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Avoid 'checkbox marketing'—maintaining a presence on every possible channel. The most effective growth comes from mastering the one or two core channels already proven to work for your business. Don't chase diversification until you have fully exploited your primary growth levers.

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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.

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 old strategy of maintaining a presence on every social platform is impractical due to team consolidation and content saturation. A focused approach on 2-3 core channels allows for higher quality creative, better engagement, and stronger community building.

In a resource-constrained environment, growth is found by improving and connecting existing channels, not by launching new ones. Re-architect your current marketing activities—like paid ads and field events—to work together to create a unified customer journey, rather than chasing the next shiny object.

Instead of diversifying efforts across many marketing channels at once, User Interviews focused on mastering one channel at a time. They built a strong foundation in SEO first, then added other channels sequentially, which allowed them to dominate each one before expanding.

To scale effectively, resist complexity by using the 'Scaling Credo' framework. It mandates radical focus: pick one target market, one product, one customer acquisition channel, and one conversion tool. Stick to this combination for one full year before adding anything new.

When a business is already profitable, even during its slow periods, focus should be on the primary constraints to growth, not on smoothing revenue. It's more effective to scale proven acquisition channels (like PPC or SEO) than to launch a new, distracting business model to solve a minor problem.

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.

When facing multiple promising growth opportunities, founders should avoid pursuing them all at once. Instead, sequence them by designating one channel as the primary "engine" for the next 6-18 months, treating others as mere proof points to maintain focus.