What mistakes I made while running a channel
Running a Telegram channel seems straightforward until you start making costly errors that stunt growth, kill engagement, or even get your channel banned. After years of observing channel owners and managing channels across niches, the most damaging mistakes fall into predictable categories: inconsistent posting, ignoring analytics, poor monetization timing, neglecting community management, and failing to protect your channel from spam and security threats.
The Early-Stage Mistakes That Cost the Most
Mistake 1: Posting Without a Content Strategy
The single biggest mistake new channel owners make is treating their channel like a personal feed rather than a media product. In the first months, many creators post whatever comes to mind — a meme Monday, a long essay Tuesday, silence for two weeks, then three posts in an hour.
What actually happens: Telegram's algorithm and subscriber behavior reward consistency. Channels that post 1-2 times daily at predictable hours see 30-50% higher view rates compared to those posting erratically. When you disappear for a week, subscribers mute your channel or simply forget about you.
The fix I discovered: Create a simple content calendar. Even a basic spreadsheet with planned topics for the week ahead transforms your output. Define 3-4 content pillars (recurring themes) and rotate between them.
Mistake 2: Choosing the Wrong Niche — or No Niche at All
I started a channel trying to cover "technology, lifestyle, and interesting thoughts." The result was predictable: nobody knew what the channel was about, and growth flatlined at around 200 subscribers.
Channels with a clearly defined niche — like Android app reviews, Python programming tips, or Berlin restaurant recommendations — grow 3-5x faster because subscribers know exactly what they are signing up for and are more likely to recommend the channel to others.
Growth and Promotion Mistakes
Mistake 3: Buying Subscribers Instead of Earning Them
When my channel hit 500 subscribers and growth slowed, I was tempted to purchase subscribers from a promotion service. I tried it once with 1,000 bought subscribers. The results were devastating:
- View rate dropped from 40% to 8%
- Engagement (reactions, forwards) nearly disappeared
- Real subscribers started leaving because the channel "felt dead"
- It took months to recover organic metrics
Fake subscribers are dead weight. They never read your posts, they skew your analytics, and they make your channel less attractive to genuine readers and potential advertisers. A channel with 800 real subscribers outperforms one with 5,000 bought ones every time.
Mistake 4: Ignoring Cross-Promotion Opportunities
For the first year, I operated in complete isolation. I never reached out to similar channels for mutual promotion, never participated in channel recommendation threads, and never created content specifically designed to be shared.
Cross-promotion with channels of similar size (within 0.5x-2x your subscriber count) is the most effective free growth strategy on Telegram. A single well-matched cross-promotion can bring 50-200 engaged subscribers who already care about your topic.
Mistake 5: Not Creating a Web Presence
Telegram content exists in a walled garden — search engines cannot index it, and people who do not use Telegram cannot discover it. I waited far too long to create a web mirror of my channel content.
Services like tgchannel.space solve this by automatically converting your Telegram channel into an SEO-optimized blog. This means your posts start appearing in Google search results, driving organic traffic from people searching for exactly the topics you cover. Every channel should have a web presence from day one — the sooner search engines start indexing your content, the faster your organic discovery grows.
Content Quality Mistakes
Mistake 6: Writing Wall-of-Text Posts
Telegram is a messaging app. People scroll through channels on their phones, often during commutes or breaks. My early posts were 1,500-word essays with no formatting — and almost nobody read past the first two lines.
What works instead:
- Keep most posts under 300 words
- Use line breaks generously (every 2-3 sentences)
- Add emoji as visual anchors (but do not overdo it — 2-3 per post maximum)
- Use bold for key points readers should not miss
- Save long-form content for 1-2 posts per week, clearly labeled
Mistake 7: Never Using Media
Text-only channels have their place, but I underestimated how much images, videos, and voice messages boost engagement. Posts with relevant images get 20-40% more views on average. Video content gets even higher engagement, especially short clips under 60 seconds.
The mistake was not just avoiding media — it was not learning Telegram's media group feature. Posting 5 images as separate messages floods subscribers' notifications. Posting them as an album (media group) delivers a clean, professional presentation.
Mistake 8: Reposting Without Adding Value
For months, I would simply forward interesting posts from other channels with zero commentary. Subscribers eventually realized they could just follow those original channels instead. Every repost should include your perspective, analysis, or at least a sentence explaining why it matters to your specific audience.
Monetization Mistakes
Mistake 9: Monetizing Too Early (or Too Late)
I made both mistakes at different times. First, I tried selling ad spots at 300 subscribers — nobody was interested, and the few ads I did run annoyed my small audience. Later, when I had 5,000+ subscribers, I hesitated for months because I was afraid of "selling out."
The sweet spot: Start experimenting with monetization around 1,000-2,000 engaged subscribers. Begin with native advertising (posts that match your content style) rather than banner-style ads. Your audience will accept monetization if the content quality stays high.
Mistake 10: Not Tracking Channel Analytics
For the first six months, I never once checked my channel statistics. I had no idea which posts performed well, what time my audience was most active, or whether my subscriber count was growing or shrinking.
Telegram provides built-in analytics for channels with 50+ subscribers. At minimum, track these weekly:
1. Average view rate (views ÷ subscribers) — healthy is 20-40%
2. Growth rate — net new subscribers per week
3. Top-performing posts — identify what resonates
4. Peak activity hours — schedule posts accordingly
Security and Moderation Mistakes
Mistake 11: Not Setting Up Admin Permissions Properly
When I added my first co-admin, I gave them full permissions by default. This is a serious security risk. Telegram allows granular admin rights — use them.
Every admin should have only the permissions they need:
- Content creators: Post Messages only
- Moderators: Delete Messages and Ban Users
- Never give Add New Admins permission unless absolutely necessary
Mistake 12: Ignoring Spam Until It Became a Crisis
I enabled comments on my channel posts (via a linked group) but did not set up any anti-spam measures. Within weeks, the comments were flooded with crypto scams, adult content links, and bot messages. Real subscribers stopped engaging with comments entirely.
Prevention is easier than cleanup:
- Enable Slow Mode in linked discussion groups
- Use anti-spam bots like @SpamBot or Combot
- Set new member restrictions (no links for first 24 hours)
- Regularly review and remove spam accounts
Mistake 13: Not Having a Backup Plan
My channel was my only platform. When Telegram experienced a major outage in my region, I had no way to communicate with my audience. When a disgruntled ex-admin caused issues, I had no secondary channel or contact method.
Always maintain at least one backup communication channel — whether it is an email list, a web version of your content, or a presence on another platform.
Tips & Best Practices
- Audit your channel monthly: Review your last 30 posts, identify the top 5 and bottom 5 by views, and adjust your content strategy accordingly
- Build a posting schedule and stick to it: Even 3 posts per week on a reliable schedule beats 10 posts one week and zero the next
- Engage with your audience: Run polls, ask questions, respond to comments — channels with active feedback loops grow 2x faster
- Document everything: Keep a record of admin credentials, bot tokens, and channel settings in a secure password manager
- Create evergreen content: Posts that remain relevant months later continue generating value, especially when indexed on the web through services like tgchannel.space
- Test before scaling: Try new content formats with single posts before committing to a series
Common Mistakes
Mistake: Deleting underperforming posts
Why it is wrong: Deleting posts looks unprofessional to subscribers who already saw them, and you lose valuable data about what does not work.
How to avoid: Leave posts up. Use analytics to learn from poor performers instead.
Mistake: Changing your channel name and username frequently
Why it is wrong: Subscribers get confused, bookmarks break, and search visibility resets. Your @username is your brand identity.
How to avoid: Choose your final name early. If you must rebrand, do it once and announce it clearly.
Mistake: Posting only during business hours
Why it is wrong: Your audience may be in different time zones or most active in the evening. Posting at 10 AM because it is convenient for you ignores when your readers are online.
How to avoid: Check Statistics → Hours in Telegram and schedule posts for peak activity times.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can a channel recover from buying fake subscribers?
Yes, but it takes time. Remove inactive subscribers using Telegram's built-in tools or third-party analytics, then focus on organic growth. Expect 2-3 months before metrics normalize.
How many posts per day is too many?
For most niches, more than 5 posts per day causes subscriber fatigue and increased mute/unsubscribe rates. News channels are the exception — audiences expect higher frequency there.
Should I make my channel public or private?
Public channels are discoverable via search and can be indexed by web services, making them better for growth. Private channels work for premium or exclusive content. Most channels should start public.
Is it a mistake to run a channel alone?
Not initially, but once you exceed 2,000-3,000 subscribers, the workload becomes significant. Finding a reliable co-admin or content partner prevents burnout and improves consistency.
What is the biggest mistake that kills channels permanently?
Abandonment. A channel that goes silent for 30+ days loses subscriber trust almost irreversibly. If you need a break, post an announcement and set expectations for your return.