• Social Media
  • Podcasting
  • Blogging & SEO
  • Pinterest

Good Season

Social Media Management & Content Strategy

  • Social Media
  • Podcasting
  • Blogging & SEO
  • Pinterest

June 2, 2026

Social Media vs Website: Why You Need to Own Your Audience

This is a post about social media vs website.

Quick Answer

Social media and a website serve very different purposes for your business. Social media gets you discovered while a website (along with an email list and other owned channels) is where you actually build something that no one can take away from you.

This post breaks down the difference between social media vs website, why relying on social media alone is a risky strategy and what to build instead.

The Problem With Building Everything on Social Media

Social media is brilliant for getting in front of new people. It is very useful and it would be silly to ignore it. But there is a fundamental problem with making it the centre of your entire content strategy: you do not own it.

Every account you build on Instagram, TikTok or any other platform exists at the pleasure of that platform. The algorithm decides who sees your content, what the rules are and they can change them at any time. And if your account gets restricted, hacked or the platform simply loses relevance (which has happened before and will happen again), everything you built there goes with it.

You are building on borrowed ground.

Social Media vs Website: What’s the Actual Difference?

The clearest way to think about it is this: social media is rented space. Your website is owned space.

When someone visits your website they are on your territory. You decide the experience, you capture their details if they sign up to your list, you own the relationship. No algorithm is sitting between you and your audience deciding whether they get to see what you’ve made. (Although, arguably, Google and Pinterest are to a point…but it’s very different).

On social media, even your most loyal followers might not see your posts. Instagram’s organic reach for business accounts is notoriously low. You can have 10,000 followers and reach 300 of them on a good day. That is not ownership, that is tenancy.

READ MORE: How to Batch Create Content: the Planning System That Actually Works

Social Media Is Good For

  • Getting discovered by new audiences
  • Building brand awareness, trust and personality
  • Driving traffic to your owned channels
  • Community building and real-time engagement

A Website and Owned Channels Are Good For

  • Establishing authority and credibility in your niche
  • Ranking on Google and bringing in search traffic long-term
  • Capturing leads and building a direct relationship with your audience
  • Converting visitors into clients or customers without an algorithm in the way

What ‘Owning Your Audience’ Actually Means

Owning your audience means having a direct line to the people who are interested in what you do; one that doesn’t depend on a third-party platform to function.

The most common forms of owned media are:

Your Website and Blog

A well-maintained blog with properly researched keywords gives you long-term search visibility that compounds over time. A post you write today could be bringing in traffic three years from now. A reel you post today has a 48-hour window before the algorithm moves on. That is not a criticism of reels as they serve a different purpose, but the contrast is stark.

READ MORE: Evergreen Content Examples and Why Your Business Needs More of It

Your Email List

This is the most underrated tool in most small business owners’ arsenals. An email list is yours. Every person on it chose to hear from you directly. There is no algorithm deciding whether they see your message. Open rates for email consistently outperform organic social media reach and the people on your list are already warm. They know who you are and they asked to stay in touch.

This is why you need an email list even if you have a healthy social media following. Followers can disappear overnight while your list is an asset you control. Just make sure you’re not one of those people who email several times a week!

Pinterest

Pinterest sits in an interesting middle ground. Some people see it as a social media platform but it’s actually more like a search engine, which means content there compounds rather than expires. A pin you created two years ago can still be driving traffic to your website today. For small businesses with blogs and evergreen content, Pinterest is one of the most underused tools available. And it’s not just to your website that it drives traffic! You can link pins to your social media profile, your podcast, your product page…

READ MORE: Pinterest vs Instagram: what’s the actual difference and which one do you need?

Your Podcast

Episodes are evergreen. People discover back catalogues. I stopped my podcast after 3 seasons about a year ago and it’s still getting streams and followers! A great episode from season one is just as findable as the one you released last week and podcast listeners are among the most loyal audiences in any medium. A podcast builds a relationship with your audience that a feed post simply cannot replicate.

READ MORE: How to Start a Podcast for Beginners: The Ultimate Guide for 2026

Why This Matters More Than Ever in 2026

Organic reach on social media has been declining for years. What worked in 2019 requires a paid budget behind it in 2026. Platforms are businesses and they want you to pay to reach the audience you already built for free. That dynamic is not going to reverse.

At the same time, AI is changing search behaviour in ways that make owned content more valuable, not less. Blog posts that answer questions, email lists with engaged subscribers and podcasts with loyal listeners are all assets that hold their value regardless of what Google or Meta decide to do next.

The businesses that are going to be in the strongest position in the next few years are the ones building both using social media as the discovery layer and owned channels as the foundation.

How to Start Building Something You Own

You don’t have to do all of this at once. In fact, trying to do everything at once is usually the fastest route to doing nothing well if you’re on your own.

Pick one owned channel and start there. If you write well, start a blog, if you like talking, start a podcast, if you have a list of people who already want to hear from you, start an email newsletter (although even if you haven’t got the list yet, you should probably build it!). The point is to start building something that doesn’t disappear when the algorithm changes or a platform dies (here’s looking at you, Vine).

Then use your social media for what it is actually good at: getting new people into your world and pointing them toward the thing you own.

Social media is the shop window; your website, your list, your podcast are the shops.

READ MORE: How to Repurpose Podcast Content and Turn One Episode into a Month of Social Media Posts

You Don’t Have to Choose Between Them

This is not an argument for abandoning Instagram or ignoring TikTok. Social media is a truly useful tool and for most small businesses it should absolutely be part of the strategy.

But it should be part of the strategy, not all of it. The most sustainable content strategies for small businesses use social media to drive traffic to things they own rather than treating the feed as the destination.

If your entire content effort is going into posts that expire in 48 hours, you are working harder than you need to. Build the thing that lasts alongside the thing that gets you discovered and you will be in a much stronger position six months from now.

FAQ

Is social media or a website more important for a small business?

Both serve different purposes and ideally you want both. Social media helps new people discover you. A website is where you establish credibility, capture leads and convert visitors into clients. If you had to choose one, a website gives you more long-term value because you own it and it compounds over time through search.

Why do I need an email list if I already have social media followers?

Because your social media followers are not really yours. The platform controls who sees your content and can change the rules at any time. Your email list is a direct line to people who chose to hear from you — no algorithm in the way. It is one of the few genuinely owned assets a small business has online.

What counts as owned media?

Owned media is any channel you control directly — your website, blog, email list and podcast. Pinterest sits in useful middle ground because content there compounds like search rather than expiring like social posts. Social media platforms are rented media because you are subject to their rules, algorithms and decisions.

How do I get people from social media onto my email list?

Give them a reason to. A useful freebie, a resource, a newsletter with content worth reading — something that makes signing up feel like a gain rather than a favour. Put the link in your bio, mention it in your content regularly and make the sign-up as simple as possible. One click, one field.

Can I use social media to drive traffic to my website?

Yes — and this is exactly how the two should work together. Use social media to get discovered and to share useful content that points back to your blog, your podcast or your email sign-up. Social media as the discovery layer, your owned channels as the destination. That is the most sustainable approach for a small business.

This was a post about social media vs website.

Posted In: Blogging & SEO, Content Marketing, Pinterest, Social Media · Tagged: content marketing, social media vs website, what is evergreen content

Get on the List

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Behind Good Season

About Me
Hi, I'm Liv. After 16 years in the music industry I started Good Season, a social media and content agency. This blog is where I share what I know about social media strategy, podcasting and content creation. Whether you're here to learn how to do it yourself or thinking about working together, you're in the right place.

Join the List

Reader Favorites

Essential Podcast Schedule Guide: How Often Should You Release Podcast Episodes?

How to Repurpose Podcast Content and Turn One Episode into a Month of Social Media Posts

How to Grow a Podcast Audience: The Ratings and Review Secret

This website contains affiliate links, meaning I may earn a small commission if you make a purchase through them at no extra cost to you.

This website is reader-supported and by using these links you help support my work and I truly appreciate it. Thank you for your support!

  • About
  • Contact Us
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions

CONNECT

Good Season is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to Amazon.co.uk.

itsgoodseason

☀️ Making content feel less like a chore and more like you
📱 Social media strategy • podcast • UGC
🎧 Ex-music industry
📍 UK-Brazil | Working Globally

I’m gonna be honest with you… Good Season has bee I’m gonna be honest with you…

Good Season has been live for two months and my analytics are pretty flat. My likes come mostly from me, my various accounts (am I right?! 😂) and my best friend. My new followers are mainly other SMMs starting their own accounts as well.

By the metrics many people look at, nothing is working. But I’m not most people and, like many of you, know better than to structure my strategy around those. 

Social media results almost never move in a straight line and they almost never arrive on your timeline. Someone sees your post today, forgets you exist, stumbles across another one three weeks later, saves it, and DMs you two months after that. That whole journey is completely invisible to you. All you ever see is the post that got four likes.

You may have heard that it takes Instagram three months to “understand” your content (I heard it through the grapevine). There’s no actual confirmation of that. Instagram actually evaluates accounts on a rolling monthly basis, constantly learning rather than building to one big moment. But the broader truth holds: building trust with an algorithm and with an audience takes longer than most people expect and longer than most people give it. (Especially since, for many reasons, I’m not yet doing everything I should be doing here! But that’s a future post)

The mistake I see all the time (which I’ve definitely been guilty of!) is treating each post as a standalone test with a verdict. It’s not. It’s one data point in a much longer story you can’t read yet.

What I’m actually watching: saves, profile visits, reach patterns across different formats, enquiries, clicks to my website…Not likes, not follower count. Those are vanity metrics and I have no business letting them determine whether this is working.

Two months is not enough data.

Ask me again at six.

In the meantime, I’ll be here posting my little carousels… sharing my views, the knowledge I’ve accrued from over 15 years of experience, analysing my data and adjusting where I see fit.
I unfollowed someone recently. She gave a lot of g I unfollowed someone recently. She gave a lot of good advice but EVERY SINGLE POST was a sales pitch! It’s like everything she said the one goal was to get a customer.

I had enough. And not because selling is wrong, of course it’s not! Everyone’s here to build something, everyone’s hustling. But because the every post felt like a vehicle for the sale rather than something actually given.

People notice that. Maybe not consciously but they feel it and, as a customer / member of an audience, it’s not great… 

The accounts I’ve seen build loyal, happy audiences aren’t the ones with a bunch of CTAs. They’re the ones who showed up week after week with something useful: free advice, honest opinions, real experience…and let the trust built organically.

When they mentioned their products and services, it didn’t feel like a sales pitch either. They mentioned it naturally. Whether it was a podcast episode or a YouTube video giving advice, they casually mentioned their course where you could learn more. Or their IG showed how they used her own product and how it helped their day to day. Get the gist?!

That’s the formula. It’s nothing new btw! Give first and consistently. The rest follows.

If you want to know more about giving free stuff as a business model, I’d recommend the book The Long Tail by Chris Anderson or the more updated version, The Longer Long Tail. Have you read either? 

#marketingtip 
#digitalmarketing 
#socialmediamarketing 
#socialmediamarketingtips
If you missed my previous post, I was talking abou If you missed my previous post, I was talking about podfade and how the majority of new podcasts disappear before episode 3. 

Today here’s the practical fix to avoid that.

The one thing that kept me sane and helped me stick to my podcast schedule was *PLANNING* (and that goes for SO many things in life and work tbh!).

Here’s the system:

* Decide your episode count before you start: pick a number that feels achievable given your actual life and commit to it before you do anything else.
* Plan every episode running order and make sure you have enough to say in each (if you don’t, just reduce the number of eps in a season, it’s totally fine) 
* Batch record everything. Not necessarily all episodes in the season but at least 3 or 4 to stay ahead. Recording and publishing weekly is the quickest way to burnout, a messy publishing schedule or both! This way you stay in control instead of constantly chasing the next episode.
* Be honest about your frequency. Weekly sounds doable until week four when you have a job, a life and zero recorded episodes left. Fortnightly and consistent beats weekly and chaotic every time. 
* Set your launch date and work backwards from it to make sure you’ll actually kickstart it! 

Planning doesn’t need to be a super fancy Notion with a million pages, it can literally be a simple spreadsheet where you can see all the information in one glance. 

The difference between podcasts that last and ones that disappear is almost always planning.

#podcastplanning 
#howtostartapodcast 
#podcasttips 
#podcastmanager 
#podcastproducer
There are 4.6 million podcasts in existence. Fewer There are 4.6 million podcasts in existence. Fewer than 500k are still active.

It’s called podfade and it happens to almost everyone. 

Studies vary on the exact figures tbh! Some say 47%, others closer to 90% but the pattern is the same regardless of which number you believe (and I’ve seen it one too many times...).

Most podcasts don’t survive the first few episodes. According to some of these studies, if you get to episode 21 you’re in the top 1% of all podcasts ever made. That’s not a high bar!

This is what happens when people start without a plan.

I’ve seen it again and again and not even just in podcasting!

One of the main reasons I’ve noticed is that people treat podcasting like social media: create when inspired, post when ready, work out the strategy at some point (socials also need a plan + strategy for longevity fyi!). We all know how that goes... that “some point” never comes.

I ran my own podcast while working a full time job and then added a masters degree course on top of it. So weekly episodes were definitely not possible for me after that...I remember trying to work out a schedule to fit everything in around my job and it was ridiculous. It’s not just an expression, there were literally not enough hours in a day!

So I switched to fortnightly, built a simple spreadsheet with every episode, every recording date, every guest, every running order and some episode notes.

Nothing fancy, just something I could easily glance at without having to click a million tabs. 

That spreadsheet kept my podcast alive and my nervous system in check. My friend kept saying “aaah it’s ok, if there’s no ep this week we’ll do it another time” but that’s what people do when they don’t have a plan. And if you want to grow your podcast like a business, you need to treat it as such. (cont. in comments)
I’ve seen so many people with such great content t I’ve seen so many people with such great content to share completely paralysed because they’re so worried about what others will say. Or they post about something important ONCE and never again because they don’t want to be annoying.

They are their own harshest, most attentive audience.

They agonise over captions, worry the post is too similar to one they did a month ago, wonder if posting three times this week is too much. They read it back seventeen times before hitting publish and then spend the next two hours regretting a word choice. In the meantime, their actual followers have scrolled past it, double tapped if they liked it and gone back to thinking about dinner (that is, if they’ve seen the post at all! Because, ya know…algo…)

The imaginary judgmental audience in your head is so much harsher than the real one. Most people are rooting for you or, at worst, completely indifferent. And if someone IS being awful…well, that’s what blocking is for (unless it’s constructive criticism that means well). 

Nobody is tracking your posting frequency or reading your archive for inconsistencies.

Hit post already! Tweak it next time if you want to, but post it. And let me know if you need an extra pair of eyes for reassurance.
Follow on Instagram

Copyright © 2026 Good Season · Theme by 17th Avenue

Manage Consent
To provide the best experiences, we use technologies like cookies to store and/or access device information. Consenting to these technologies will allow us to process data such as browsing behavior or unique IDs on this site. Not consenting or withdrawing consent, may adversely affect certain features and functions.
Functional Always active
The technical storage or access is strictly necessary for the legitimate purpose of enabling the use of a specific service explicitly requested by the subscriber or user, or for the sole purpose of carrying out the transmission of a communication over an electronic communications network.
Preferences
The technical storage or access is necessary for the legitimate purpose of storing preferences that are not requested by the subscriber or user.
Statistics
The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for statistical purposes. The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for anonymous statistical purposes. Without a subpoena, voluntary compliance on the part of your Internet Service Provider, or additional records from a third party, information stored or retrieved for this purpose alone cannot usually be used to identify you.
Marketing
The technical storage or access is required to create user profiles to send advertising, or to track the user on a website or across several websites for similar marketing purposes.
  • Manage options
  • Manage services
  • Manage {vendor_count} vendors
  • Read more about these purposes
View preferences
  • {title}
  • {title}
  • {title}