Splitting your content into different YouTube channels and Facebook groups can work, but it depends on how you’ve structured it
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That’s a smart question. Splitting your content into different YouTube channels and Facebook groups can work, but it depends on how you’ve structured it. Let me break down the pros and cons so you can see if it’s the best way forward:
✅ When splitting works well
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Different target audiences → If you have very different content types (example: one channel for business training, another for personal motivation), splitting helps avoid confusing viewers. Each audience knows exactly what they’re getting.
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Brand positioning → If you want separate brands (for example, your name as a leader vs. your team training group), separate channels/groups keep things clean.
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Algorithm clarity → YouTube and Facebook recommend content to people based on engagement. Focused channels/groups signal a clear niche, so the algorithm can push your videos to the right audience.
⚠️ When splitting backfires
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Too thinly spread → If your audience is small, splitting can weaken your momentum. One strong channel often grows faster than several small ones.
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Extra management work → Each channel/group needs posting, engagement, and consistency. If you don’t have the time to keep them all active, some will look “dead,” which hurts credibility.
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Confused followers → People may not know where to follow you if you have too many pages/groups. They could miss your best content.
💡 Best practice for views and growth
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Main hub channel – Have one main channel for your biggest, most valuable audience (likely your personal brand channel).
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Support channels/groups – Use extra groups/channels for niche or “deep-dive” content (e.g. private training, team coaching, product-specific info).
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Cross-promotion – Always link back to your main hub so viewers don’t get lost. Example: "For more, check out my main channel."
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Test first – Instead of splitting everything at once, test if a second channel actually grows faster than keeping all videos on one.
👉 So yes, it can work, but only if each channel/group has a clear purpose and you can keep them consistently active.
If your audience is still small, I’d suggest focusing on one main channel and one main Facebook group first, then branching out once you see traction.
Would you like me to help you design the structure (like which channel should be the hub, which ones should be niche, and how to link them together)?
You said:
ChatGPT said:
Perfect — since you already have 3 YouTube channels, you can absolutely structure them in a way where one becomes the “main hub” and the others support it. Here’s a step-by-step framework you can apply:
🎯 Step 1: Decide Your Main Channel
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Pick the channel that best represents your personal brand (your name, your face, your message).
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This channel should focus on broad, high-value content that attracts the most people (e.g. motivation, lifestyle, freedom, personal development, business principles).
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This is where you put your best, most polished content—the channel you want to grow the biggest.
🎯 Step 2: Define the Support Channels
Each support channel should serve a clear, narrower purpose. For example:
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Channel 2: Training/How-To Channel → step-by-step tutorials, team duplication training, or deeper educational content (less entertaining, more practical).
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Channel 3: Product/Opportunity Channel → videos about your products, testimonials, opportunity presentations, nutrition/fitness/product tips.
These channels are valuable but not broad enough to grow big on their own. They funnel people back to your main channel.
🎯 Step 3: Cross-Link All Channels
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In video descriptions → “For more training/motivation, check out my main channel here: [link]”
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In video intros/outros → Mention your main channel: “If you like this, I share more on my main channel—link below.”
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YouTube settings → Add your main channel as the featured channel on all support channels.
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Pinned comments → Always direct them back to the main hub.
🎯 Step 4: Content Flow
Think of it like a funnel:
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Main Channel = attracts the most people with broad, motivational, and personal brand content.
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Support Channels = go deeper, give detailed info, and send people back to the main.
Example flow:
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Main channel video → motivates people to change → points them to your support channel for a training → support channel points back to main channel for the “big picture” and community.
🎯 Step 5: Branding & Visuals
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Use consistent thumbnails, logos, and color schemes so people know all 3 belong to you.
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Main channel = your name (e.g. Rodney Manwaring).
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Support channels = descriptive (e.g. Rodney Manwaring Training / Rodney Manwaring Health).
👉 This way, you’re not splitting your energy randomly—you’re building one big channel with authority, while the other two act as satellites that push traffic back to it.
Would you like me to map out a content posting strategy (what types of videos go on each channel and how often to post) so it all works together smoothly?
You said:
ChatGPT said:
Exactly 👌 — that’s a smart way to look at it.
Let me line it up with your Facebook structure so it makes sense:
🔑 Main YouTube Channel = Your Preparation Hub
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Just like your Facebook preparation hub, this is your main brand channel.
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Content is broad and valuable: personal growth, lifestyle, motivation, freedom, leadership, mindset, your story.
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Goal = build trust, authority, and connection → people follow you because they like you.
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This is where you want the most views, subscribers, and engagement.
🎯 Support YouTube Channels = Curiosity Channels
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These are like your Facebook product and opportunity curiosity groups.
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Content is more specific and focused:
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Channel 2 → Curiosity for products (nutrition, fitness tips, wellness results, testimonials).
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Channel 3 → Curiosity for business opportunity (financial freedom, work-from-home tips, duplication systems, success stories).
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Goal = create curiosity and funnel people back to your main hub (and eventually into groups, DMs, or your business funnel).
🔄 How They Work Together
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Main channel (hub) attracts people broadly → they see your personality, values, and lifestyle.
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If they’re curious, you point them to:
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Product curiosity channel (if they’re more into health/weight loss).
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Business curiosity channel (if they’re more into income/freedom).
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From curiosity → you guide them to Facebook groups / WhatsApp chats / private calls → where real conversions happen.
✅ So yes, your main YouTube channel = your Preparation Hub.
✅ Your other YouTube channels = your Curiosity Channels (just like you use separate groups on Facebook).
Would you like me to sketch out a content map (example: what 3–4 video types to post on each channel weekly) so it’s crystal clear how they feed into each other?
You said:
ChatGPT said:
You’ve nailed it 🎯 — yes, your main YouTube channel can be used to create curiosity for your Facebook preparation hub.
Here’s how it lines up:
📌 Main YouTube Channel → Facebook Preparation Hub
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Your main YouTube channel is the magnet. People discover you because you’re giving broad, valuable content (motivation, freedom, lifestyle, mindset).
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Instead of pushing products or opportunity right away, you invite them to your Facebook preparation hub.
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Example in video:
“If you like this and want to go deeper with me, I’ve got a free community on Facebook where I share exclusive training and strategies — link is in the description.”
That way, YouTube is like the front door, and your Facebook hub is the living room where you build the relationship.
📌 Support YouTube Channels → Product & Opportunity Curiosity
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Your other channels still work as curiosity tools.
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If someone sees results videos or opportunity content there, you point them back to your main channel (to build trust) OR straight to the preparation hub (to learn more).
🔄 Flow Example
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Main YouTube channel → attracts attention with value → points to Facebook preparation hub.
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Facebook hub → builds relationship, warms them up → points to product curiosity group or opportunity curiosity group.
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From curiosity → you move them into private conversations / presentations / signups.
✅ So yes:
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Main YouTube = create curiosity and trust → lead them to your prep hub.
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Prep hub = relationship and training → then filter into products or business.
Do you want me to show you the exact wording (scripts) you can use in your YouTube videos and descriptions to smoothly guide viewers into your Facebook preparation hub without looking “salesy”?
You said:
ChatGPT said:
Got it ✅ — thanks for listing your channels, that helps a lot.
Right now you have:
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Rodney Manwaring Network Marketing Academy → training/skills for network marketers (education, duplication, leadership).
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Freedom Path → personal freedom, mindset, lifestyle, financial independence.
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Look & Feel Your Best → health, fitness, nutrition, products.
Those are support/niche channels (curiosity + training).
🏆 Your Main Channel
Above these, yes — you should have ONE main Rodney Manwaring channel that’s your personal brand hub.
This is the channel where:
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You share your story, your vision, your mission.
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You post content that’s broad and appeals to everyone (motivation, entrepreneurship, freedom, personal development, living life on your terms).
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You show who Rodney Manwaring is and why people should follow your journey.
Think of it like this:
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The “Academy” = your classroom.
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“Freedom Path” = your philosophy.
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“Look & Feel” = your product curiosity.
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Main Rodney Manwaring channel = YOU, the leader, the personality, the brand.
📛 What to Call It
Keep it simple, personal, and brandable — this is your umbrella brand.
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Rodney Manwaring (clean, authority-based).
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Or Rodney Manwaring Official (slightly more polished).
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Or Rodney Manwaring TV (if you want more of a show vibe).
But keep it just your name, because:
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It gives you flexibility (you’re not locked into just network marketing).
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People follow people, not companies.
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Later, if you build a bigger brand, your name is already recognized.
🔄 Flow With the Other Channels
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Main Rodney Manwaring channel → broad content → points to your Facebook preparation hub.
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From prep hub → people get guided into:
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Network Marketing Academy channel (if they want deep training).
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Freedom Path channel (if they want freedom mindset).
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Look & Feel channel (if they’re curious about health products).
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👉 So yes, you need a main channel above the 3.
Call it simply “Rodney Manwaring” — that’s your main hub and authority brand.
Would you like me to sketch a content posting structure (e.g. which videos belong on Rodney Manwaring main, which go on the other 3, and how often to post) so the whole system works like one big funnel?
You said:
ChatGPT said:
Here’s a strong description you can use for your main Rodney Manwaring YouTube channel. I’ve written it so it positions you as a leader, ties into your other channels, and points people to your Facebook preparation hub.
✍️ Suggested Channel Description
Welcome to my official YouTube channel – Rodney Manwaring.
I help people escape the limits of wage slavery and step into a life of freedom through personal growth, entrepreneurship, and faith-based principles. On this channel, you’ll find powerful insights on how to:
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Develop the mindset of success and freedom
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Build your own business using duplicatable systems
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Create health, wealth, and happiness for yourself and your family
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Live by true principles that align with prosperity and long-term growth
This is the hub of my content. From here, you can explore my other channels:
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Network Marketing Academy → practical skills, duplication strategies, and team training
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Freedom Path → mindset, lifestyle, and financial freedom inspiration
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Look & Feel Your Best → health, fitness, and nutrition to fuel your success
💡 If you’re ready to take the next step, join my private Facebook Preparation Hub, where I share exclusive training and deeper strategies to help you grow in both life and business. [Insert link]
Subscribe and let’s build the path to true freedom together.
Would you like me to also write you a shorter “about” bio (2–3 sentences) you can use for the YouTube “About” section so it’s punchy and easy to read on mobile?
You said:
ChatGPT said:
Yes 👍 a person can be invited into a Facebook group without being your friend first — but it depends on the type of group and how you do it:
🔹 If it’s a Public Group
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Anyone can find and join on their own.
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You can share the group link directly with them (messenger, email, WhatsApp, or even in a YouTube description).
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They don’t have to be your Facebook friend.
🔹 If it’s a Private Group
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You can still share the invite link (Facebook generates one inside your group settings).
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When they click the link, they can request to join and answer your membership questions.
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You don’t need to be their friend — the link itself bypasses that.
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If you want to manually add them by name, then yes, you usually need to be friends first so Facebook can match the person correctly.
✅ Best Practice for Network Marketing Prep Hubs
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Keep your Preparation Hub as a private group (so it feels exclusive).
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Share the invite link with prospects instead of trying to “add” them.
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This way, they choose to join → it creates more curiosity and commitment.
👉 Quick action: go to your Facebook group → click “Invite” → choose “Invite with link” → copy that link. Now you can send it anywhere (email, DM, YouTube, WhatsApp) without needing to friend them first.
Do you want me to show you the exact steps to set up the invite link and membership questions so it filters only the right people into your prep hub?
You said:
ChatGPT said:
Yes 🙌 it’s not only okay, it can actually be a strength — but you’ll want to do it with the right balance.
Here’s why and how:
✅ Why It Can Work
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Attracts the right people – If your brand is about freedom, personal development, and living by principles, spiritual/biblical teachings show people your foundation. The ones who resonate will trust you more deeply.
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Differentiates you – Most “prep hubs” are just business or product driven. Adding spiritual depth sets you apart as a leader who cares about more than just money.
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Creates alignment – The people who join your team or buy from you will already share values with you, making it easier to work together long-term.
⚠️ Things to Keep in Mind
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Respect diversity – Not everyone in your hub may share your exact faith background. Share biblical principles in a way that feels universal and uplifting (discipline, stewardship, honesty, freedom, service).
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Keep balance – Too much preaching may turn off those who only came for business/product knowledge. A mix (e.g. 70% business/health training, 30% spiritual/life lessons) usually works best.
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Tone – Present it as personal values and inspiration, not forcing belief. Example:
“One principle I live by, found in the Bible, is stewardship — taking care of what God gives us. This also applies in business and health.”
🔄 How to Use It in Your Prep Hub
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Weekly spiritual post or video → short, motivational, scripture-based.
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Tie it back to business/health/freedom → show how biblical principles connect to practical success.
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Create a unique identity → your hub isn’t just another business group; it’s a place for whole-life success (spiritual + financial + physical).
👉 So yes, it’s not only okay — it can make your hub stronger and more attractive to the right people, as long as you present it wisely.
Would you like me to draft a content posting mix (e.g. what percentage of posts should be business, product, spiritual, motivational) so your prep hub stays balanced and engaging?
You said:
ChatGPT said:
No, don’t delete them 🚫 — those 10 videos are actually a goldmine, even if you feel they’re not perfect. Let me explain:
🎥 Why You Should Keep Them
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Authenticity beats perfection → People in your prep hub want to see you, not a polished actor. Those videos show your voice, your values, your leadership.
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Foundation content → They become your “library” inside the hub. New people joining later will scroll and see your earlier teachings. That builds authority.
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Engagement seeds → Even if they didn’t get many views yet, they create history. Sometimes older content starts getting engagement later once your hub grows.
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Consistency proof → It shows you’ve been at this for a while — not just starting yesterday. That builds trust.
⚠️ When It Might Be Good to Delete
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If a video seriously misrepresents you now (e.g. poor messaging, something you don’t believe anymore).
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If there’s a technical issue (bad audio, accidental background noise that’s distracting, private info shown, etc.).
Otherwise, keep them.
💡 What You Can Do Instead of Deleting
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Re-share them: Post “From the archives” and reshare one with a new caption.
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Organize them: Pin a post saying “Start here 👇 My top teachings” and link the most important ones.
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Repurpose them: Edit clips and repost shorter highlights — this boosts engagement without making new content from scratch.
✅ Bottom line: Don’t delete those 10 videos. They’re valuable assets. Keep them as your foundation, and just build on top with new, better-structured content.
✅ Why Incorporate Ebooks into Existing Channels
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Leverage your existing audience – Your main and support channels already have people who trust you. Promoting ebooks there reaches an audience that’s already warmed up.
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Better algorithm performance – Posting on multiple small channels splits views and engagement. Keeping content on established channels helps YouTube push it to more people.
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Cross-promotion – You can make ebook content part of a bigger funnel:
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Main channel → personal brand/values → mention ebooks as resources.
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Network Marketing Academy → ebooks on sales, recruiting, personal development.
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Look & Feel Your Best → ebooks on health, fitness, nutrition.
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⚠️ When to Consider a Separate Ebook Channel
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If you have tons of ebook-focused content, like reading tips, audiobook excerpts, summaries, and reviews, a dedicated channel could make sense.
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If your ebooks cover a completely different niche that doesn’t fit your current audience, it may confuse viewers if mixed into existing channels.
💡 Best Approach for You
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Use your current channels as the home base.
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Create short videos for each ebook: highlights, tips, key lessons, or value-added snippets.
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Include links to download/purchase the ebooks in the description and pinned comment.
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Occasionally bundle videos into a playlist titled “Ebooks & Guides by Rodney Manwaring” so viewers can easily find all your written content.
This way, your ebooks enhance your channels instead of creating extra work, and your existing subscribers become potential readers naturally.
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