You’re Renting Your Lead Flow. Here’s What That’s Actually Costing You. written by John Jantsch read more at Duct Tape Marketing
If your largest paid channel disappeared tomorrow, platform shuts down, algorithm changes, cost doubles, your pipeline is gone inside 30 days.
If that’s true, you don’t have a Growth Engine. You have a rented pipeline.
This is the situation most founders are in. Paid ads on two or three platforms. Paid social. Maybe a paid directory. When the credit card stops, the leads stop. The business has revenue but no predictability. It has a dependency.
Owned vs rented
An owned channel is one you control. You decide who’s on it, what reaches them, when. No platform change can touch it.
A rented channel is one someone else controls. You pay for access. You play by their rules. When the rules change or the price goes up, you adjust or you disappear.
The difference compounds over time. A business that builds owned channels for 5 years has compounding value. A business that rents for 5 years has 5 years of expenses. Same spend, completely different position.
The four owned channels
Email has been declared dead roughly once a year for 15 years and keeps working anyway.
A founder who builds a qualified email list over 5 years has direct, reliable, owned access to their audience at zero marginal cost per send. No paid channel comes close to that math.
The list has to be qualified, built from people who asked to be on it. It has to be used consistently. And it has to be treated as a content surface, not a sales channel. The same principles that make content work apply here: genuine point of view, useful, specific.
Most businesses underuse email because it feels unfashionable. That unfashionability is the tell. The channels that feel unfashionable and still work are the ones smart operators quietly compound in.
Referral systems
Referred prospects arrive pre-trusted. They close faster, they’re less price sensitive, and they’re more likely to refer others. Most small businesses have no referral system. They have referrals that happen accidentally.
A real referral system has 3 parts: a specific ask, made at a specific moment, with a specific easy path for the referrer to take. All 3 are necessary. Most businesses are missing at least 2.
The ask needs to be made. Customers don’t refer unless asked because it’s not obvious to them that you want referrals. The moment matters: right after a customer experiences something good is when the ask lands. And the path needs to be easy enough that referring requires almost no effort.
Partnerships
Non-competing businesses that serve the same ideal client are the most underused lead source in small business marketing.
An accounting firm’s ideal client also needs a business lawyer, a financial planner, a banker, an insurance broker. Each of those providers has a list of the same customers. Two or three real partnerships beat 20 casual ones.
A structured partnership has named partners, defined criteria, a regular rhythm of contact, and a way to track what’s being exchanged. Partnerships are work. They compound once they’re real.
Direct relationships
Networking, speaking, association involvement, in-person participation. The oldest channel in the book, and it still produces the highest-intent leads in most categories.
A prospect who hears the founder speak at an industry event arrives at the buying conversation miles ahead of where a paid lead arrives. The trust is largely pre-built.
Direct relationships don’t scale the way email or content scale. They scale with founder effort. Founders who invest in them consistently find that the Growth Engine runs mostly on relationships 2 years in.
Where paid actually belongs
Paid works when it amplifies something already working. If the content is converting organically, paid can extend its reach. If the messaging is landing, paid can get it in front of people it otherwise wouldn’t reach.
Without those foundations, paid produces expensive activity that doesn’t convert. Every founder has seen that at least once.
The healthy ratio for most small businesses: roughly two-thirds of new customer flow from owned channels, one-third from paid amplification. A business running the opposite ratio is fragile, even if the current economics look fine.
One thing to do this week
List every lead source that produced revenue in the last 12 months. Mark each one owned or rented. Count the ratio.
If rented is more than half, the Growth Engine is the priority. Start with the owned channel closest to working but undeveloped. That’s usually email or referral.
The Growth Engine is step 5 of a seven-step system I’ve been refining for over 20 years. The full framework is in my new ebook, “7 Steps to Small Business Marketing Success.” Get it at dtm.world/7steps.
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