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Instead of guessing which value props will resonate, marketers can run small, targeted ABM campaigns to test different messaging angles (e.g., product-heavy vs. outcome-led). This provides product marketing with real-world data on what works before they invest in a full-scale launch.
Before manufacturing a large batch of a product, validate demand by running inexpensive Meta ads to a small audience. This 'fire a bullet before you fire a cannonball' approach lets you gauge real customer interest by tracking clicks, proving the concept works before making a large financial commitment.
The weeks following a launch are for intense learning, not just promotion. The goal is to quickly identify high-adopting customer segments and then execute mini 'relaunches' with tailored messaging specifically for them, maximizing impact and conversion.
Before finalizing an offer, create and promote two distinct lead magnets. The one that outperforms reveals your audience's true pain point and can pivot your entire business strategy. This approach transforms a list-building tactic into a powerful market research tool for finding product-market fit.
To get C-suite buy-in for long-term brand investment, marketers should run small, ring-fenced test campaigns. By isolating a market segment and layering brand tactics on top of demand generation, you can demonstrably prove superior growth compared to a control group, de-risking a larger investment.
Treat marketing creative like a ladder of validation. Test an idea as a tweet. If it gets engagement, expand it into an article. If that works, produce a video. This process of gathering feedback at each step ensures that by the time you create a high-cost asset like a TV ad, the core concept is already proven.
Even if a publication won't change its headline, split-testing variations provides invaluable data. The winning message can then be used to frame the topic in subsequent high-stakes communications, like congressional testimony or investor pitches, ensuring you lead with the most compelling and effective angle.
Instead of immediately launching expensive A/B tests or ad campaigns, first validate your messaging qualitatively. Put it in front of a panel of ideal customers and ask open-ended questions to get faster, richer feedback on clarity and resonance.
Instead of only testing minor changes on a finished product, like button color, use A/B testing early in the development process. This allows you to validate broad behavioral science principles, such as social proof, for your specific challenge before committing to a full build.
Start paid media testing with high-level message categories, or 'avenues' (e.g., 'designed by experts'). Once data shows which avenue resonates, drill down into minor variations, or 'cul-de-sacs' (e.g., 'handpicked by experts', 'backed by experts'). This structured approach prevents wasted spend on testing random copy.
Instead of perfecting one funnel, successful brands test a high volume of marketing angles (e.g., 50) with simple static ads. They identify the top performers (e.g., 3-4 "honey holes") and then build out more extensive funnels with video and dedicated landing pages for only those winners.