Would You Like A Side Of Failure With That?
Are you paralyzed by the fear of launching imperfect campaigns or testing unproven strategies? Are you waiting for the perfect market conditions, creative, or timing that never arrives? This hesitation is particularly damaging in today's seemingly always-shifting landscape, where market opportunities can evaporate in weeks or even days.
Lack Of Competence Or Lack Of Confidence?
Breaking free from marketing inertia demands decisive action and sustained energy. Yes, marketers must invest significant effort to master new tools, craft fresh creative approaches, and build a presence on emerging platforms. However, once they establish these new marketing systems, maintaining momentum requires far less energy than the initial push.
If Many Marketers Do Something Foolish, It Is Still Foolish
The tendency to prioritize low-impact tactics over strategic initiatives is particularly damaging in marketing. Many marketers, myself included, have fallen into the trap of spending their peak creative energy on minor tactical details like tweaking email subject lines or adjusting button colors, while tackling major strategic decisions like brand positioning or customer segmentation when they're already mentally drained. This misallocation of energy leads to mediocre results on the initiatives that matter more in the grand analysis of effectiveness.
Best Practices Best? By Definition, They’re Average
While a marketing team might be capable of running campaigns across dozens of platforms, managing multiple content streams, and juggling various promotional initiatives simultaneously, this doesn't mean it's the optimal approach. When marketing resources – both human and financial – are spread too thin, the quality of execution inevitably suffers, and the impact becomes diluted.
You Are Under No Obligation to Be the Same Person You Were 5 Minutes Ago
Your last marketing campaign probably didn't go exactly as planned which immediately surfaces the use value of using marketing margins as your buffer zone. These buffers can be the difference between a campaign that crumbles under unexpected pressure and one that adapts and thrives.
Outcome Over Ego
Part of dealing with market realities includes avoiding losses before pursuing wins, particularly when managing brands and planning campaigns. Many marketing initiatives fail not because they lack ambitious goals but because they don't first secure the foundational elements that prevent catastrophic failures. This might mean maintaining consistent messaging or protecting existing customer relationships before pursuing aggressive growth strategies. In practical terms, ensure the campaigns don't alienate core customers before trying to capture new market segments.
The Bold Move reveals The Path
When you make one bold move: everything becomes clearer and you can see where you actually need to go, not where you think you should go. But, most people wait for perfect conditions before taking action. That's backwards. Bold moves create perfect conditions. They shake things up. They force you to think differently. They make you deal with reality instead of hypotheticals.
All Data Comes From The Same Place
Sometimes time spent reinventing the wheel results in a revolutionary new rolling device. But sometimes it just amounts to time spent reinventing the wheel. Our intertwined social world is too complex for us to master, driven by feedback loops and tipping points, forces that are constantly changing, swayed by chance and chaos, accidents, and black swan events.
Does Your Marketing Take Selective Attention Into Account?
The process of focusing our attention only on a subset of the stimuli in the environment — usually those related to our goals makes crafting effective marketing campaigns even more challenging. Why?
Sophisticated Wandering Is Wrong
Most marketing campaigns are lots of activity and noise, but there's no real sense of where they're headed. We launch campaigns because that's what we do.
This is misguided.
Try starting with the end in mind. Not just "we want more sales" (that's lazy thinking), but a crystalline vision of what transformative success looks like. When you're fuzzy about success metrics, every A/B test is just guesswork (most A/B tests are done incorrectly but I digress). Every piece of content is just content for content's sake. You're throwing post-its of varying sizes at a wall, hoping something sticks.
Recognize When Something Is Ready Enough to Serve Its Purpose
Recognize when something is ready enough to serve its purpose. The people we get to work with, especially in marketing often forget that every piece of work is an iteration, not a final destination. You create work that matters. Now go and see who else thinks so by launching it into the world.
Don't Omit The Omission Bias From Your Thinking
Instead of highlighting what your product does, emphasize what prospects lose by not acting. Frame inaction as the risky and therefore uncomfortable choice.
The Map Is Not The Territory. The Marketing Is Not The Market.
We're not just competing for attention; we're exploiting fundamental neurobiological circuitry that evolved over millions of years. The orienting response – that automatic head turn toward novel stimuli – wasn't designed for massive digital billboards along the highway or infinite scroll feeds. It was meant to help us spot predators and potential mates.
Beware The Subadditivity Effect*
Sometimes, you have to let people fall in love with your product one feature at a time.
Breaking down a product's value proposition into individual, meaningful benefits can help customers better appreciate its total worth, counteracting their natural tendency to undervalue combined probabilities or features.
Ignore this at your own peril
Are you trying to optimize your marketing campaign but not sure what to optimize? Try one, two, or all of these. Maybe not at the same time as optimizing for many can hurt the optimization of one. More on that later.