Monthly Archives: March 2026

Tactical Measures.

0

Much of marketing today is tactical. We build stuff we can measure to see if it impacts sales.  Without measurement, how do marketers know they are any good? Measurement is the holy grail of marketing. ROI baby ROI!

When measurement isn’t going well – read, sales are flat/down/slowing – senior marketers often default to the brand value of the effort. “Well, we may not have sold as many products as we had hoped, but consumers like us more or engaged more.”  The advertising industry thrived for years using this thinking.

Here’s the problem. Tactics, ungoverned by brand strategy are just random hits. To use a baseball metaphor, they are not wins. Even runs aren’t wins. I coined the term tactics-palooza a number of years ago, when Google and the web were milking ad budgets for dollars. Tactics not strategy. Follow the clicks. Better yet, follow click-to-buy.

Well, its still true. Tactics and so-called performance marketing are the realm of the day. I’m all for measurement but measurement against a brand strategy is the way to role. With an overlay of sales.  On-brand tactical sales are how you build a brand. And loyalty. And sustaining businesses.

Marilyn Laurie, a great FCB strategist of yore used to say “Make deposits in the brand bank.”  Not the tactical measurement bank.

Peace.

 

Full-Stack Branding

0

I keep reading LinkedIn descriptions and see members use the words “full-stack this” and “full-stack that.”  Pretty savvy turns of a phrase. So I looked up the meaning of full-stack. Apparently, it refers to front-end (user experience) and back-end (supporting tech and execution). 

As I do with most things, I put on my brand strategy hat and realized brand strategy is front-end and product and corporate management are back-end. Without a full-stack approach to marketing, e.g., brand strategy plus execution and adherence, you have oogatz (Google it).

Too many purchasers of brand strategy don’t do an effective job with the back-end. It’s not properly enculturated into the business.  It therefore lasts as long as the current ad campaign. Or the current CMO. Or the latest technology fad. AI anyone?

I like to think I’m a successful front-end brand strategy guy. But I need to make sure clients buy-in beyond the presentation. Northwell Health used to have a new employee breakfast meeting with the CEO every Monday. I suggested to the marketing director at the time that the CEO share the brand strategy at that meeting – a slam dunk. It didn’t get recommended. You’d think I was recommending vaccines. Doh!

Apparently, I need to work on my technique. Maybe I won’t take the job unless the client shows me how they plan to codify the strategy. Yeah, who am I kidding?

Peace.