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For established channels, aim for predictable 10-20% improvements. For new initiatives where no results exist, take bigger risks and set unreasonable goals to chase massive, high-magnitude outcomes. This mental framework avoids applying undue conservatism to unproven, high-potential channels.

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Like venture capital or Hollywood, marketing's value comes from rare, breakout successes that far outweigh all other efforts. The marketer's job is to create opportunities for these unpredictable "10x" moments, rather than focusing solely on incremental, linear gains.

To avoid constant battles over unproven ideas, proactively allocate 5-10% of the marketing budget to a line item officially called "Marketing Experiments." Frame it to the CFO as a necessary fund for exploring new channels before current ones tap out and for seizing unforeseen opportunities.

To achieve significant growth (over 10%), contractors should allocate 10-12% of their target revenue goal to marketing, not a percentage of last year's actual revenue. This forward-looking investment is scary but necessary to fund the growth you want to achieve, rather than just sustaining current levels.

Chess.com's goal of 1,000 experiments isn't about the number. It’s a forcing function to expose systemic blockers and drive conversations about what's truly needed to increase velocity, like no-code tools and empowering non-product teams to test ideas.

Aiming for 10x growth is simpler than 2x. A 2x goal leads to adding numerous small tasks and complexity. A 10x goal, discussed in the book "10x is Easier Than 2x", forces you to identify the one or two critical paths to success, eliminating distractions and allowing you to double down on what truly works.

The highest risk-adjusted return comes from amplifying what already works. The likelihood of a new marketing channel or sales script succeeding is statistically low. Instead of rolling the dice on something new, you should allocate resources to dramatically increase the volume of your proven winners.

To ensure continuous experimentation, Coastline's marketing head allocates a specific "failure budget" for high-risk initiatives. The philosophy is that most experiments won't work, but the few that do will generate enough value to cover all losses and open up crucial new marketing channels.

Instead of striving for the perfect strategy from the start, commit to massive, imperfect action. The inherent pain and inefficiency of doing high volume with low output will naturally force you to learn, adapt, and optimize your process much faster than theoretical planning.

To balance execution with innovation, allocate 70% of resources to high-confidence initiatives, 20% to medium-confidence bets with significant upside, and 10% to low-confidence, "game-changing" experiments. This ensures delivery on core goals while pursuing high-growth opportunities.

Instead of traditional budget allocation, treat marketing decisions like a VC portfolio. This means structuring investments to have a limited, known potential loss (capped downside) but the possibility of exponential returns (uncapped upside), encouraging bolder, more innovative moves.