Every few months, a new platform starts making noise—Blue Sky, Mastodon, Threads, you name it. The headlines spark curiosity. The algorithms on Facebook or Instagram feel harder to crack. You notice a few artists or collectors announcing they’re “done” with Meta platforms and moving on.
And naturally, you start to wonder: Am I falling behind by not jumping ship? Should I be putting energy into building a presence somewhere new?
These are smart questions. But smart decisions come from data, not just anecdotes. Before you stretch yourself thin trying to gain traction in yet another social media sandbox, it’s worth zooming out and running a simple test: Is the move worth the time, effort, and distraction cost?
Step One: Don’t Panic Over Anecdotes
One artist says they’re getting great engagement on Blue Sky. Another announces they’re leaving Facebook “forever.” You see a few of your followers saying, “Find me on Threads!” It feels like a wave.
But it’s often not.
Social platforms amplify trends in pockets. People like to make bold declarations online, especially about leaving platforms—but their behavior doesn’t always match their words. Some come back in a week. Many never leave in the first place.
So before changing your strategy, get grounded in what your own numbers are telling you.
Step Two: Use Metrics That Matter
If you’re running Facebook or Instagram ads (or posting regularly), the most important question is: Are they still working?
Here are a few data points worth monitoring:
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Cost per click (CPC): Is it increasing over time? By how much?
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Cost per conversion (if you’re running ads tied to sign-ups or sales): Is it stable? Improving? Getting worse?
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Sales attributed to Meta traffic: Are people who discover you there actually buying?
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Email list growth: How many new subscribers are coming in from social media sources?
In our case, even after years of running campaigns, we’ve actually seen our cost per conversion drop over the past six months. That means for the same ad spend, we’re reaching more collectors and bringing in more newsletter subscribers. Anecdotally, we’ve seen no slowdown in results—and our most valuable traffic still comes from Meta platforms.
Unless your data is pointing clearly to declining results, hold steady.
Step Three: Know Where Your Collectors Actually Spend Time
As tempting as it is to chase the “next big thing,” you want to be where your buyers are.
Facebook still has over 3 billion users. Instagram hovers around 2 billion. Compare that to even an impressive-sounding figure like 30 million users on Blue Sky, and it becomes clear: the bulk of your potential market still lives on the major platforms.
And remember, social media is about connection. You don’t just need a platform—you need your people to be on that platform too. Until there’s a true exodus (and your metrics confirm it), it’s safer to stay where your audience already is.
Step Four: Protect Your Core Asset—Your Email List
Social platforms come and go. You don’t own your followers. You don’t control the algorithm. What you do own is your email list.
In a chaotic platform environment, your list becomes the anchor. If someone leaves Facebook but they’re on your list, you can still reach them.
Investing in list growth should always take priority over chasing a shiny new platform.
Build opt-ins into your social posts. Offer incentives to sign up (like a behind-the-scenes look at your process, or early access to new work). Make your list feel like a privilege—not just a broadcast tool.
Step Five: When Should You Experiment?
You don’t need to ignore new platforms entirely. Here’s a quick decision filter I recommend:
✅ Try a new platform if:
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Your main platform metrics are consistently declining over a 6–12 month window.
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Your core audience has already moved (and you can prove it via survey, analytics, or lost traffic).
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You have extra bandwidth to test without taking energy away from proven efforts.
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You treat it as R&D—a limited-time experiment with defined goals.
❌ Avoid chasing a new platform if:
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Your current marketing channels are still performing.
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You’re only reacting to buzz or FOMO.
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You haven’t built a strong base (especially an email list) on your current platform.
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You’re still figuring out how to use the platform you’re on.
Final Thought: Stick with What Works—Until It Doesn’t
Marketing always rewards focus and consistency. When everyone else is zigzagging to the next platform, there’s opportunity in staying put and mastering the one you’re on.
Watch your numbers. Trust your data. Build your list. And remember: the tools will always change. What matters most is that you stay connected with the people who care about your work—and that doesn’t require being everywhere at once.
Are you experimenting with a new platform right now? What’s working—or not working—for you? Let’s compare notes.