Marketing Canvas - Channels

About the Marketing Canvas Method

This article covers dimension 430 — Channels, part of the Journey meta-category. The Marketing Canvas Method structures marketing strategy across 24 dimensions and 9 strategic archetypes.
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In a nutshell

Channels (dimension 430) scores how customers interact with your brand — physical and digital, owned and third-party — and whether those interactions form a seamless, coherent experience across all of them.

The canonical distinction that defines this dimension: most companies have channels. Few have orchestrated channels. The score measures orchestration, not presence.

A brand with a website, a mobile app, a social media presence, a phone line, and a field team is not necessarily scoring well on dimension 430. The question is whether those channels work together without silos — whether a customer who starts research on one channel can complete the journey seamlessly on another, and whether the company can track and serve that customer across the transition.

In the Marketing Canvas, Channels sits within the Journey meta-category alongside Moments (410), Experience (420), and Magic (440). It is the delivery infrastructure — the system that ensures every moment designed in 410 is actually accessible to the customer in the format that serves them best.

Presence vs. orchestration: the canonical distinction

Every company has channels. Most companies have more channels than they have resources to maintain well. The channel list is not the dimension. The orchestration of that list is.

The test is a single customer journey across multiple channels. A customer who discovers Green Clean through a health parenting blog, visits the website to research the formula, emails a question about ingredient safety, books a service via the app, receives the Family Health Report by email, and calls to ask about a recurring subscription — has touched five channels. If the experience is continuous (the phone call picks up where the booking left off; the subscription question doesn't require re-explaining the service model), the channels are orchestrated. If each channel treats the customer as a stranger, the channels exist but are not orchestrated.

The canonical four properties that define orchestrated channels:

Context (431) — can customers use the most relevant channel for their specific situation at each moment? A customer researching a service in the evening needs findable, credible content on the web. A customer mid-service with a question needs an immediate human response. A customer reviewing their health report at midnight needs a digital self-service interface. The same channel cannot serve all three moments well.

Interaction quality (432) — do channels provide clear, personalised, seamless interactions? Quality here means the interaction is adapted to the customer's identity and context — not generic, not one-size-fits-all, not a copy-paste template.

Information consistency (433) — is data consistent and real-time across channels? A customer who updates their household profile in the app should not have to re-state it on the phone. A booking made on the website should be visible to the cleaner on their route app. Inconsistency in data across channels is the most common channel orchestration failure — and the most invisible to the teams building the channels, who each see only their own system.

Orchestration (434) — are channels connected so customers can navigate seamlessly between them with no silos? This is the composite test: does the company have a joined-up view of the customer's journey, or does each channel operate as a separate interaction with no shared memory?

Digital, physical, and moment-driven channel design

The channel strategy question is not "should we be digital or physical?" Every customer journey involves both. The question is: which channel serves each moment best?

A purely digital company that ignores physical moments — the cleaner arriving at the door, the unboxing experience, the in-person explanation of a result — misses the touchpoints where trust is built or lost at the highest intensity. Physical moments carry emotional weight that digital channels cannot replicate.

A traditional service business that treats digital as a secondary channel — the website as an online brochure, the email as a support afterthought — loses the pre-purchase research phase entirely. Customers research digitally before they commit physically. Winning the digital research moment is often what determines whether the physical visit ever happens.

The best channel strategies design each moment to use the channel that serves the customer best:

  • The research moment needs findable, credible digital content

  • The booking moment needs a frictionless digital transaction

  • The service delivery moment needs a reliable physical interaction

  • The result delivery moment needs a clear digital report with optional human follow-up

  • The renewal moment needs a proactive, low-friction digital prompt

Designing channels from moments is the inversion of the default approach (designing moments around the channels that already exist). The default produces a channel strategy. The inversion produces an orchestrated journey.

Channels in the Marketing Canvas

The canonical question

Can customers interact with your brand through the channels they prefer, with a seamless experience across all of them?

Channels appears in the Vital 8 of two archetypes — in notably different roles:

Secondary Brake for A1 (Disruptive Newcomer): A disruptor's survival depends on being noticed and understood immediately. Features and positioning may be compelling, but if the channels through which the target customer discovers and evaluates the brand are wrong or incomplete, the disruption never reaches beyond the early-adopter bubble. Channel failure for A1 is quiet: the product is ready, the message is sharp, but the distribution infrastructure isn't present where the customers are. A Secondary Brake score means the brake must reach ≥+1 before channel failure begins to limit the reach of the disruption.

Secondary Accelerator for A5 (Pivot Pioneer): A company executing a strategic pivot may find that its existing channels were optimised for the old positioning and the old customer segment. The new direction — new JTBD, new lead segment, new positioning — may require new channels entirely. Legacy channels that served the old strategy are not neutral for the pivot; they actively signal the old identity to customers encountering the brand for the first time in the new context. For A5, channel strategy is part of the repositioning work, not a downstream execution decision.

A note on Fatal Brakes: Channels does not appear as a Fatal Brake in any archetype. But channel failure can block the dimensions that are Fatal. If Acquisition (610) is a Fatal Brake and channel orchestration failures are increasing CAC, the channel problem is a Fatal Brake problem in disguise. If Experience (420) is a Fatal Brake and channel inconsistency is producing the experience variance, the same applies. Channels is the infrastructure. Infrastructure failures propagate upward.

Statements for self-assessment

Rate your agreement on a scale from −3 (completely disagree) to +3 (completely agree). There is no zero — the Marketing Canvas forces a directional position on every dimension.

  1. Your customers can use the most relevant channel in function of their specific context at each moment.

  2. Your channels are physical and digital — you provide clear, personalised, and seamless interactions, anywhere, anytime.

  3. Information captured or shared in your channels is consistent, real-time, personalised, useful, and accurate.

  4. You have orchestrated all your channels — there is no silo between them, and customers can navigate seamlessly through them at each moment.

  5. You optimise the social and environmental impact of your physical and digital channels.

(Dimensions 431–434 + 435 in the Marketing Canvas scoring system)

Note on Detailed Track scoring: if averaging sub-question scores produces a mathematical zero, the method rounds to −1. A split score means the dimension is not clearly helping your goal — and "not clearly helping" requires the same investigation as "hurting."

Interpreting your scores

Negative scores (−1 to −3): Channels operate in silos. Customers who cross channel boundaries encounter a brand that does not recognise them. Orchestration is absent or incomplete. The likely downstream effect: acquisition costs are higher than they need to be (research-to-booking friction), experience scores are lower than designed (channel handoff failures), and engagement data is fragmented (no joined-up view of customer behaviour).

Positive scores (+1 to +3): Channels are orchestrated. Customers move between channels without friction. Data is consistent and real-time across the full journey. Each channel is designed for the specific moment it serves. The company can track the customer journey across touchpoints and improve each channel based on measured performance.

Case study: Green Clean

Green Clean is a fictional eco-friendly residential cleaning service used as the recurring worked example throughout the Marketing Canvas Method. Green Clean sells a residential service — cleaners visit customer homes — not packaged products. Their relevant channels are: website, booking flow, email, in-home service visit, Family Health Report (digital delivery), phone/chat support, and referral mechanics.

Score: −2 to −1 (Weak) Green Clean's channels are independent systems that do not share data or context. The website takes booking requests but is not connected to the cleaner's scheduling app — bookings are manually transferred by the founder. The Family Health Report is generated as a PDF by one team member and emailed by another, introducing a 24–72 hour delay that varies unpredictably. When a customer calls with a question about their report, the support team does not have access to the customer's service history or their specific report data — every call starts from scratch. A customer who books through the website and follows up by email is treated as two separate interactions. No channel knows what the others have communicated. The silos are invisible to the teams but immediately apparent to any customer who crosses a channel boundary.

Score: +1 to +2 (Developing) Green Clean has connected the booking system to the cleaner's route app — scheduling is now automated. The Family Health Report is generated and emailed automatically within 6 hours of service completion. A customer CRM has been introduced: all booking, service, and communication history is accessible to the support team when a customer calls. But the research channel (website) still operates independently — prospects who spend time researching on the website and then book are not identified as the same person until after the booking is made, meaning the website-to-booking conversion cannot be tracked and the research journey cannot be improved with data. The referral mechanic is manual — the team asks existing customers to refer but has no digital system to track referrals or reward them efficiently. Orchestration has improved significantly but is not yet complete.

Score: +2 to +3 (Strong) Green Clean's channels are fully orchestrated around the customer journey, not around internal team structures. The website research behaviour is tracked — customers who read the formula science page before booking convert at a higher rate, so that content is featured prominently in the booking flow. Booking, service, health report, follow-up communication, and subscription renewal are all automated and connected through a single customer record. Support staff see full service history, report data, and communication history before responding to any contact. The referral mechanic is digital — existing customers receive a referral link after every service and can track whether their referrals booked. Channel performance is measured per moment: website conversion rate, booking completion rate, Health Report open rate, support resolution time, referral conversion rate. Each metric corresponds to a specific channel at a specific journey stage. The orchestration is visible in the data: channel handoffs produce no drop-off in conversion that would indicate a silo.

Connected dimensions

Channels does not operate in isolation. Four dimensions connect most directly:

  • 240 — Visual Identity: Channels must carry visual identity consistently. A customer encountering the brand on Instagram, the website, the booking confirmation email, and the physical cleaner's uniform should see a coherent identity at every touchpoint. Channel proliferation without visual governance produces brand fragmentation.

  • 410 — Moments: Channels serve specific moments. The channel strategy is only as good as the moments map underneath it. Without knowing which moments require which types of interaction, channel decisions are made by habit (we've always had a phone line) rather than by design (this moment requires human contact).

  • 420 — Experience: Experience quality depends on channel execution. Channel inconsistency is one of the most common causes of experience variance — customers receive different responses from different channels because the channels are not coordinated. A +2 on Experience requires channel orchestration as a prerequisite.

  • 530 — Media: Media and channels overlap in digital contexts. Paid media, social media, email, and owned content all function as channels at the research and awareness stages. The boundary between Media (530) and Channels (430) is context: Media drives reach and awareness; Channels deliver the interaction and transaction. They share infrastructure and must be planned together.

Conclusion

Channels is the infrastructure dimension of the Journey meta-category. It does not generate the value proposition, design the experience, or create the magic. It delivers all of those things to the customer — or fails to.

The distinction that matters for scoring is not how many channels the brand has. It is whether those channels form a coherent system. A well-orchestrated system of three channels outscores a fragmented system of eight. The customer's perspective is binary: either the journey is seamless across channels, or it is not.

Channel failure is rarely dramatic. It does not produce a single terrible interaction. It produces accumulating friction — the customer who has to re-explain their situation to every channel they touch, the research that doesn't convert because the booking flow is on a different system, the report that arrives three days late because two teams aren't connected. Each incident is minor. The cumulative effect on acquisition, experience, and retention is material.

Sources

  1. Forrester Research, "The State of Omnichannel Commerce", Forrester, 2024 — forrester.com

  2. McKinsey & Company, "The value of getting personalisation right — or wrong — is multiplying", McKinsey, 2021 — mckinsey.com

  3. Marketing Canvas Method, Appendix E — Dimension 430: Channels, Laurent Bouty, 2026

About this dimension

Dimension 430 — Channels is part of the Journey meta-category (400) in the Marketing Canvas Method. The Journey meta-category contains four dimensions: Moments (410), Experience (420), Channels (430), and Magic (440).

The Marketing Canvas Method is a complete marketing strategy framework built around 6 meta-categories, 24 dimensions, and 9 strategic archetypes. Learn more at marketingcanvas.net or in the book Marketing Strategy, Programmed by Laurent Bouty.

Marketing Canvas Method - Journey - Channels by Laurent Bouty

Laurent Bouty

A C-Level international Marketing and Strategy professional, Laurent Bouty brings his 20 years of international experience in Marketing, Sales, Strategy and Leadership. He has a broad Marketing experience (from Marketing Strategy to Communication) including latest trends like analytics, social networks and mobile gained in Telecommunication, Advertising and Financial sector. Laurent has a strong marketing execution orientation in highly complex industries through team development and best practices implementation.

As speaker and Academic Director, Laurent is sharing his enthusiasm and passion for Marketing topic. He also developed the Marketing Canvas as a simple yet efficient tool for building your Marketing Strategy.

As trainer and Strategic Marketing Expert at Virtuology Academy, Laurent is helping brands to benefit from entrepreneurial tools, models and tactics.

https://laurentbouty.com
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