Six lessons from two years without social media
What I've learned, what I'm doing instead and what happened to my business
💌 Last week I answered questions about marketing, Substack, getting started in business and more in the first mini-mastermind for paid subscribers and earlier this week we kicked off October’s Accountability Club. As I’m nearing my one-year anniversary on Substack, I’ll be sharing more about my Substack strategy with paid subscribers next week (and also have a bonus-post planned on going paid). I’d love to have you on board as a paid subscriber ✨Upgrade your subscription to paid to receive the posts.
This month marks two years since I left Instagram and stopped using it to market my business. I was so ready to leave—yet hadn’t actually planned to stay away more than a couple of weeks.
Looking back, it’s been one of the best business decisions I’ve ever made. Leaving social media was the first time I really started embracing marketing my business my way. It was the moment when I gave myself permission to completely follow what felt right to me—a strategy that I’ve been using ever since.
In this post, I share 6 lessons I’ve learned from 2 years without social media. I’d love to hear how you use social media in your business, how you feel about it and what, if anything, you’d want to change.
📌And, if this is a topic you’re interested in: check out my free email series on moving your business away from social media, or join the waitlist for my group programme Marketing without social media to get my support in making lasting changes.
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1. I don’t need social media in order to run a thriving online business
Now that I’m not longer on social media, I am 100% marketing my business in a way that feels good to me. The kind of marketing I do now, largely through my Substack newsletter, community and outreach, fits me much better personally.
I’m not an “always on”-person, and being rewarded for how much time I spent on a platform makes me feel rebellious and tired and slightly icky.
I feel lighter being off social media. Mainly, though, I feel lighter marketing in a way that fits me.
I’m a writer, someone who thinks on paper and values deeper connections. I’m good at creating workshops and mini-courses. I’m not someone who enjoys the fast, the visual and the ephemeral. Leaving Instagram has cleared up so much time in my business and even more mental space in my brain. I no longer feel that niggle in the back of my mind telling me “I haven’t posted yet today/this week, I need to do it!”. I feel lighter being off social media. Mainly, though, I feel lighter marketing in a way that fits me. I believe that it is that, how I’ve found a way of marketing that feels good to and for me, that has made my business thrive the way it does right now.
Full transparency: I was making barely any sales through social media—I never sold a single 1:1 mentoring call through Instagram, although sharing about the two small business guides I launched in 2021 did help me get a bunch of new newsletter subscribers, and a dozen sales. Making so few sales through social media made it easier for me to leave, perhaps.
At the same time, I did not have the security of a large community anywhere—including social media—to provide a safety net.
2. I didn’t need a big following elsewhere in order to leave social media
At the time I left social media, in October 2021, I was still finding my feet in business, which showed in the number of clients I worked with, the number of followers I had on social media and the number of subscribers to my newsletter.
I don’t have a record of how many newsletter subscribers I had when I left social media in October 2021, but I do know that in January 2022 I had 135. So in October 2021, I probably had a little less than that—more than 100, I think, but certainly not more than 135 subscribers.
I blogged semi-regularly on my website as well: Wordpress tells me that in October 2021 I had 250 visitors to my website, which was more than in September and November of that year, probably because I had just launched my business boundaries that feel good guide.
In the summer of 2021 I got really into Pinterest—I’d taken a course that helped me set up Pinterest and landed on a strategy that worked for me at the time. This showed: from 607 impressions in July 2021 to 2930 in October 2021. Of these impressions, the outbound clicks numbered 20 in October 2021 and engagement—saves, outbound clicks, Pin clicks—was 60 in October 2021.
These numbers mean very little by themselves of course. They do show that I didn’t have a huge following elsewhere.So often you hear about business owners leaving social media and feeling able to do so because they have a huge newsletter list, or a podcast, or a YouTube channel that does well.
I currently have over 1200 newsletter subscribers, 1143 website visitors in September 2023 and 2352 impressions on Pinterest over this past month, with an engagement of 985 (full disclosure: I contribute any of my current Pinterest success to my wonderful VA Laura who pins my blog posts for me).
Bottom line: as little or as much as these numbers mean, I didn’t have a big audience anywhere when I left social media in 2021. And I was able to grow my community substantially after leaving, using the kind of marketing that takes less time, is aligned with me and my needs and makes me feel good.
3. It’s all about interconnection
In the first years of my business any marketing strategy I had basically consisted of doing as much as possible in what felt like a very haphazard way—even if I was following a plan or strategy devised by someone else. I essentially kept throwing things at the wall to see what would stick.
Early in 2021 I devised a much more interconnected way of marketing. I stopped marketing for just one channel or platform, got really clear about what each channel did and what my aim was, and all my marketing led back to a hub, my website. Visualizing this for myself made everything easier, more efficient and more manageable to me.
I’ve written more about my marketing ecosystem here, and I frequently teach others to devise their own as well. If you’d like to set up a marketing ecosystem that feels good and aligned, and is efficient and effective, my new group programme is just the thing for you. It’s running in the Spring of 2024 and you can now waitlist for it right here.
Since my last update I created a waitlist for Marketing without social media. I’ve also been working on the slides and workbook for the first workshop (see the sneak peak below).
In addition to office hours, a gentle private (off social media!) community and bonuses, the programme includes four monthly workshops that are pre-recorded so you can watch them whenever you want—and as many times as you want. This first workshop is all about finding your bearings: we’ll be taking a careful look at how you’re currently marketing your business, practically exploring how your the different channels or platforms fit together, and diving into how your marketing currently feels and how it ties in with your (business) values.
This workshop lays the foundation for the entire programme, and includes a workbook which templates and worksheets.
4. I attract the people I do because I’m not on social media
I firmly believe that our business needs to serve our own needs first. For me, leaving social media was something I really needed to do, for my own mental health and joy in my business. But it’s turned out to do more than just that.
I’ve started to attract the (lovely) clients and subscribers I do because I’ve chosen not to be on social media. Not only are these frequently people who want to spend less time on social media in their business themselves—or even quit it altogether—but they are also the kind of people who struggle with the fast pace that social media requires.
Often, they, like me, are the kinds of people who appreciate the slower and gentler, the deeper and more sustainable pace of marketing off social media.
Having this happen feels nothing less than magic to me: by taking a step that is so aligned with who I am and how I want my business to run, I’m attracting people who feel similarly aligned and right for me and what I have to offer.
5. I feel so much less pressure now
Social media never felt quite right for me and my business and I felt increasing pressure (and annoyance) at having to show up, having to keep up with changes and most of all, having to keep feeding the algorithm. Posting less worked for me for a while, but knowing that posting less also meant that what I did post was shown less than if I were to post more often just added to my frustration.
I also feel less pressure to do the kinds of things that other people are doing. Of course I would sometimes also be inspired by what other people were sharing, but there were times when these posts brought up feelings of comparison in me. I know that I do my best work when I keep my eyes on my own page, and being distracted from that felt off.
6. I’m using other ways of keeping in touch with people
Even before leaving social media I would joke that I essentially live under a rock. I haven’t kept up with the news for years as I realised that doing so was just bad for my mental health.
The only downside to leaving social media was that I no longer saw updates from people that I did want to stay in touch with. I considered creating a new, private, account that I could use only to follow those people, but never got around to doing so. Instead, I explicitly reach out to people that I want to connect with. I send old-fashioned emails asking people how they’re doing and set up virtual tea dates. I respond more frequently to small business newsletters that I’m subscribed to. I am more explicit in sharing my appreciation for the work other people do.
Of course, all of this is not black-and-white. There is no reason for any of you reading this to leave social media. Perhaps that’s a seventh lesson I’ve learned over the past two years: sometimes people feel like it’s somehow objectively better to leave social media. But marketing on social media is not morally right or wrong. It is only right or wrong for you, for your life and your business.
Leaving social media altogether isn’t the only option. You can do so gradually, and not all at once. You can use social media differently than you are now, for instance more as a shopwindow rather than a constant stream of updates.
What matters is what works for you and cultivating more than one marketing channel (which is a key part of what we’ll be working on in Marketing without social media too).
Take a moment to think or journal about these questions:
How do you currently feel about social media?
What is the role of social media in your current marketing? What is your aim in using it?
Which non-social media forms of marketing would you like to experiment with?
I’d love to know your thoughts about marketing on social media. What works for you and what doesn’t? What do you enjoy about social media, and what do you want to change?
If you’re new to Substack: you can comment by clicking the button below—you’ll be prompted to set up an account which requires very little personal info and takes only one minute of your time.
a book | Zadie Smith’s The Fraud is in many ways different from her earlier work, but, like her earlier novels, just a really good, intelligent read (affiliate link).
another book | I tore through Fellowship Point is a few days: it’s big, it’s expansive, it’s filled with intelligent and strong-headed female characters and I loved it (affiliate link).
a Substack post | I enjoyed reading
’s birthday resolutions—including ‘accepting that not everything can stay the same’ and ‘learn how to pause properly’.an interview | Lise Lønsmann answered my questions on how she runs a slow, gentle and profitable business over on my blog. She talks about believing in imperfection and feeling a call to slow down.
a podcast | a while back I chatted to
about my decision to leave social media, how I’ve been using Substack and more. It was a lovely chat which you can now listen to.What’s on your lists of favourites this month? What did you read, see, hear, drink, eat, observe that made your day?
September mini-mastermind: answering your questions on Substack, marketing, starting a business and more
October’s Accountability Club: come celebrate and share!
Have a really good, calm rest of your week! I’m watching the leaves turn on the trees outside my study window and enjoying the show. 💌 Paid subscribers will get a post on my Substack strategy in their inbox next week, which includes tips that are useful for all kinds of newsletter, on and off Substack.
I’ll be back with a regular newsletter towards the end of the month.
Until next time xx
Let’s work together
If you’re craving a slower, gentler and more profitable business, I’d love to support you. Over the past year, I’ve worked with female small business owners, freelancers and artists to restructure their days and week; create big picture plans; launch their Substack; brainstorm and plan new products and more.
Most of all, I help them feel a sense of clarity and empowerment in choosing to do business differently.
Send me a message or check out my website for ways of working together: from one-off sessions to flexible packages. I’d love to be by your side this year.
I still use social media a lot, but not as much for marketing. Facebook I only use to participate in groups that I'm a member of. Instagram I use to promote my work and I even got a Substack subscriber through it the other day! I also use IG to find art events, associations, and opportunities because once it learns your location you start to see relevant things. I also use it to look at photo and travel locations and to find business resources. Pinterest is one I really want to return to but haven't been able to find the time. Maybe now that my Substack is set up.
I so enjoy reading your insights and experiences of marketing your business off social media, they're so valuable!
I recently changed up my Instagram so I have a private feed that keeps me updated with family and friends (although I rarely check in on it) and I've set up a new 'business' account with the view to only follow and interact with people and other businesses very intentionally. I rarely use it though if I'm honest! I still don't know what to write or post that isn't just for the sake of it but it feels reassuring to have in 'the background'.
Whilst that's very much much in the background, in trying to take a more focused approach to Substack but I'm still figuring that out for myself. Substack feels so much lighter and more enjoyable plus it's definitely more aligned with my values so I'm looking forward to seeing where it goes!