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Sleeping Barber - A Marketing Podcast

Sleeping Barber
Sleeping Barber - A Marketing Podcast
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218 episodes

  • Sleeping Barber - A Marketing Podcast

    SBP 213: Dull Ads Are A System, Not A Symptom. Orlando Wood @ System1

    26/06/2026 | 53 mins.
    Day 4 on the Croisette, and the Cannes Festival of Creativity is in full swing. The Cannes Cut series is proudly presented by System1.
    Vanessa Chin, VP Marketing at System1, opens with a live field dispatch: which campaigns are actually scoring at Cannes, what the new Creator Effectiveness Playbook says about briefing for emotional impact, and why Dunkin' took gold while Kit Kat posted one of the highest out-of-home scores System1 has ever recorded.
    She also tackles the question the industry keeps circling - is AI the creative revolution everyone promised, or just a better production tool?
    Then the feature interview.
    Orlando Wood, Chief Creative Officer at System1, argues that dull advertising is structural, not incidental.
    Media fragmentation, measurement frameworks calibrated for the wrong school of advertising, and rules-based creative thinking all work against artistry before a single brief is written. Drawing on advertising history from Toulouse-Lautrec to Bernbach, and neuroscience from Ian McGilchrist, Orlando maps the war between showmanship and salesmanship - and explains why applying one school's measurement philosophy to the other destroys the work.
    The episode closes with the Buzz Cut: the sights and sounds from the attendees. Ty Heath from LinkedIn shared her perspective on life inside the B2B Lions jury room, WARC APAC's Rica Facundo on the three ceilings of social, Hannah Riberdhal from Brand Marketing Sweden on what this year's Cannes sounds like compared to four years ago, and two Young Lions competitors fresh off a 24-hour brief.

    Timestamps
    0:00 Opening - Vanessa Chin (System1) on Cannes testing, AI, and the Creator Effectiveness Playbook
    12:23 Feature interview - Orlando Wood on why dull advertising is structural, not a talent problem
    23:06 Fluent devices, coherence vs consistency, and the living brand
    33:08 The history of showmanship and salesmanship - and why creators may be bringing artistry back
    37:11 Measuring creative: why salesmanship measurement destroys showmanship work
    40:10 Post Pod debrief
    41:18 Buzz Cut - Ty Heath (LinkedIn B2B Institute), Rica Facundo (WARC APAC), Hannah (Brand Marketing Sweden), Young Lions

    References
    System1 https://system1group.com/
    Advertising Principles Explained (course with Sir John Hegarty) https://advertisingprinciplesexplained.com/
    System1 Creative Dividend Report https://system1group.com/the-creative-dividend
    System1 Creator Effectiveness Playbook https://system1group.com/the-creator-effectiveness-playbook
    Lemon: How the Advertising Brain Turned Sour - Orlando Wood (book) https://system1group.com/lemon

    Thanks for keeping us in your ears, stay sharp everyone.
  • Sleeping Barber - A Marketing Podcast

    SBP 212: The Cannes Cut - Brand Fit Beats Follower Count: Day 3 Reflections

    25/06/2026 | 49 mins.
    Day three at Cannes Lions revealed something unexpected.
    Coming into the festival, many predicted AI would dominate every conversation.
    Instead, another topic has quietly taken centre stage:
    Creators.
    Not creator hype. Not influencer marketing. Creator effectiveness.
    Presented by System1, today's Cannes Cut explores one of the biggest conversations happening across the Croisette. Marc and Vassilis reflect on another packed day at Cannes, including the System1 Stars of the Show event featuring Andrew Tindall, Orlando Wood, Mark Ritson, Les Binet, Adam Morgan and many of the industry's leading thinkers.
    The featured interview is with Andrew Tindall, Chief Growth Officer at System1, who joins us to discuss the new Creator Effectiveness Playbook, developed in partnership with WPP and TikTok.
    One insight stood above the rest:
    Most creator campaigns aren't driving meaningful brand growth. A small "brilliant minority" are responsible for the majority of the impact.
    The conversation has evolved beyond follower counts and engagement rates. Instead, marketers are asking better questions:
    Does this creator genuinely fit the brand?
    How do creators build memory, not just engagement?
    Why does emotion still outperform optimisation?
    What role do distinctive brand assets play in creator content?
    And how do we stop treating creator marketing like a casino?

    We also bring back another edition of The Buzz Cut, hearing directly from marketers around the world, including Lauren Anderson (Amazon Ads), David Tiltman (WARC), Reno from Nikkei, and Vinnie from Leo São Paulo, sharing what's capturing their attention halfway through Cannes.
    In this episode:
    Highlights from System1's Stars of the Show
    Andrew Tindall on the Creator Effectiveness Playbook
    Why only a small minority of creator campaigns drive real growth
    Why brand fit matters more than follower count
    Pinterest's positioning around quality engagement
    Why AI feels more like infrastructure than the headline story
    The latest perspectives from marketers across the Croisette

    The rosé can wait. Our questions can't.
    Chapters
    00:00 Introduction
    03:04 Insights from System1's Baoli Event
    05:54 The Role of Creators in Sports
    09:01 Pinterest's Marketing Strategy and Insights
    11:50 The Current State of Creative Effectiveness
    14:55 The Importance of Emotion in Advertising
    18:11 The Evolving Role of Content Creators
    21:03 Key Findings from the Creator Effectiveness Playbook
    25:21 The Role of Emotion in Branding
    29:08 Effective Briefing for Creators
    30:34 Understanding Distinctive Brand Assets
    32:17 Leveraging Social Devices in Marketing
    35:08 Insights from Amazon's Brand Activation
    38:35 The Evolution of Cannes Lions Festival
    43:11 Creative Impact and Effectiveness
    47:13 The Value of Attending Cannes Lions
  • Sleeping Barber - A Marketing Podcast

    SBP 211: The Cannes Cut - Creators, Commerce, and Amazon's Canvas: Day 2 Reflections

    24/06/2026 | 39 mins.
    This episode has been presented by System1.
    Everyone talks about the full funnel. Amazon has actually built it. Day 2 of the Sleeping Barber's Cannes Cut takes Marc and V from the Amazon port activation, a full marina-length brand experience housing a cafe, a speakeasy, 30 meeting rooms, and a stage headlined by Shaquille O'Neal and Oprah, to a sit-down interview with Lauren Anderson, US Head of the Brand Innovation Lab.
    Lauren explains what the 'canvas' framing actually means for advertisers: not a menu of placements to check, but a working-backwards discipline from brand objectives through to seamless customer handoffs. The Hellman's 'Mayo for a Melody' campaign, extending the Andy Sandberg Super Bowl spot into a Fire TV karaoke experience with QR-enabled purchase, is the clearest case study of how awareness converts to action without the usual clunky hand-off between platform teams.
    The conversation also covers creator partnerships (co-collaborators, not billboards), the messy middle of measurement (experiential value is real but long-horizon), and why the Brand Innovation Lab's ethos is restraint: not throwing every part of the canvas at a brief, but identifying what's most fit for purpose.
    Buzz Cut guests from the catamaran round out the episode: Esther Benzi (CMA President), Zach Grossman (Director of Sales, TikTok Canada), Neil Mohan of ClickHealth, and Jeanette from Hashtag Paid, all weighing in on creativity, measurement, and what it actually feels like when AI takes the backseat at Cannes.
    Chapters
    00:00 - Cannes 2025, another look
    05:13 - Amazon's Brand Activation at Cannes
    10:03 - bInsights from the Boat: Networking and Learning
    11:43 - Lauren Anderson and The Role of the Brand Innovation Lab
    19:59 - Campaigns that Connect: Hellman's and More
    31:36 - Esther Benzie
    32:52 - Zack Grossman
    34:26 - Neil Mohan
    37:17 - Jeanette Rees
  • Sleeping Barber - A Marketing Podcast

    SBP 210: The Cannes Cut - Creativity That Works: Cannes Day 1 Reflections

    22/06/2026 | 40 mins.
    This episode has been presented by System1.
    What happens when Byron Sharp, Mark Ritson, System1, creators, AI, and Cannes Lions all collide on Day One?
    In the first edition of our Cannes Cut series, presented by System1, Marc and V unpack the biggest themes emerging from Cannes Lions 2026, including why creativity is increasingly being judged through the lens of effectiveness, why marketers may be spreading budgets too thin, and why some of the industry's biggest thinkers are converging on a surprisingly small set of principles.
    Along the way, the guys sit down with Vanessa Chin (SVP Marketing, System1) to discuss creativity, creators, celebrities, emotional advertising, AI-generated campaigns, and why happiness and humour continue to outperform serious purpose-driven work.
    They also hit the Croisette to capture perspectives from attendees, founders, creators, publishers, and marketers about the trends shaping Cannes this year.
    In this episode:
    Why effectiveness has become the dominant conversation at Cannes
    David Tiltman's "Fewer, Bigger, Better" framework
    The five things Byron Sharp and Mark Ritson agree on
    Mental availability and why awareness isn't enough
    Distinctive brand assets and why logos alone don't cut it
    Why sophisticated mass marketing still matters
    The case against purpose-led marketing
    How creators are becoming marketing "super touchpoints"
    Why funny advertising continues to outperform serious advertising
    The role AI is actually playing in modern creative development
    Sights and sounds from the Croisette

    Plus: exclusive insights from Vanessa Chin and conversations with marketers attending Cannes from around the world.
    The Rosé can wait. The questions can't.
    In this episode:
    Why effectiveness has become the dominant conversation at Cannes
    David Tiltman and WARC's "Fewer, Bigger, Better" framework
    The five things Byron Sharp and Mark Ritson agree on
    Mental availability and why awareness isn't enough
    Distinctive brand assets and why logos alone don't cut it
    Why sophisticated mass marketing still matters
    The case against purpose-led marketing
    How creators are becoming marketing "super touchpoints"
    Why funny advertising continues to outperform serious advertising
    The role AI is actually playing in modern creative development
    Sights and sounds from the Croisette

    The Rosé can wait. The questions can't.
    Chapters
    00:00 - Welcome to Cannes: The Excitement Begins
    02:53 - Insights from Industry Leaders
    06:06 - The Importance of Mental Availability
    08:52 - Distinctive Brand Assets and Their Impact
    12:09 - The Shift from Purpose to Emotion in Advertising
    14:59 - The Role of Celebrities in Marketing
    17:58 - The Power of Humour in Campaigns
    20:52 - The Future of Creators in Advertising
    23:48 - Final Thoughts and Key Takeaways
    27:25 - Conor Byrne, Exploring AI's Human Element
    30:03 - Alex, Insights from AI Central Media
    32:49 - Rachel Higgins, Connecting and Gaining Inspiration
    35:38 - Mariam Bebiashvili, Marketing Strategies and AI Integration
  • Sleeping Barber - A Marketing Podcast

    SBP 209: The Sharp Cut - Buyers Don't Move in Straight Lines

    18/06/2026 | 20 mins.
    What if the biggest problem in marketing isn't your message, your targeting, or your budget? What if it's the map you're using?
    For more than a century, marketers have relied on funnels, customer journeys, and pipeline stages to explain how people buy.
    The problem?
    People don't move in straight lines.
    In this Sharp Cut, Marc and Vassilis unpack why buying behaviour looks far more like a messy search pattern than a carefully planned journey. Drawing on research from Ehrenberg-Bass, Google, WPP, Oxford, James Hankins, Gartner, Bain, and the LinkedIn B2B Institute, they explore why most consumer decisions are made before shopping begins and why so many B2B deals stall after the buying process has already started.
    Along the way, they tackle the real purpose of the funnel, the limits of customer journey mapping, the hidden role of buying committees, and why the pipeline may be better at reporting decisions than helping people make them.
    In this episode:
    Why the traditional funnel continues to survive
    What the Consumer Decision Journey got right—and wrong
    The surprising finding that 84% of purchases favor brands consumers already lean toward
    Why "good enough" beats "best" more often than marketers realize
    The difference between consumer and B2B buying behavior
    How buying committees create friction inside organizations
    Why 40-60% of qualified B2B deals end in no decision
    The pipeline's real purpose
    Why probability may be a better model than journeys

    The funnel is a useful reporting tool. It just isn't a very good theory of human behaviour.
    Takeaways:
    Success in marketing is often misrepresented as a straight line.
    The consumer decision journey is more complex than traditional models suggest.
    Buyers often choose brands they are already leaning towards before shopping.
    The funnel oversimplifies the buying process, leading to ineffective strategies.
    Fear of making the wrong decision can paralyze B2B buyers.
    Satisficing is a common behavior where buyers settle for 'good enough'.
    Mental and physical availability are crucial for influencing buyer decisions.
    The traditional funnel model is outdated and needs to be rethought.
    Understanding buyer behavior requires acknowledging the chaos of the decision-making process.
    Marketers should focus on building frameworks based on real consumer behavior rather than idealized models.

    Chapters:
    Chapters

    00:00 - Introduction
    02:48 - The Complexity of the Consumer Decision Journey
    06:06 - The Limitations of Traditional Marketing Models
    08:49 - Understanding Buyer Behavior and Decision-Making
    11:59 - Rethinking the Marketing Funnel
    14:57 - The Role of Fear in B2B Buying Decisions
    17:53 - Building a Better Marketing Framework
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About Sleeping Barber - A Marketing Podcast
Ready to rethink business strategy and supercharge your marketing game? Join hosts Marc Binkley and Vassilis Douros as they break down big questions at the crossroads of strategy, marketing effectiveness, and creative impact. From real-world case studies to hot-off-the-press business news, each episode dives deep into how modern companies navigate complexity. Plus, interviews with global thought leaders bring you fresh insights and actionable strategies to drive growth and build unforgettable customer experiences. This is your backstage pass to smarter thinking and better business results.
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