Picture the busiest partner in your network. She runs her own practice, carries her own client load, and gives your community whatever attention survives the week. Now ask one question: when she has something worth sharing with the network, does she know — instantly, without deliberating — exactly where to post it?
If the honest answer is "it depends," you don't have a communication strategy. You have a pile of tools.
Jono Bacon gave this failure mode a name: Communication Fetishism — pouring investment into communication platforms while starving the communication itself. What makes it so common is that it never feels like a mistake while it's happening. Every tool gets added for a defensible reason. Quick questions "need" WhatsApp. The wiki makes the network look organized. The portal makes everything feel official.
A founder I advise learned this with a network of 18 partners. Her stack: a Slack workspace with 14 channels, a Circle portal, a WhatsApp group, a private Facebook group, a biweekly email digest, a private podcast, and a Notion wiki nobody had touched since launch week. Seven platforms serving eighteen people — and combined engagement lower than single-channel communities half her size. Announcements landed in one channel while partners were watching another. Questions surfaced in the wrong place and died there. Three partners had muted every notification and surfaced only for the monthly call. Two hadn't opened Slack in six weeks.
Her explanation was the most honest sentence in the whole story: "I wanted it to feel professional." That instinct — signaling seriousness through tooling — is exactly the trap Bacon describes.
Every Channel Charges Rent
The Attention Tax Your Partners Never Agreed to Pay
Each platform you add bills your partners in attention. They have to remember it exists, log in, scan it, and decide whether anything deserves a response. For an independent consultant who is also selling, delivering, and invoicing, every extra login is friction nobody asked for — and friction compounds.
Watch how a multi-platform stack actually fails, failure mode by failure mode:
- Triple delivery. One piece of news arrives as a portal digest, a Slack notification, and an email from the founder — the same ecosystem demanding three separate actions in three separate formats.
- Split conversations. A question gets asked in the WhatsApp group and answered in a Slack channel. Neither half is searchable from the other. The next partner with the same question starts from zero.
- Reaction noise. 47 unread WhatsApp messages, almost all emoji and one-line applause. The one genuinely useful message sits three screens deep. The partner skims, surrenders, closes the app.
- Forgotten real estate. The portal gets visited only when a notification drags someone there. No notification, no traffic — indefinitely.
Add it up: fifteen minutes spread across four apps and almost nothing useful retained. Contrast that with one workspace holding three purposeful channels. The same partner opens a single app, catches up in five minutes, and has attention left over to actually contribute.
Multiplying channels doesn't multiply communication. It manufactures noise — and noise trains partners, week by week, to tune the whole network out.
"A beautiful portal nobody opens loses to an ugly Slack channel everybody reads. The conversation is the community. The container is overhead."
Bacon's deeper point is that founders mistake spending on platforms for spending on community. A polished portal photographs well in the onboarding deck and signals ambition. But the community was never going to live inside the portal. It lives in the exchanges between partners — and those exchanges flow to wherever friction is lowest, with total indifference to what you built.
The Room Is Not the Party
Content Does the Work Platforms Get Credit For
There's a second layer to Communication Fetishism, and it does more damage than channel sprawl: treating the platform launch as the finish line. It's the starting line. Standing up the tool is the easy, one-time part. Keeping it full of things worth reading is the hard part — and it never stops being your job.
A workspace that goes silent for three days reads as a ghost town. A portal still showing its launch-month articles reads as abandoned. A group where only the founder ever posts isn't a community — it's a broadcast with witnesses. Engagement doesn't come from the container. It comes from useful, timely, specific exchanges between people who can help each other.
Here's the uncomfortable ratio: most founders put 80% of their community energy into platforms and 20% into content. Invert it.
What does the 80% — the content side — actually look like in practice?
- A live client problem, posted raw. One partner describes a situation they're stuck on; three peers reply with what worked when they faced something similar. No training module reproduces that exchange.
- An unpolished methodology note from the founder. An observation from this week's research or a recent client conversation — not an article, a provocation that invites replies.
- A referral request specific enough to act on. "Client in financial services needs data governance expertise — anyone in the network cover that?" Thirty seconds to write, real money on the other end.
- A win with the mechanics attached. "Closed a $40K engagement that started with the diagnostic — here's how the conversation unfolded." Social proof and a repeatable lesson in one post.
Notice that none of these need custom infrastructure. Every one of them fits in a single channel. The value sits entirely in the message, never in the vessel.
So when engagement sags, resist the upgrade reflex. The fix is almost never a better platform. It's better prompts, better questions, and more concrete reasons for partners to show up this week.
The Four-Tool Ceiling
A Complete Stack for Any Network Under 100 Partners
Bacon's prescription — proven across everything from open-source projects to professional associations — is aggressively minimal. Four tools, one job each:
One async home. Slack or Microsoft Teams — never both. Cap it at three to five channels with unmistakable purposes: #general for network-wide announcements, #wins for partner victories, #referrals for cross-practice opportunities, #methodology for framework questions, and optionally #off-topic for the human bonding that makes the other channels work. A sixth channel for a sub-100 community is fragmentation, not organization.
One video tool. Zoom or Google Meet, used for everything — monthly calls, quarterly reviews, training, ad-hoc partner sessions. Don't dignify the quarterly review with a second platform because it feels weightier. Same tool, same link format, zero relearning.
One document library. Google Drive, Notion, or SharePoint. Playbooks, templates, methodology docs, case studies, and training materials in a single searchable place, organized by type rather than by date — nobody hunting for the pricing playbook should need to remember which month it shipped.
One rhythm. Monthly call on the same day every month, quarterly reviews on a fixed schedule, the annual summit announced a year out. Predictability collapses cognitive load: when the third Tuesday is always the call, attendance stops being a decision and becomes a habit.
That's the whole stack. The founder with 18 partners across seven platforms would have gotten more engagement from Slack, Zoom, Google Drive, and a recurring calendar invite. Her extra platforms weren't infrastructure — they were friction wearing a professional costume.
Earn the Right to Build
Three Thresholds Where Custom Tooling Stops Being Premature
None of this means custom platforms are wrong. They're early. There are real points where general-purpose tools genuinely break and purpose-built infrastructure pays for itself:
Past 100 partners. At that scale Slack stops coping: conversations outrun async readers, regional and specialist subgroups need their own rooms, and the network needs threaded discussion, durable search, and member profiles. A structured community platform finally returns more than it costs.
When diagnostic data becomes an asset. Once your partners have delivered enough assessments that the aggregate results carry strategic weight — benchmarking, research, methodology validation — capturing and normalizing that data deserves real architecture. That isn't a communication upgrade; it's a data platform, and it earns its build.
When matching becomes a bottleneck. If inbound diagnostic completions arrive faster than you can manually route clients to the right partner, automation is justified. Matching on specialization, geography, availability, and client need is genuinely hard engineering — and genuinely valuable.
Until you've crossed at least one of those lines, hold the line. The pull to build is strongest in founders from technology backgrounds, because building feels like motion. But community progress is measured in conversation, not in shipped infrastructure.
Communication Fetishism endures because it produces artifacts you can point at. A portal. A stack. A system. Your partners don't want artifacts. They want clients, answers, and a practice that grows — and a single channel carrying three genuinely useful messages a week delivers more of that than a flawless portal with no conversation inside it. Say more. Build less. The order matters.