All businesses fall into common marketing traps—wasting budget, missing the mark, and slowing growth. And if you think that only small businesses make these mistakes, think again.
Here are two high-profile examples where I think brands got it spectacularly wrong, despite having big budgets and expert teams.
When Protein World launched its "Are You Beach Body Ready?" campaign across the London Underground, they expected it to inspire fitness goals. Instead, it triggered a firestorm of negative press. Commuters claimers the ad was objectifying and body-shaming. Within days posters were defaced, petitions were launched, and the campaign was subsequently banned by regulators.
Failing to anticipate cultural sentiment and audience perception. What was meant to be bold and aspirational turned into a PR disaster, damaging the brand’s reputation.
Legacy British car brand Jaguar nearly broke the internet with its futuristic "Copy Nothing" rebrand. The campaign launch video—viewed over 170 million times on X (formerly Twitter)— without featuring a single car.
Losing sight of core brand identity and abandoning heritage clientele in favour of an abstract, futuristic identity left people confused about what they were selling. A rebrand should clarify—not confuse.
I thought I'd share five of the most common marketing mistakes I see (and some easy suggestions on how to fix them)
Many businesses jump into marketing with no clear strategy, deploying a scattergun approach. This includes posting on social media randomly, running ads without clear messaging or creating content with no real purpose. The result? Low engagement, wasted budget, and no real impact on sales.
If you’re marketing without a plan, you’re just making noise. The fix here is a clear go-to-market strategy aligned to business objectives to ensure every campaign, piece of content, and ad has a purpose.
Most organisations pay initial lip service to SEO and organic search and then it will quickly drop off the to do list replaced by spend on paid ads and social media posts. But with 68% of all online experiences starting with a search engine (BrightEdge) and only 0.63% of people clicking on results beyond page one of Google (Backlinko) this is a huge mistake:
Neglect SEO, and you risk being invisible to actual customers. This compounds over time. The fix here is more holistic, looking at the bigger impact of combining data, content, tools, and tech.
A broad, generic message dilutes your impact. Not everyone is your customer.
The more specific you are, the more effective your marketing. The fix here is to:
Most brands focus on getting customers but forget about keeping them. Acquiring a new customer costs 5-7 times more than keeping an existing one (Harvard Business Review) and increasing retention by just 5% can boost profits by up to 95% (Bain & Company).
Your best customers are the ones you already have. Your fix here is to pivot your focus from acquisition techniques to include activation, retention, and advocacy. I would suggest considering:
Relying on the same old tactics leads to stagnation. Many businesses fail to track their marketing performance, relying on gut feeling rather than hard data. The best marketing embraces trial and experimentation.
Marketing without. You're just guessing. There are a number of fixes for you to consider implementing to help better understand the results of adopting different marketing approaches.
1 |
HAVE A CLEAR STRATEGY
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2 |
OPTIMISE SEO & ORGANIC SEARCH
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3 |
STOP TRYING TO MARKET TO EVERYONE
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4 |
PRIORITISE RETENTION MARKETING
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5 |
MEASURE & EXPERIMENT
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Want expert help to build a smarter marketing strategy? Let’s ditch the guesswork and make your marketing work harder—and smarter. Why not book a discovery call today?