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Confession: I got burned early in my career by a marketing plan that…

Confession: I got burned early in my career by a marketing plan that looked brilliant on paper and fell apart inside 60 days. Not because the strategy was wrong. Because nobody ran the basic math before we committed to the targets. I remember sitting in the debrief thinking, the benchmark data has existed for years. Someone just didn't look at it. And that pattern, skipping the feasibility check because the vision feels compelling enough, is still the most common and avoidable failure I see. Here's what actually happens. A business spots a competitor eating into their market. The reflex is to push offers. Run a promotion. Buy some ads. Create urgency fast. And that actually doesn't mean anything unless the unit economics behind it hold up. What changes the outcome isn't the offer. It's whether the brand has built enough relevance and trust that the offer lands with someone who already believes in you. That's a lifecycle question, not a campaign question. If you aren't doing lifecycle marketing, you really should be asking yourselves why not. The businesses I've watched hold ground against bigger, better-funded competitors did one thing consistently. They stopped looking at where customers were spending money and started asking what customers actually wanted that nobody was delivering yet. Consumption data is a historical record. Craving is a market predictor. Those are different inputs and most plans only factor in one. Getting sharper on that distinction is where I'd start. Not with a bigger budget. Not with a new agency. With the question your current marketing plan probably hasn't answered yet. If that's a gap you're sitting with right now, let's talk about how to close it.

Juan MoutonJun 5, 2026Published to LinkedIn — Juan MoutonView original ↗

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