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.
Most content fails because its intention is selfish: to convert a user. A successful strategy treats the content itself as the final product, designed solely to provide value and build a relationship. This consumer-centric approach, which avoids treating content as a top-of-funnel tactic, is what builds long-term trust and a loyal audience.
For businesses heavily reliant on email, adding SMS marketing is not just an incremental improvement. Data from MailChimp shows that customers see a 16.5x ROI multiplier after launching their first SMS campaign. This demonstrates the immense value of communicating with customers across different channels where they are ready to engage.
Sales reps shouldn't feel pressured to invent a new reason to reach out in every step of a sequence. If your core value proposition is strong and solves a real problem, it remains relevant. Persistently and politely reiterating that value demonstrates conviction and is often more effective than finding weaker, new angles.
Using phone, email, and social isn't merely about finding a channel that works; it's about becoming a known person. When a prospect has heard your voice on a voicemail and seen your face on LinkedIn, you are no longer an anonymous bot. This human connection dramatically increases the likelihood of a response, even if it's a polite 'no'.
As software commoditizes, the buying experience itself becomes a key differentiator. Map the entire customer journey, from awareness to renewal, and design unique, valuable interactions at each stage. This shifts the focus from transactional selling to creating a memorable, human-centric experience that drives purchasing decisions.
Move beyond traditional sales sequences by implementing "invisible funnels" triggered by customer actions, like filling out an intake form. Use automation to analyze their responses and initiate personalized conversations, creating trust and generating sales without a hard-sell campaign.
Simply executing a multi-touch sequence across different channels is insufficient. If the core message is generic and demonstrates a lack of basic research, even a perfectly structured cadence will be ignored and eventually blocked. Relevance is the prerequisite that makes persistence effective rather than just annoying.
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.
In a noisy market where brand recall requires 15-20 touches, the key to creating demand is not just a multi-channel presence (ads, outbound, PLG). The real superpower is ensuring the core brand promise and messaging are identical and consistent across all of them.
Solely judging marketing by last-touch attribution creates a false reality. This narrow metric consistently favors predictable channels like search and email, discouraging investment in brand building and creative storytelling that influence buyers throughout their journey. It's a losing battle if it's the only basis for decision-making.