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It's not enough to have a product wedge; you need a channel-specific wedge. Brands must define a clear reason for customers to buy from their website versus Amazon or Target. Without this, marketing dollars are spent inefficiently as customers default to other, less profitable channels.

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Applying a single attribution model, like last-touch, to all channels is a mistake. It undervalues top-of-funnel activities and can lead to budget cuts that starve the pipeline. Instead, measure each channel based on its intended outcome and funnel stage.

The most effective strategy combines brand building with performance marketing. This hybrid approach uses measurable channels to tell stories and build brand equity, ensuring every marketing dollar is accountable for results while avoiding the limitations of pure performance plays.

Differentiate marketing channels by their purpose. Use online platforms for broad reach and repeated touchpoints. Reserve offline, in-person events for fostering the genuine, vulnerable connections that are difficult to replicate digitally and are critical for building strong relationships.

In B2C, consumers often know the brand, so the goal is demand amplification. In an indirect B2B channel, the end-user rarely interacts with the brand directly. Marketing's job shifts to equipping and enabling partners to be effective brand advocates when the marketer isn't in the room.

Instead of treating all channels equally, identify which customer segments (e.g., brand advertisers) are best served by which channels (e.g., TV screens). Shifting demand accordingly can unlock massive growth by optimizing the entire portfolio and increasing customer ROI.

Tushy finds little sales cannibalization between its DTC site and Amazon because they serve different customer archetypes. Instead of forcing an 'Amazon shopper' to a .com site, brands should meet them where they are, focusing on mental and physical availability across all relevant channels.

In a resource-constrained environment, growth is found by improving and connecting existing channels, not by launching new ones. Re-architect your current marketing activities—like paid ads and field events—to work together to create a unified customer journey, rather than chasing the next shiny object.

For CPG brands, a physical retail presence, even with lower margins, should be viewed as a customer acquisition strategy. It provides crucial visibility and trial, driving customers to your higher-margin direct-to-consumer website for subsequent purchases and retention.

The most common human failure in marketing orchestration is attempting to build a complex, multi-channel system from day one. Successful teams start simple: they nail the ICP and creative for a few channels, prove the value with clear measurement, and then use those wins to get buy-in from other teams and break down silos.

A single-channel strategy focuses on mastering one tactic, like conferences. A "tollbooth" strategy is more profound: it focuses on owning a specific customer *demand situation*. This situation can then be targeted from multiple angles and channels, all designed to make it impossible for a buyer in that moment to ignore you.