Instead of going all-in on one proven channel, Omer Shai advocates for a diversified portfolio. By pursuing 10 channels, you might get three amazing successes, three mediocre results, and four failures. This "three is bigger than one" philosophy de-risks growth and uncovers new opportunities.

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Most founders worry about a single client representing too much revenue, but the same "concentration risk" applies to lead sources. If one channel (e.g., Instagram) generates over 40% of your leads, your business is vulnerable. Diversification makes you safer and more valuable to buyers.

The pressure for omnipresence leads to diluted focus and burnout. The most successful entrepreneurs are intentionally choosing one or two channels, going all-in, and finding peace in letting other platforms go. This deep, consistent presence outpaces scattered efforts every time.

Early-stage companies often dilute focus by pursuing multiple marketing channels at once. A better strategy is to master a single, proven channel and scale it to a significant revenue milestone (e.g., $300k/month) before even considering diversification. This ensures you've won on one front before opening another.

Conventional wisdom to 'stay focused' is flawed. Breakthrough growth often comes from making many small, exploratory bets. YipitData's success wasn't from perfecting one thing, but from the one small, tangential bet each year that drove 90% of the growth while others failed.

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.

The dominant VC narrative demands founders focus on a single venture. However, successful entrepreneurs demonstrate that running multiple projects—a portfolio approach mirrored by VCs themselves—is a viable path, contrary to the "focus on one thing" dogma.

Relying on one signature offer or income stream is a high-risk strategy. A more sustainable approach is building a portfolio business with multiple, smaller streams—like a course, a membership, and affiliate income. This ecosystem creates stability, allowing the business to weather storms and reducing pressure on any single component.

Instead of testing every possible marketing channel, successful companies find one or two that produce power-law outcomes. This requires identifying your product's inherent advantages for distribution (e.g., social shareability for a consumer app) and doubling down there first.

The highest risk-adjusted return comes from amplifying what already works. The likelihood of a new marketing channel or sales script succeeding is statistically low. Instead of rolling the dice on something new, you should allocate resources to dramatically increase the volume of your proven winners.

The pressure to "pick one lane" is often misguided. If your goal is happiness, managing multiple ventures you're passionate about is a superior strategy. If your goal is purely to maximize financial returns, then focusing on the most profitable one is better.