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Instead of spreading yourself thin, focus on two platforms with different formats and demographics (e.g., video-based TikTok and text-based Threads). This diversifies your audience, mitigates the risk of algorithmic shifts, and maximizes the ROI of your content creation efforts.
To survive platform shifts, creators need a dual strategy. First, aggressively grow their brand on today's dominant platforms to build leverage. Second, actively experiment with and learn emerging technologies to be ready for the transition, avoiding the fate of MySpace stars who missed Facebook.
Spreading marketing efforts too thin is a common mistake. It is more strategic to focus resources on achieving excellence on a single, relevant platform where your audience is active. Once dominant there, you can recreate those wins on other platforms.
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.
Spreading a small team across multiple social platforms leads to mediocre, generic content. A more effective strategy is to focus intensely on a maximum of two channels, posting 2-3 times per week to maintain relevance without sacrificing quality or platform-specific nuance.
The old strategy of maintaining a presence on every social platform is impractical due to team consolidation and content saturation. A focused approach on 2-3 core channels allows for higher quality creative, better engagement, and stronger community building.
The team focuses its creative energy on just two core formats: short-form video (TikTok/Reels) and LinkedIn thought leadership. However, they repurpose and distribute this content across 35 different accounts and platforms, maximizing reach without stretching creative resources thin.
Treat social platforms as distinct tools. Use TikTok's wide-reaching algorithm for top-of-funnel discovery and lead generation. In contrast, use LinkedIn for daily, consistent posting to build deep trust and nurture a loyal "crew" of followers.
Traditional strategy forces "either/or" choices due to resource constraints. On social media, where distribution is cheap, the best strategy is "and." Don't choose between two brand names or content pillars; create content for both. This allows you to test what resonates with different audience segments without artificial limitation.
Don't just cross-post the same content. A more effective strategy is creating meta-content that leverages audience curiosity. For example, discussing TikTok trends on LinkedIn performs exceptionally well because it brings valuable, 'foreign' insights to a curious professional audience.
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.