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Effective content strategy goes beyond platform-specific formats. It requires understanding the user's psychological state. A person on LinkedIn has a 'business' mindset, while on Instagram they have an 'entertainment' one. Your message, analogies, and tone must adapt to this context to be effective.
Instead of a "spray and pray" approach, The News Movement creates distinct content for each social platform. Instagram gets human-centric stories, TikTok receives raw news footage, and YouTube Shorts is more flexible, respecting different user engagement patterns.
Instead of a one-size-fits-all message, brands should create hyper-relevant content for different demographics (e.g., high school football teams, working moms) on the platforms they use (e.g., TikTok, LinkedIn). This decentralized approach builds a stronger, more resilient brand than a single campaign.
Social media has shifted from 'social' to 'interest' media, where the algorithm targets users based on the content they consume. Making hyper-specific content for your target audience is the most effective form of targeting. Resist making broad content for vanity metrics, as it won't reach qualified buyers.
Don't dismiss LinkedIn as just for B2B. Its organic reach is powerful and underleveraged. Users are in a business-focused mindset, making them receptive to a different style of content than on entertainment-driven platforms, creating a unique opportunity for brand distribution.
B2B marketing often assumes a sterile, professional-only mindset. This is flawed. The same person scrolling LinkedIn during the day also binges consumer entertainment at night. B2B content should embrace humor and personality, recognizing that you're always marketing to the same multifaceted human being.
Simply clipping a podcast for YouTube or sharing a video on LinkedIn rarely works. Each platform's culture and algorithm demand content created specifically for its format, rhythm, and audience norms to be effective.
Social media algorithms are so sophisticated they identify your ideal customer based on the content's subject, language, and visuals. Instead of chasing generic views, create hyper-specific content for your target avatar. The platform will find the right audience for you, making the content the ultimate targeting tool.
The common advice to chop up a single video or blog post for every social platform is a myth. Each platform's algorithm and audience expectations demand native content. True growth comes from mastering one or two channels with tailored content, not from thinly spreading repurposed material across many.
Effective cross-platform content strategy isn't just reformatting. It requires understanding the user's mindset. A LinkedIn user is in a professional context, while an Instagram user seeks entertainment. Your message must be contextual to that specific psychological state to resonate.
The context in which content is consumed matters. Users browse LinkedIn with a professional and business-oriented mindset, making them far more receptive to listings, deals, and industry insights than when they are on entertainment- or family-focused platforms.