On TikTok, the era of fighting alone is over.
Now, the brands that are doing well are all using the "matrix tactic," operating a group of accounts in coordination, driving traffic to each other, sharing risks, and even making a new account go viral within a month. But many people mess up as soon as they start: either all their accounts get limited in reach, or their content conflicts with each other, and in the end, they don't make any money and get a bunch of accounts banned.
Today, let's use the strategies of three real brands to break down the core logic of the matrix approach.
Image source: Google
Precise Positioning: Give Each Account Its Own "Exclusive Track"
The first step in building a matrix is to give each account a clear, differentiated positioning, like building blocks where each piece has its own place. Some accounts are responsible for brand image, some focus on product sales conversion, and some target users in specific regions. This way, you can cover more scenarios without making fans feel confused.
Case Study: Consumer Electronics Accessories Brand Belkin
The main account of consumer electronics accessories brand Belkin, @belkin, focuses on showcasing the full range of products in real-life scenarios. For example, a viral video with 1.8 million views was shot in a car, showing how a wireless power bank can both charge and serve as a stand, making the "convenience" selling point feel down-to-earth. The sub-account @belkinvnstore, on the other hand, focuses on the Vietnamese market. Although it only has 1,366 followers, it posts videos every two or three days showing local people using Belkin products in their daily lives, precisely penetrating the regional user base. This "global + regional" positioning allows the brand to maintain an overall tone while deeply tapping into niche markets.
Image source: TikTok
Content Coordination: Use "Big Accounts to Boost Small Accounts" and Accelerate the Traffic Snowball
Matrix accounts can't each do their own thing; they need to learn to "build ladders" for each other. Once one account finds a successful model, immediately replicate it across multiple accounts, and then use @mentions, comment section traffic redirection, and content collaboration to drive traffic to each other, making the traffic snowball bigger and bigger.
Case Study: Maternal and Infant Brand Makuku
Makuku's matrix coordination is a typical example. The main account @makukuindonesia.official attracted 1.1 million followers with family sitcoms and product reviews, averaging 2.1 million views per video. After building brand trust, the dedicated live-streaming sales account @makukuoffcialstore.id took over the traffic. The main account often guides viewers in videos: "Want to see more deals? Go to the live room and wait." After 453 live streams, the average audience per session was over 9,000, directly generating nearly $500,000 in sales. This "content seeding + live conversion" cooperation makes traffic run more efficiently.
Image source: TikTok
Traffic Networking: Multiple Accounts Form an "Internal Cycle" for More Stable Monetization
The ultimate goal of the matrix is to weave traffic into a net, allowing fans to circulate among different accounts and eventually reach the monetization stage. Whether it's the main account boosting smaller ones or different functional accounts driving traffic to each other, the core is to keep traffic circulating within the system, rather than leaking out.
Case Study: Shenzhen Smart Home Appliance Brand HANRIVER
Shenzhen smart home appliance brand HANRIVER has three accounts: @hanriver.official, @hanriverlifelive, and @hanrivertokoandalanresmi, which are responsible for brand display, lifestyle content, and the official store, respectively. When the main account posts a new product video, the lifestyle account simultaneously posts a usage tutorial, and the store account follows up with promotional information. From getting to know the product, to learning how to use it, to placing an order, the entire path can be completed within the matrix. Now, the three accounts have accumulated 320,000 followers, forming a stable "content - trust - conversion" closed loop.
Image source: TikTok
Final Words
In fact, building a TikTok matrix is essentially about "replication + coordination."
First, refine a workable account template, then mass-produce differentiated accounts, and finally let them leverage each other. Just like Belkin, Makuku, and HANRIVER, the goal is not for every account to go viral, but to achieve more stable traffic and monetization through overall collaboration.
Remember, the essence of the matrix is not the number of accounts, but that each account is exerting its strength in the right place.
Short answer for decision makers
This TikTok business signal should be used as a planning prompt, not a standalone trend. The practical question is whether your brand has the market readiness, creator supply, Shop conversion path, paid-media structure, and reporting cadence to act on it now.
Key facts
- Market signal: TikTok marketing tips - short video marketing methods
- Published: July 28, 2025
- Source transparency: the original source linked in this article
Tuke recommendation
Choose one market, one product group, one creator cohort, and one KPI for the next operating cycle. Then align creative testing, TikTok Shop optimization, live commerce readiness, and weekly reporting around that single decision.
What should brands do with this TikTok signal?
Brands should translate the signal into a focused operating test across creative, creators, TikTok Shop readiness, paid media, and reporting before increasing budget.
How does Tuke Marketing evaluate this kind of news?
Tuke Marketing reviews platform news through market timing, category demand, creator supply, commerce readiness, and measurable growth actions.
When should a team contact Tuke about this topic?
A team should contact Tuke when it needs to turn a TikTok market signal into a practical launch, creator, advertising, live commerce, or reporting plan.
Source transparency: Tuke cites the original source linked in this article and adds its own operating analysis for brands evaluating TikTok growth decisions.