Don't just treat other channels as spokes for a central email list. Instead, build a multi-channel network where email, YouTube, SMS, and other platforms all point to each other. This creates a resilient web that captures and retains audience members across their preferred platforms.
Unlike social media, where algorithms and platform changes control your reach, an email list is a durable asset you own. This provides stability and a direct line of communication, insulating your business from platform volatility and ensuring you can always reach your audience.
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.
The conventional wisdom is to move followers off social to an owned email list. However, the reverse is also powerful. Drive engagement and grow your social following by embedding links to your best social posts directly within your newsletters and promotional emails.
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.
The era of linear, multi-step marketing funnels is over. Brands must now craft succinct, cohesive stories that are effective regardless of the order in which a consumer encounters them across channels (email, SMS, social). Each touchpoint must stand on its own while contributing to the whole narrative.
Instead of blasting the same message across all channels, the key is to make them work in unison to tell a single, coherent story. This coordinated approach prevents message fatigue and delivers better results by treating each channel as a component of a larger conversation.
Position your email list as the central hub of your marketing, not just another channel. The primary goal of all other efforts—social media, podcasts, blogs—should be to grow and serve this core, owned asset. This creates a sustainable, defensible marketing ecosystem.
Instead of treating social media as a long-term home, use it as a strategic tool to get your audience onto platforms you own, like an email list. The primary goal is to capture attention and immediately guide followers into your ecosystem, building a more resilient business off-platform.
Matt McGarry's 'Big Three' strategy posits YouTube, podcasts, and newsletters as core media pillars. All other platforms, like LinkedIn or X, should be treated strictly as discovery channels. This framework clarifies their role as top-of-funnel tools, preventing creators from misallocating resources on platforms they don't own.
Reverse the traditional marketing funnel. By linking from newsletters directly to a relevant social media post, brands can leverage their highly-engaged email audience to boost post performance and grow their social following simultaneously.