👀 ICYMI: Inbox to Income, the workshop that will teach you how to turn your newsletter into a revenue-generating machine is happening next week. Did you reserve your seat? (They’re limited, especially those that include 1:1 support.) Grab yours here! Most businesses don’t fail because they’re bad at what they do. They fail because they never build a system that reliably brings in revenue and leads. They start strong, chasing whatever marketing trend is hot at the moment. One week, it’s Instagram reels. The next, it’s TikTok, followed by an experimental run with LinkedIn thought leadership. But at no point do they stop and ask: does this compound? Is it sustainable in the long run? What happens if it goes away? Every successful business (especially in the creator/SME world) has one main engine — a single, central force that generates revenue and makes everything else work. Everything else? That’s just support. It supports the core engine in working as well as possible. Let’s talk about what a real growth engine looks like, and more importantly, how to build one without becoming a one-trick pony. Before we dig in, a quick message from today’s partner, whose generous free offer complements our topic very well. 📣 Brought to you by 📣Be.Better.Inconsistent income is one of the biggest tell-tale for not having a growth engine. Are you still telling yourself you'll "figure it out " while facing another month of inconsistent income and slow progress? Still posting on social media and using hope as a strategy for getting clients? My friend Lewis Thompson-Milne has generously put together a free training to help you leave all that behind. In less than 15 mins a day, you'll discover the core principles used by successful coaches to establish a consistent income, command higher prices, and gain the confidence to build a coaching practice that brings you the cash and freedom you deserve. Ditch the DIY hustle.
Want your name up here? Grab a slot before the prices go up! (Prices go up in April 2025!) No matter how diversified you are, though, there will always be one primary channel. I like to call it “the one source of truth” — the channel that you spend most of your time growing, creating content for, promoting, and so on. Of course, this would also be your main growth engine. Let’s look at a few options. Types of growth engines — what’s great and what sucks about eachThere are plenty of ways to grow a business, so this is by no means an exhaustive list. It is, however, a list of the most sustainable and easy-to-leverage growth engines. 1. The email list/newsletter (compounding trust and revenue over time)If you’ve been in my world for more than five minutes, you already know how I feel about this one. An email list is the closest thing to business insurance you’ll ever get. It’s an asset you own, a direct line to your audience, and, statistically speaking, the highest ROI marketing channel out there (up to $40 revenue for every $1 spent). But most people avoid email because they think it’s too slow, too much work, or too old-school compared to the dopamine drip of social media. They’re half right — it’s not easy or fast. Then again, what is? Why it’s great:
Why it sucks:
Best for: solopreneurs, coaches, service providers, and creators who want a reliable, low-cost way to drive revenue over time. Shameless plug: newsletter growth is exactly what I’m teaching in the Inbox to Income workshop next week. Save your seat and see how you can turn your newsletter into your best growth engine. If you want stability, predictable sales, and the ability to grow without relying on a tech company’s mood swings, email is your best bet. It’s what I’m betting on too — you’ll see below why the other options don’t fit my business model as well. Still, email is not the only game in town. 2. The content ecosystem (long-game authority building)Some businesses don’t need an email list to thrive — at least, not directly. Their growth engine is content that lives forever — blog posts, YouTube videos, or podcasts that keep bringing in new leads year after year. The idea is simple: create high-value content that ranks in search or gets recommended by algorithms, and let that traffic turn into customers over time. Why it’s great:
Why it sucks:
Best for: niched experts, SaaS companies, and businesses that want to attract high-intent leads without relying on paid ads. SEO and content marketing built my first business from scratch. This was my first growth engine, so I’m somewhat emotionally attached to it. Not enough to turn a blind eye to its limitations, though. Overall, this is a great engine if you’re patient. Not so great if you need money yesterday. 3. Referral and word-of-mouth (the reputation engine)Some businesses grow almost entirely through word-of-mouth. They don’t need SEO or ads because their existing customers do the selling for them. It’s a dream scenario: no marketing budget, no content strategy, just pure reputation power. But for most people, this doesn’t just happen. You need a deliberate system that encourages referrals. Why it’s great:
Why it sucks:
Best for: service businesses, consultants, high-ticket offers, and companies with exceptional customer experiences. Referrals work best when paired with another engine — something that keeps the pipeline full when referrals slow down. 4. Paid acquisition (money in, money out)Some businesses skip the long game entirely and just buy their growth. They throw money at Facebook, Google, and TikTok ads, fine-tune their funnel, and scale as long as the numbers work. [If you’re interested in paid growth, check out this deep dive on the topic.] It’s fast, measurable, and (sometimes) profitable. But it’s also the riskiest engine because if you get it wrong, it burns through cash at an alarming rate. Why it’s great:
Why it sucks:
Best for: eCommerce brands, SaaS startups, and businesses that want fast growth but also have a long-term plan beyond ads. A word of caution: setting up ads on big platforms (Meta, Google) is a trade in itself. Do NOT approach it on your own unless you have experience with running paid ads campaigns or a sizeable budget to burn through until you learn how to do it. Paid ads work best as a growth accelerator — they’re great when layered on top of another solid engine, but dangerous when they’re the only thing keeping your business afloat. One growth engine does not equal one channelThere’s rarely a business that only has one channel — and for good reason. The most common approach is having several channels that feed your main growth engine. Here’s what my setup looks like: While I use multiple channels (I only added the main ones to this graph), you can see how they all feed off each other.
I wrote about repurposing here and how it helps me keep my sanity intact and avoid churning out mediocre content just to feed the insatiable bots. How to build your own growth engineEmail is my biggest revenue and growth driver. Yours could be an entirely different platform. Whatever platform brings you the most revenue should benefit from most of your attention. Funnel people there and nurture that platform before any other.
The goal isn’t to be everywhere. It’s to be consistent with one primary growth engine and have a system that keeps it running — so you’re not stuck on a never-ending hamster wheel. If you’ve been struggling to build something that actually compounds, instead of just doing random acts of marketing that don’t add up to anything, this is exactly what we’ll cover in Inbox to Income. The whole point of this workshop is to help you build a system that generates revenue predictably — without exhausting yourself chasing new trends every month. While my list is by no means huge, it’s my biggest revenue driver. I built it to be self-sufficient. As a bonus, testimonials like this keep me going and prove that I made the right choice. Want a similar engine for your business? Join me for the Inbox to Income workshop on March 27th, 11:30am EST. Will I see you there?
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