A generational shift in terminology has occurred where younger marketers refer to a single ad or a short flight as a "campaign." This misunderstanding dilutes the strategic importance of true campaigns—long-running, integrated platforms designed to build brand equity over years.
In a saturated media environment, hiring a 'storyteller' to generate more content is ineffective. True brand recognition comes from executing a single, memorable, high-impact campaign that captures mass attention, making it far more valuable than thousands of social media posts.
Marketers often silo brand-building and sales-driving objectives, but they are intrinsically linked. If a creative fails to generate a short-term sales lift, it's a strong signal that it's also failing to build long-term brand equity. An ad that sells inherently delivers an equity benefit.
Think of consistent brand building—through thought leadership and storytelling—as preparing the soil. It lays a foundation of trust and recognition. When a targeted ABX campaign is launched, it lands with a warmer, more receptive audience, rather than feeling like a cold, disjointed outreach.
Don't judge channels like Facebook Ads or direct mail in isolation. True marketing success comes from a 'marketing mix' where multiple touchpoints—like yard signs, retargeting ads, and wrapped trucks—work together to create a compounding effect that builds brand recognition and momentum.
Achieving a brand status that commands a premium price is not a short-term project. It demands years, often decades, of consistent messaging and marketing investment to build the necessary emotional connection with customers. Most companies lack the patience and long-term vision for this.
Contrary to the belief that ads quickly wear out, strong creative often performs better with repeated exposure. This concept of "wear in" justifies patience, allowing a new campaign to build familiarity and emotional connection with the audience, as stories grow resonance over time.
Marketing teams often mistake demand programs for campaign strategy. A true campaign strategy is a higher-level "canvas" that orchestrates all efforts—reputation, demand creation, and enablement—against a specific audience, ensuring a consistent customer experience rather than disjointed tactical execution.
The common marketing belief in ad "wear out" is wrong, as familiarity breeds contentment, not contempt. Consequently, marketers often pull their advertising campaigns right at the point where repetition is making them most effective.
Familiarity breeds contentment, not contempt. The 'Mere Exposure Effect' shows that repeated exposure to a stimulus makes us feel more positive towards it. This explains why consistent campaigns outperform those that frequently change creative. The performance gap between effective, consistent campaigns and inconsistent ones widens dramatically over time, creating a compounding advantage.
A key insight from analysis of Effie and System1 data is that brands get bored of their creative work long before audiences do. As strategist Mark Ritson highlighted, pulling successful campaigns prematurely forfeits the significant long-term value of "compound creativity."