



Many years ago, businesses would find new customers by putting a print ad in the local newspaper — and that worked. Today, you need to use several marketing channels. There are more ways than ever to reach potential buyers — from Facebook posts to print mailers — and depending on whom you’re trying to reach, you’ll need to use different methods of communication.
The marketing channels you use now are a way for you to connect with your audience, promote products, build brand awareness, and foster customer relationships. Read on to learn more about marketing channels, including the 12 most popular channels, and how to choose which ones would benefit your business.
Marketing channels defined
A marketing channel is a pathway or medium through which your business communicates with your target audience and distributes products or services. These channels serve as a bridge between you and your customers that helps make sure your messages, brand values, and offerings reach the right people effectively.
Marketing channels guide potential customers through different stages of the buyer’s journey — from awareness and consideration to conversion and loyalty. Doing so helps you promote your products and ultimately build long-term relationships with repeat buyers.
There are two main types of marketing channels: digital and traditional. Digital marketing channels include online platforms such as social media, search engines, email, and content marketing. On the other hand, traditional marketing channels — such as television, radio, print media, and direct mail — are still relevant, especially for companies aiming to reach certain audiences. Most businesses today will use a mix of both traditional and digital channels to create an approach that maximizes who they reach.
The impact of marketing channels on business
Marketing channels can boost customer acquisition, brand awareness, and revenue growth because they help you reach the right people at the right time. The right combination of channels lets you connect with your target audience and engage with them effectively to drive conversions that contribute to long-term profitability.
One of the key ways marketing channels impact businesses is through customer acquisition. Channels such as social media, search engines, email marketing, and paid advertisements help you find potential customers at various touchpoints in their buying journey — and hopefully turn those into paying customers.
Brand awareness is another critical area where marketing channels make a difference. Traditional channels like television, radio, and print advertisements help establish strong brand recognition, while digital platforms like social media, influencer marketing, and content marketing help you build deeper relationships with your audience through consistent engagement and storytelling.
12 effective types of marketing channels
Your company will need to use multiple marketing channels to extend your reach. Below are 12 of the most effective types of marketing channels.
Email marketing
Email marketing remains one of the most cost-effective and high-ROI channels for businesses — even in the age of social media. Your company can create personalized email campaigns that reach your customers (or potential buyers) and encourage them to purchase. Email is a relatively simple way to nurture leads and retain your customers for years to come. Consider sending out regular newsletters or targeted promotions to keep your audience engaged with a strong ROI.
Social media marketing
Social media marketing is more important than ever. Platforms such as Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, and TikTok let you find potential audiences and engage with them in real-time. Depending on your desired customer base, you’ll focus on some social media platforms over others. For example, you might use TikTok to engage with Gen-Z and Facebook for older generations. If you want to reach busy professionals, on the other hand, LinkedIn might be a strong one to focus on.
Content marketing
Creating valuable and relevant content — such as blogs, guides, infographics, and videos — attracts and nurtures potential customers. Content marketing is all about creating this type of content that’s useful and educates your audience with the hopes of building trust and eventually guiding them to make a purchase. You might create a blog schedule and map out a series of articles that would be appealing to your customers to keep them coming back to your website again and again.
Search engine optimization (SEO)
SEO helps customers find your content on search engines like Google. Ranking higher in organic search results increases your brand credibility, attracts targeted traffic, and generates long-term benefits without the ongoing costs of paid ads. To help boost your SEO, you’ll want to create content that targets specific keywords your customers use — while making sure your website loads quickly and links to other sites effectively.

Join the Moment Marketer Community.
Looking to meet and learn from fellow Marketing professionals? Our #MomentMarketer Community is the place for you.
Influencer marketing
For some companies, partnering with an influencer lets you tap into a new customer base that’s likely going to be interested in your products. The influencer acts as a trusted voice that can sway their user base to purchase from you. Whether through social media collaborations, product reviews, or endorsements, influencer marketing provides brands with authentic and relatable exposure to their target audience.
Affiliate marketing
Similar to influencer marketing, some businesses might find it effective to partner with affiliates such as bloggers or other websites to promote their products in exchange for a commission. For example, an outdoors retailer might partner with an adventure blogger and include affiliate links in their latest pieces that link to your products — and the affiliate would get a cut of the sales. This approach reduces your upfront advertising costs while helping you tap into an interested audience.
Paid advertising (PPC)
Pay-per-click (PPC) advertising through Google Ads, social media ads, and display ads puts your website at the top of search results to reach highly targeted audiences quickly. This channel gives you instant visibility, which makes it good for short-term campaigns or lead generation.
Mobile marketing (SMS and apps)
Reach your customers where they’re almost always at: their phone. SMS marketing lets you send texts, and in-app notifications let you interact directly with your customers. These texts or notifications can help your business stay top-of-mind with timely promotions, reminders, and location-based targeting.
Video marketing
People love watching videos, so take advantage of that with platforms like YouTube, TikTok, and live streaming services. This medium is a great tool for storytelling to boost your engagement, and whether you choose short-form or long-form videos, they can capture people’s attention and boost conversion rates.
Webinars and live events
To help make yourself a thought leader in your industry, use webinars, virtual conferences, and live Q&A sessions. This is an opportunity to educate your audience, showcase your expertise, and engage potential customers in real-time.
Direct mail
Despite the dominance of digital marketing, physical mail campaigns — such as postcards, brochures, and catalogs — still hold value for particular audiences. Direct mail is particularly effective for localized marketing if you’re looking to expand in a particular geographic area or for brand loyalty programs.
Public relations (PR)
PR strategies — including press releases, media coverage, and thought leadership — help brands maintain a positive reputation. Getting your brand out into trusted publications makes you look more credible and gain new customers.
Why a multi-channel marketing strategy works best
A multi-channel marketing strategy — which involves using multiple platforms and touchpoints — helps you maximize your reach and get the best results. These are some of the reasons why you’ll want to use this approach as a part of your overall strategy:
- Expands your reach and visibility: Each marketing channel has its own unique audience and engagement style. Some customers prefer email updates, while others discover brands through social media. By using multiple channels, you’re ready to reach your customers where they are.
- Strengthens customer engagement: When your customers can interact with you in multiple places, that gives them more touchpoints with your brand. For example, a customer might see your social media ad, visit your website to read your blog, and then sign up for an email newsletter. That gives you more chances to convert this individual.
- Improves conversion by having channels work together: Social media and SEO are great ways to boost your brand awareness, while email marketing helps you keep long-time buyers. By using cross-channel marketing, you’re able to guide your buyers through the marketing funnel toward conversion and loyalty more effectively than relying on one touchpoint.
How to choose the best marketing channels for your business
Since you need multiple marketing channels, here are a few tips to help you pick the right ones:
- Start with your business goals: Begin by determining what you want to achieve. If you’re trying to increase brand awareness, you might start with social media, content marketing, and influencer partnerships. On the other hand, if you’re looking to generate new leads you might add in PPC and email marketing.
- Understand your target audience: Know where your customers are most active by learning about their demographics, online behavior, and current stage of the buyer’s journey. For example, if your target audience is young professionals, LinkedIn and email marketing may be effective. If you’re targeting Gen Z consumers, platforms like TikTok and Instagram might be better choices.
- Evaluate your budget: Not all channels cost the same. If you’re looking for low-cost ways to get started, you might try email or organic social media and SEO. A middle ground might include a full content marketing strategy and affiliate partnerships. Higher cost options include paid ads and print advertising — but those can have a high ROI in the right circumstances.
- See what your competitors are doing: See where your competitors are currently reaching customers and how they’re doing it. Look for any gaps or untapped opportunities where your brand can step in and stand out.
- Test: Experiment with different channels by running small test campaigns. Then analyze key metrics such as conversion rates, cost per acquisition, and engagement levels to see what works best. Testing helps you move toward data-driven marketing where you know what works based on real life interactions.
By choosing the right channels, you’re able to reach your customers and drive them toward conversion. To help you get started using data to determine what marketing channels are most effective, try Salesforce Marketing Cloud. This tool will help you make data-driven decisions about your marketing strategy to help you reach your customers effectively. Learn more about Marketing Cloud.
Marketing Channels FAQs
Marketing channels are the various pathways or methods businesses use to communicate with their target audience and deliver their products or services to customers.
Main types include digital channels (e.g., social media, email, search engines, websites) and traditional channels (e.g., print, TV, radio, direct mail, outdoor advertising).
Selecting the right channels ensures that marketing messages reach the target audience effectively, maximizing engagement, optimizing spend, and achieving marketing objectives.
Businesses choose channels based on their target audience's demographics and behaviors, marketing budget, industry trends, competitive landscape, and overall marketing goals.
Owned channels are controlled by the business (website, blog); paid channels are where businesses pay for placement (ads); and earned channels are achieved through organic exposure (PR, word-of-mouth).
By integrating channels for a consistent customer experience, analyzing performance data for each channel, continuously testing new approaches, and adapting to audience preferences.