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Instead of creating new assets, Matt McGarry creates "lazy lead magnets" by packaging existing content. For his YouTube videos, he'll offer the presentation slides or gate the full newsletter issue he's discussing. This low-effort, high-relevance approach saves time while still providing immediate value.
Lead magnets don't require creating new content from scratch. A highly effective strategy is to bundle existing assets, like grouping several podcast episodes on a single topic into a "playlist" or guide. This offers immense, curated value to subscribers with minimal new effort from the creator.
Comedians struggle to build email lists because they lack a compelling incentive. Punch Up provides this "carrot" by gating exclusive video content. This mimics the e-commerce strategy of offering a discount for an email, effectively trading content for direct audience access.
Beyond being valuable, a lead magnet must offer a 'quick win.' Focus on providing something the user can implement immediately to see progress. This speed-to-value is critical for making a strong first impression and demonstrating your expertise effectively.
Offering a free resource like slides or a workbook in a YouTube video's description is a scalable list-building tactic. Data from multiple creators, with videos ranging from 32k to 600k views, shows a remarkably consistent conversion rate of around 3-4.6%, making it a predictable growth channel.
Don't hoard your best material. Turn content that paying clients receive into free lead magnets. Prospects aren't paying for information, which is commoditized; they are paying for the applied insight and implementation of your ideas. This generosity builds trust and attracts more high-quality prospects.
You don't always need to create a lead magnet from scratch. Consider three approaches: gating a single, high-value piece of existing content, bundling related assets like podcast episodes into a thematic collection, or creating a brand new, dedicated resource like a quiz.
With the proliferation of newsletters, the simple 'subscribe' call-to-action is less effective. A valuable lead magnet serves as a more compelling, indirect way to get on a user's email list, essentially bypassing their subscription fatigue.
Newsletters can be powerful list-builders, but only if promoted like a product. Instead of a simple 'join my newsletter' prompt, create a dedicated page that details the value, explains what subscribers will get, and even offers a preview of a past issue.
Instead of repurposing all content, identify the specific bottom-of-funnel (BOFU) pieces that already convert well. Turn these assets into multiple formats (e.g., blog into a YouTube video) and cross-link them. This creates a powerful, self-reinforcing ecosystem around your most valuable, lead-generating content.
Creating dedicated lead magnets is time-consuming. Instead, identify your most valuable newsletter issues and place them behind an "email gate." This strategy provides high-value content for new subscribers without requiring you to create any additional assets.