How to use this influx of marketing advice to your advantage
Here’s the framework I use — for myself and my clients:
1. Be picky about who you listen to
Listen to experts, not influencers. The difference:
- Experts speak from lived experience
- They don’t gatekeep their best insights
- Their advice still makes sense even if you don’t buy anything
To clarify: A CTA at the end of an article, post, or email is fine. But advice that intentionally leaves you confused (unless you buy their thing) is not.
2. Fix the basics before you try anything fancy
Don’t:
- Add a quiz funnel before your website copy is clear
- Launch a complex email sequence without a solid welcome flow
- Obsess over SEO hacks if your messaging doesn’t resonate
Nail your foundations first. Resist shiny object syndrome.
3. Apply one new thing at a time
Marketing skills build like muscle. Slow, steady progress leads to real growth — but too much intensity from the get-go will inevitably burn out.
Choose one improvement, work it until it’s solid, then move on.
That’s how confidence (and results) compound.
4. Always look for the simplest route
If something feels overwhelming, it’s probably over-engineered.
Clarity beats cleverness, consistency beats novelty, and momentum beats perfection.
5. If you’re stuck, get outside your own head
No matter how great a marketer you are, proximity blindness is real.
If you can’t tell what you should focus on first, sometimes you don’t need more advice. You need someone to tell you:
“This matters.”
“This doesn’t.”
“Start here.”
(That “someone” might be a trusted colleague, a friend in your industry, a mentor, or an expert you trust.)