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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.
Stop spending money to test ads. Instead, publish a high volume of organic social content and identify what naturally gains traction. Then, convert only those proven, high-performing pieces into paid ads. This model dramatically lowers customer acquisition costs by ensuring ad spend only scales winners.
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.
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.
Once a marketing angle proves effective, build a dedicated, end-to-end funnel for it. This means tailoring the ad, landing page, pop-ups, and all follow-up communications (email/SMS) to that single, consistent message for maximum conversion and personalization.
Large CPG players have slow, agency-driven feedback loops. Nimble DTC brands can win by rapidly testing creative, messaging, and offers online, gaining an insurmountable learning advantage. Speed itself becomes the strategic edge, not just a byproduct of being small.
Instead of guessing the right marketing angle, Paperless Post's co-founder advises creating light copy tests for different positioning statements. This allows online businesses to quickly see what resonates with customers before committing to a larger strategy.
Many brands stagnate because their creative testing volume is far too low. Simply 'testing creatives' isn't enough; at the $2 million annual revenue level, a company should be pushing a much higher volume—around 25 unique ad concepts per week—to break through performance plateaus.
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 inefficient, broad-reach brand campaigns like TV ads, D2C brands can achieve better results by mirroring B2B's focused approach. Using measurable channels like creator whitelisting and publisher advertorials allows for targeted storytelling to ideal customer profiles.
Top e-commerce brands outpace competitors by operating at a much higher tempo. They use tools like AI to massively increase creative output, testing over 100 ad variations weekly versus a handful, which allows them to discover winning formulas much faster.