1.2M Followers in 6 Months… My Content Marketing Strategy REVEALED
Summary
- My change in mindset about content marketing reflects my understanding of its role in a business.
- There are five phases to building a content marketing machine, and each phase has a unique objective.
- Start simple: make content and post it somewhere, which is more than what some have accomplished.
- Consistency is key; find a rhythm for posting that works for you, like once a week.
- Post reliably across all platforms to increase your presence.
- Understand each platform's capacity for content and try to maximize posts accordingly.
- Phase five is about creating and capturing content to enhance reach, like a call-in show.
- Emphasize quality in your content, but recognize that producing a high quantity helps you improve.
- The initial phases of content marketing aim primarily at lead nurturing, not customer acquisition.
- Use manual outreach, affiliates, or paid ads to acquire customers and let content serve as a credibility and trust builder.
- Turn your high-performing content into sales tools and indicators for potential successful paid marketing hooks.
- Cater content to each platform's unique style; the same message can be repackaged appropriately.
- Creating good content can take significant time; patience gives you a competitive edge.
- Hiring specialists or vendors can accelerate your content marketing process, but watch for an overemphasis on quantitative metrics.
- A carefully curated content strategy costs less than paid ads for a similar amount of exposure.
- Find your niche expertise and produce valuable content that commands attention within that domain.
- For small business owners, just looking legitimate and current on social media can be enough; focus efforts here.
- If you decide to use content marketing as a lead generator, be prepared to invest time and money, just like in paid advertising.
- Advance to phases four and five only when you're ready to consistently create valuable content and have the necessary support structure in place.
- Focus on what unique value you bring and grow your expertise from there without competing with top industry figures initially.
Video
How To Take Action
I would suggest starting with making some simple content and posting it online. Just start – that's more than many do. Aim for posting once a week to find a rhythm that's easy to keep up with. You can pick your favorite platform, maybe one you're already using, and stick with it.
Here's another tip: When you post, make sure your content is on all platforms you're active on. This way, more people can see what you're sharing. Remember, different platforms can handle different amounts of content, so try to post as much as each one will let you without overwhelming your followers.
Focus on making quality content, but don't worry if it's not perfect at first. Creating a lot helps you get better. It’s alright if early attempts aren't amazing; you improve by practicing.
Your content at the start should help show people that you're trustworthy and that your business is real. If someone sees your fresh content and thinks you know what you're talking about, that’s a win. You don't need to get lots of new customers from your content early on; use it to build trust with the customers you find through ads or word of mouth.
If some of your content gets more likes or shares, use it to help your sales team. They can share popular posts with potential customers. Also, try out the messages from those posts in your ads to see what works best.
As you keep going with your content, think about what special knowledge you can share. What's something valuable that you know a lot about? Start there. Don't worry about being the top expert in a big field. Even being the best at one small thing can get you noticed.
Remember, content marketing can be a long game, just like paid ads. But it can be cheaper over time. It will cost you some effort in the beginning, but it's worth it if you're sharing something valuable that addresses a problem.
A simple action plan:
- Create content – start with what you know.
- Post consistently – once a week is good.
- Use all your platforms – but don't spam.
- Improve quality – it's okay to start rough and get better.
- Use content to build trust – help existing sales efforts.
- Highlight your unique value – share your expertise in a niche area.
Stick with this, and be patient. Growth takes time, but your persistence pays off.
Quotes by Alex Hormozi
"There's no such thing as too long, only too boring"
– Alex Hormozi
"Quality over quantity, but quality quantity wins over quality"
– Alex Hormozi
"The more you give, the more you grow; the more you take, the more you shrink"
– Alex Hormozi
"Patience is one of the ultimate advantages"
– Alex Hormozi
"Just because it's easy to quantify doesn't mean it's important"
– Alex Hormozi
Full Transcript
launch that they should stop making content because they were wasting their time i was partially right and partially wrong and in this video i want to break down the shift that i've had in terms of content marketing and its role within a business the five phases in building a content marketing machine and how to focus on one of two primary objectives with content marketing and so if you don't know who i am my name is autry mosey i own acquisition.com we're full of companies right now does over 150 million dollars a year i make these videos because i hope that you use the stuff you make a bunch of money and then you come and join acquisition.com so we can invest in your business that's why i do it let's rock and roll with the phases of content i'm going to walk through the five phases and then i'm going to talk about which of the objectives you're solving for each of these and then finally like an out scale version all right phase one is you make something and you post it that's it you just gotta post something sometime somewhere and believe it or not a lot of you guys haven't even done phase one which is why i have to outline it number two is that you post something consistently you create a cadence or a calendar around when you post you find a platform that you like ideally one that you're probably already using and you just post again after you post it once and you say you know what this was seven days apart if i do this every seven days i will now be consistent for me i just know that there's one day a week that i do all my marketing stuff what i do on that day changes but it's always marketing related that's what's worked for me maybe it'll work for you the third phase you post you post reliably and you do it on all platforms that's a massive increase in the amount of volume that you are posting this is when it transitions in terms of objectives and i'll get to the objectives in a second phase four is that you go from posting just even once on every platform on a regular cadence to maximizing how much every platform can take the short form platforms can take sometimes five ten posts a day like twitter or tick tock facebook reels at this moment rules change all the time if you have a news feed style or you have an audience that it's pushing stuff to they tend to fatigue faster and they don't want to get overwhelmed with one person that's usually where you get capped at it one or two times a day and so what you have to do is look at all the platforms figure out what the max amount is that you can publish on a platform and then all you do is you crank the volume on all of them at the same time that's phase four most people never even get to phase four and then phase five you go from creating for all of those to capturing and creating for example if i wanted to have a show where everybody called in and i could repurpose all that stuff across content that would be me deliberately creating content in a way across all those channels but not only creating but also capturing so that i could further enhance my reach and the amount of volume that i created and the big rule with volume that i have is that there's no such thing as too long only too boring the second rule that i have is quality over quantity but quality quantity wins over quality in order to know what is quality it usually takes reps to get good and so you will probably do a lot in the beginning and it will probably suck comma and that's okay because it is a requisite for getting good you start by sucking and then you get better and then eventually you suck so little you're actually good the difference between phase one and two and phase three four five is the objective if you're doing phase three four five the objective is to generate new customers from content and it's different than phase one and phase two where the only reason you can do that is just to have lead nurture just to give you guys some sales stuff just to give you guys some fodder and just test some hooks those are the five phases if you're a small business owner that costs time and that costs money so what do you do i actually have had this conversation with probably half of our portfolio companies in the last three months what is the role of organic marketing play in the business from concept of acquiring customers that's why we do this stuff right we do this to acquire customers if you have other ways of getting customers which for most of you would be manual outbound affiliates or paid ads besides referrals and if those are the primary channels you do not want to take your eye off the ball on that that's what's paying the bills that being said the purpose or the objective of having the organic content is lead nurture not lead generation so what happens is someone comes in through an affiliate someone comes in through a paid ad someone comes in through a manual app on because you had an sdr call them or they got a cold email what do they do they look at your social profile they look at your website and they say is this person legit the only litmus test you have to pass there is that you've posted something recently that's not [ __ ] that's really it they'll probably consume two three four pieces of content and say this guy or this gal knows what they're talking about this is recent enough that i know that they're still in business this is a legitimate business that's all we're trying to accomplish here and if you do start to have content that starts performing better than others that gives you two things one is it gives the sales guys content that they can proactively feed to the prospects and so what you should build is a master excel sheet of your best content of all time because there is some content that you've made knowingly or unknowingly that convinces more people to buy from you on that content sheet you'll have what are the faqs what are the types of questions that people ask on sales calls which gives you great fodder for the types of content you make in the future and again you do it for one for the sales team and two for marketing you do it for the sales team because as soon as they have that question they can send that as a reply between call one and call two to close a prospect or if they have the question that they found out before the call they can send it to them beforehand increase the likelihood they close but that's the first tangential benefit besides nurture that making this content helps you with the second one is that it gives you an idea of what you can start leading with on your paid side they're disproportionately saving it disproportionately sharing it when you run paid ads you can look at your organic content be like dude i don't know what it is people went nuts for this if for some reason this headline or this hook worked well you weave it into every one of your cold emails and you can split test it and say wow this beat our control and so think of the the content you're making as just low risk ways of testing hooks and headlines to get people to buy from you phase one and phase two if you're in one of those camps you don't need to do anything else that's it that's all you gotta do if you wanna know what it looks like to actually use content marketing as a way to generate leads phase three which is your posting once a week or on some cadence on all platforms the purpose of phase three is learning what packaging looks like on each of the platforms if you've ever seen that meme that had like tinder linkedin facebook and like instagram platforms are all a little bit different same person just packaged a little differently this tweet here then getting put into a tick tock then also getting put into a youtube short and then also getting put into a reel it's the same concept the same subject matter but we package it a little bit differently phase fours you then say great i feel like we finally get each of these platforms and this [ __ ] takes time it takes probably six months and this is if you have means to pay for the stuff but i'll get into the cost in a second maxing out the platforms which is phase four number five is actively creating so candidly right now i'm barely scratching phase five we're actually just dialing on phase four which is maximizing across all platforms we're not really there yet we're maxed out on probably half the platforms i'm mostly making that's what we're doing right with 345 you're actually making good enough content that the platforms are serving it to new audiences because they are able to grow the amount of time people spend on the platform because your stuff is good they pay you an impressions for providing value to their audience more followers more likes all that stuff you still have to have a way to convert those people into customers and so the way to do that is just having call to actions for example if you're a business doing three million dollars or more and you're an internet business go to acquisition.com you can fill out the stuff for a minority investment that's what we do put that into your content and then the rest of your time you're just providing value you don't need to get fancy with it you don't want to be one of those guys who just pitching all the time a lot of people oversell the small amount of demand they have so they can never grow the audience the more you give the more you grow the more you take the more you shrink and when you do it that way you never go hungry because you always have more people knocking on your door than you have seating in your in your house from a cost perspective there's time cost there's long term cost and there's money cost if you start doing content as your way of getting customers expect it to take a long time i started making content for acquisition.com about 18 months before we really started seeing any kind of deal flow or growth across the platforms if you think about this as a long-term play i still believe that fame is the most efficient business model all right it's one of the best ways to arbitrage making money but it takes time and no one's willing to wait which then gives you a competitive advantage because patience is one of the ultimate advantages is that you're just willing to do things for an unreasonably long period of time without thinking you're smarter than you really are a quote from neil strauss even at phase three it's going to be pretty much beyond your capacity to actually create capture edit and distribute across all platforms you're not gonna be able to do it on your own and so you need some degree of leverage that leverage is gonna come in the form of labor you're gonna have to pay people to help you out in the beginning the more costly way of doing it but faster is to have vendors so to have people who are specialists on each of these platforms because what they're going to do is get you up to speed five times faster they're gonna already know all the mistakes that people normally make now one thing they have to look out for for vendors and this is especially important you know for me is that most vendors are data driven and what i mean by that is they get obsessed with clicks and views and impressions and subscribers that's good to a degree it's okay to be satisfied with a smaller audience that's just the type of person that you're actually looking to attract it's hard to make this shift and it's really hard to ram it down their throats because most clients that pay them only care about those things because they don't know what else to measure just because it's easy to quantify doesn't mean it's important the values that you have the messages that you want to get out there who you're trying to reach will be more important than the quantitative metrics are those good litmus tests in terms of if nothing you ever have hits yeah you should probably pay attention to that but if only one specific type of thing hits and it's not core to who you are you got to be able to resist that temptation because otherwise you're going to build this audience doing stuff you don't want to do attracting people you don't want to be with for us to put out the stuff that we put out right now across all platforms for layla and i cost about 70 000 a month that's to put out roughly 160 pieces of content a week you're like oh my god like i know it's a lot that's because we're trying to promote we're using this instead of using paid ads so if i were to just pay for the impressions it would cost me about 2 million a month to get the impressions that right now cost me about 70 000 a month i have a lot of cost savings doing it organically the lever on that though is how good you are and that's tough and it probably sounds weird for me to even say this so take it the way that you probably or hopefully know that i mean it most people talk about stuff that they don't have the right to talk about just because you call yourself an expert doesn't make it true and so the question is how narrowly can i define the problem that i solve so that in that tiny world in that pond i am king you might not be the best business person in the world i'm not but the question is of all the sources of information that are both entertaining and educational is the stuff that you put out there good enough that people are like i will pay attention to this person because if you've ever struggled to give away your services for free it's because the biggest cost isn't your price if people aren't willing to pay for it with their attention then it has other costs which is it's not worth their attention why should this person listen to me and why is this worth their time if you can answer those questions in the content that you're making in a tangible way that their life is going to get better as a result they'll come back and tell their friends i'm not andy versailles i'm not gary vee i'm not at my lead i'm not all closing in on a billion dollars plus i'm not grant cardone well don't try and compete with them but if you're like hey i'm the fastest toilet fixer in this side of tuscaloosa you might only be competing in three guys if you have evidence you are beyond reproach if someone looks at you and says like hey man your content's crap you can be like this is how you fix toilets i'll try and be more entertaining next time but this is how you fix them and you have evidence that you fix 500 toilets this way first you're fixing toilets and then you're talking about how you can expand a plumbing business and then you're talking about how you can expand a local business and then you're talking about marketing on whatever specific method you use to grow your thing and then you're talking about expanding an enterprise and then lo and behold you're a business expert but it takes time if you're a small business owner you can do the first two phases just post about stuff make sure it's valuable just to make sure that you are a legitimate looking business that looks like it's doors say open on it that's all we're trying to accomplish and help the sales guys out if you want to make content marketing your actual lead generation machine then you need to invest in it the same way you invest in it for paid marketing you're going to probably have to have vendors you're probably over time what you learn from your vendors you're going to bring employees in-house and you're going to teach it to them and then you start scaling the volume up internally and then phase 5 you go max out mode right you start cranking out on everything and then you start creating stuff specifically but when you're doing that at that phase you probably don't need to worry about this video