While most marketers chase new technology like AI, true differentiation will come from applying creative, modern thinking to undervalued and seemingly archaic channels like radio or out-of-home. This contrarian approach creates disruptive, attention-grabbing moments.
Relying solely on data leads to ineffective marketing. Lasting impact comes from integrating three pillars: behavioral science (the 'why'), creativity (the 'how' to cut through noise), and data (the 'who' to target). Neglecting any one pillar cripples the entire strategy.
Marketers mistakenly assume B2B industries like finance are dull. In reality, these sectors are filled with compelling human stories about hopes, dreams, and innovation. The perceived lack of creativity is a massive competitive advantage for marketers willing to find and elevate these narratives.
Marketers should use AI-driven insights at the beginning of the creative process to inform campaign strategy, rather than solely at the end for performance analysis. This approach combines human creativity with data to create more resonant campaigns and avoid generic AI-generated content.
As businesses scale, they often abandon the scrappy, creative tactics that sparked their initial growth. To combat rising ad costs and channel fatigue, intentionally revisit these early, 'unscalable' activities. Re-injecting that fun, different energy can generate the 'free memories' and reach needed for the next growth phase.
AI tools generate overwhelming digital communication, devaluing online interactions. Consequently, face-to-face events become a more critical and effective way for marketers to build genuine relationships and stand out from the automated clutter.
Instead of treating all channels equally, identify which customer segments (e.g., brand advertisers) are best served by which channels (e.g., TV screens). Shifting demand accordingly can unlock massive growth by optimizing the entire portfolio and increasing customer ROI.
The radical shifts in marketing shouldn't be seen as a burden. HubSpot's CEO frames this as an opportunity to reinvent the playbook after years of chasing small, incremental improvements. Fast-moving teams now have a chance to gain massive, non-linear advantages.
In an AI-driven world, optimizing for website traffic is a losing game. A better long-term strategy is to create high-value content (podcasts, videos, newsletters) across various platforms. This approach helps people directly and simultaneously feeds the large language models that are increasingly becoming information gatekeepers.
Frame marketing strategy not as managing channels, but as "day-trading attention." Identify platforms where user attention is high but advertising costs are low due to a lack of saturation from major brands. This arbitrage opportunity allows smaller players to achieve outsized results before the market corrects.
Solely judging marketing by last-touch attribution creates a false reality. This narrow metric consistently favors predictable channels like search and email, discouraging investment in brand building and creative storytelling that influence buyers throughout their journey. It's a losing battle if it's the only basis for decision-making.