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Your social media platform should be reverse-engineered based on where your target audience congregates. For example, selling to Gen X women points to Facebook, while targeting professionals for an accounting firm makes LinkedIn the obvious choice. Platform relevance changes over time, so constant re-evaluation is necessary.
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.
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.
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.
The goal on LinkedIn isn't to reach all one billion users. Instead, sales professionals should focus on their specific Ideal Customer Profile (ICP) within a niche market. By creating highly relevant content for this small, targeted audience, you can establish authority and influence decision-makers far more effectively than by attempting mass appeal.
Instead of reactively trying to please algorithms, proactively identify the best 'doorways'—specific platforms and content formats—to reach your ideal audience. This shifts the focus from chasing reach to strategically choosing where you appear and how you present your brand.
Most businesses view LinkedIn as a B2B platform or resume site. It has evolved into a social network with massive organic reach where users often scroll during work hours to avoid their tasks, making them a captive audience for all types of content, not just professional topics.
Building an audience on platforms like X (Twitter) is incredibly difficult because you're competing with world-class writers. In contrast, the standard for content on LinkedIn is much lower, making it significantly easier for founders and marketers to stand out, be authentic, and build a following.
Unlike Facebook's algorithm, which thrives on broad audiences, LinkedIn's requires precision. Success comes from using small, hyper-targeted audiences, often built from custom-uploaded company lists, to ensure every dollar reaches the exact target profile.
B2B SaaS companies selling to specific verticals (like car dealerships) should stop broadcasting on all channels. Instead, they must focus on LinkedIn, creating native content as if for TikTok and then using targeted ads to amplify winning posts to their ideal customer profile.
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.