One Platform or Many? The Content Distribution Question Nobody Answers Honestly
Should you go deep on one channel or spread across many? The real answer isn't 'it depends' — it's a clear sequence most people get backwards.
14 articles in this topic
Should you go deep on one channel or spread across many? The real answer isn't 'it depends' — it's a clear sequence most people get backwards.
A content calendar feels like discipline. But filling slots on a schedule quietly replaces the real question — "is this worth saying?" — with a worse one: "what goes in Tuesday's slot?" The calendar becomes the goal.
Posting manually keeps you 'authentic' and 'in the moment' — or so the argument goes. Here's the honest case for and against scheduling, and when a scheduler earns its keep.
Anyone can copy your topics, your format, even your tactics. The one thing they can't copy is your voice. Here's how to find and develop yours.
A content calendar is supposed to bring discipline. Too often it becomes the goal itself — filling slots regardless of whether anything is worth saying. The calendar should serve the content, not the other way around.
The advice to "be everywhere" produces mediocre presence everywhere and mastery nowhere. For most creators and small teams, two channels done well beats six channels done badly — every time.
AI can write a hundred posts in minutes — and that's exactly the problem. Here's the line between AI that amplifies your voice and AI that drowns the internet in slop.
Creating content daily fragments your focus and drains your energy. Batching it into focused sessions changes everything. Here's how to do it right.
LinkedIn is drowning in the same formulaic posts — the fake humility, the manufactured story, the 'agree?' Here's how to stand out by sounding like an actual human.
"Niche down" is the most repeated advice in content — and the most misunderstood. Go too broad and you're invisible; too narrow and you're trapped. Here's how to actually think about it.
Most creators spend 90% of their effort making content and 10% sharing it. The ratio should be flipped. Great content nobody sees loses to good content everybody sees.
Everyone wants the viral hit. But the creators who actually build something durable win through boring, relentless consistency. Here's why, and how to sustain it.