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In today's economy, being "relevant" is defined by actively producing content across 7-10 major digital platforms. A successful business that ignores this reality is fundamentally vulnerable to future disruption, regardless of its current financial success.
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.
Relying on one platform and its payments is a high-risk strategy due to algorithm volatility. Successful creators build resilience by distributing content across multiple platforms (podcasts, newsletters, websites) and combining revenue from ads, sponsorships, and direct sales.
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.
Businesses that cling to outdated platforms because of tradition or vested interests will fail. New platforms, like MTV in its day, create new superstars (e.g., Madonna, Prince) who embrace the shift in consumer attention, leaving behind those who resist the change.
In an attention-based economy, the primary function of any business is to produce content and capture audience mindshare. Your role as a realtor or shop owner is secondary. The cost of production and distribution is now so low that there is no excuse for not embracing this fundamental identity shift.
The advantages of scale—retail distribution, supply chain, and big ad budgets—are no longer insurmountable. Platforms like Shopify, Amazon, and TikTok empower smaller players. To stay relevant, large corporations must adopt the agile, audience-centric tactics of individual creators.
AEO is influenced by a brand's entire digital footprint, from Reddit to YouTube to LinkedIn. This counters the startup advice to focus on one or two growth channels, suggesting that a broader, more holistic marketing strategy is now necessary to win in AI search.
As platforms like Google consume media traffic, brands can no longer rely on placing ads next to content. They must become the content destination themselves. The strategy is to build a direct relationship, often via an app, winning "the battle of the storefront on your phone" and reducing dependency on paid channels.
In the current digital landscape, consistent content creation is not optional; it is the primary mechanism for gaining leverage. By not producing content on platforms like LinkedIn, Instagram, and TikTok, businesses are effectively handing over market relevance and advantage to their competitors.
To build a lasting brand, creators must define their value independently of any single platform. The core mission and value delivered to the audience should be clear enough to be translated from YouTube to TikTok to the next immersive medium, ensuring longevity beyond temporary trends.