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Sleeping Barber - A Marketing Podcast

Sleeping Barber
Sleeping Barber - A Marketing Podcast
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190 episodes

  • Sleeping Barber - A Marketing Podcast

    SBP 185: The Sharp Cut - The Incentives Trap: The Blueprint for Success [Part 3]

    26/03/2026 | 20 mins.
    The final installment (part 3) of our series about the incentives trap.
    In this episode, Marc and Vassilis outline the blueprint for success where they actively challenge the complexities of marketing measurement, emphasizing the need for a goal-oriented approach rather than relying on easily accessible metrics.
    They also discuss the dangers of short-term measurement, the importance of understanding long-term brand health, and introduce the concept of incrementality measurement as a way to better assess marketing effectiveness. The conversation also highlights the need for a shift in media metrics to ensure that marketing is viewed as an investment rather than a cost center.
    Enjoy the show!
    Takeaways
    The most common mistake in marketing measurement is starting in the wrong place.
    Measurement that doesn't change decisions has zero ROI.
    Metrics should be chosen based on their ability to inform strategic decisions.
    Long-term metrics reflect brand investment and market share growth.
    Brand building and performance activation require different measurement frameworks.
    Small brands need brand health tracking more urgently than large ones.
    Incrementality measurement helps clarify marketing's true impact on sales.
    Marketing effectiveness is more important than marketing efficiency.
    The cost per thousand impressions is becoming a misleading metric.
    A measurement philosophy should start with the desired outcome and build backward.

    Chapters
    00:00 - Introduction to Measurement Challenges in Marketing
    02:55 - The Importance of Goal-Oriented Measurement
    06:06 - Understanding Long-Term vs Short-Term Metrics
    09:07 - The Cashflow Funnel Framework
    12:07 - Incrementality Measurement: A New Approach
    15:04 - Reframing Marketing as an Investment
    18:04 - The Future of Media Metrics
  • Sleeping Barber - A Marketing Podcast

    SBP 184: The Barber's Brief - Have most marketers not learned the basics?

    24/03/2026 | 31 mins.
    In this episode of the Sleeping Barber Podcast, Marc and Vassilis delve into various topics surrounding marketing, brand performance, and the evolving landscape of digital advertising.
    They discuss a recent study on brand performance metrics, the importance of foundational marketing knowledge, and how nostalgia can be leveraged by heritage brands. Additionally, they explore Google's new AI advertising engine and highlight a creative ad campaign by Patron Tequila.
    Enjoy the show!
    Key Takeaways:
    Great creative still deserves a spotlight in marketing.
    Reclassifying traffic can help measure brand-driven sales accurately.
    Only 35% of marketers passed a basic knowledge test.
    Formal training is a better predictor of success than experience.
    Nostalgia can effectively bridge generations in marketing.
    Google's AI mode is methodically rolling out to enhance advertising.
    Patron Tequila's new campaign emphasizes high production value.
    The importance of distinctive brand assets in advertising.
    AI search will change the marketing funnel incrementally.
    Engagement with listeners is crucial for future content.

    Chapters
    00:00 - Introduction to the Podcast
    01:01 - Exploring Brand Performance in Digital Marketing
    06:13 - The Marketing Savant Myth and Knowledge Gaps
    12:08 - Reviving Heritage Brands with Nostalgia
    17:02 - Google's AI Mode and the Future of Advertising
    22:02 - Creative Ad of the Week: Patron Tequila
    28:58 - Upcoming Episodes and Closing Thoughts
    News Links:
    The commercial power of brands in the Digital World
    Link: https://kapero.com/en/commercial-power-of-brands/
    Ritson calls for end to ‘marketing savant myth’ as Ipsos lays bare knowledge gaps
    Link: https://www.thedrum.com/news/ritson-calls-for-end-to-marketing-savant-myth-as-ipsos-lays-bare-knowledge-gaps
    McDonald’s on its mission to gamify its ‘treasure trove’ of brand assets
    Link: https://www.marketingweek.com/mcdonalds-cards-brand-assets/
    AI Mode is Google’s next ads engine — and it already knows how to monetize it
    Link: https://searchengineland.com/ai-mode-google-next-ads-engine-471967
    Ad of the week:
    The Perfect Pour - Guillermo del Toro
    Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SLvR8ru2D8U
  • Sleeping Barber - A Marketing Podcast

    SBP 183: The PostPod - The Habit That Shapes Better Marketers

    19/03/2026 | 23 mins.
    What shapes the way you think?
    In this post-pod conversation, Marc Binkley and Vassilis Douros reflect on their discussion with Roger Martin — not just on strategy, but on something deeper: where curiosity comes from, and why it matters more than ever.
    From personal stories to practical implications, this conversation explores the moments that shape how we question, how we problem-solve, and how we navigate complexity in modern marketing.
    They unpack:
    The early experiences that shape how we think and challenge ideas
    Why asking better questions is more valuable than having quick answers
    How Roger Martin’s thinking connects to real-world problem solving
    The role of AI in accelerating outputs — but not replacing judgment
    Why the future of marketing belongs to those who can think, not just execute

    As knowledge becomes more accessible and tools become more powerful, the real advantage shifts from information to interpretation.
    This is a conversation about staying curious, thinking critically, and resisting the pull toward easy answers.
    If you enjoyed the episode, feel free to like, comment, or share — and let us know what topics you’d like us to explore next.
    Chapters
    00:00 - The Inquisitive Mindset
    02:57 - Lessons from Family Influence
    05:56 - AI's Role in Business Strategy
    08:54 - The Evolution of Entry-Level Roles
    12:02 - Critical Thinking in the Age of AI
    15:05 - The Future of Work and Culture
  • Sleeping Barber - A Marketing Podcast

    SBP 182: The Decision Factory: AI’s Missing Manual. With Roger Martin

    17/03/2026 | 1h 2 mins.
    The modern marketing organization is not a factory that produces campaigns; it is a Decision Factory that produces choices. In this episode, legendary strategist Roger Martin returns to explain why his 20-year-old "Knowledge Funnel" is more relevant in 2026 than ever before. As AI commoditizes the "mode" (the average), the role of the marketer must shift from executing tasks to solving mysteries and developing heuristics. If you are using AI to do your job faster, you are likely just making yourself easier to replace. To survive, you must learn to use AI as an "interlocutor" that frees you to do the one thing AI cannot: reflect.
    Key Takeaways
    The Wage Bill Reality: Knowledge workers now represent nearly half the workforce but over 70% of the wage bill, making the efficiency of the "Decision Factory" the single biggest management challenge of the century.
    AI is a Mode-Seeker: AI is mathematically designed to find the mode—the most frequent, average response. It will give you the "standard" approach faster than any human, but it cannot give you the "best" or "unique" approach.
    The Reflection Gap: In a study of "best and brightest" consultants, less than 1% actually practiced reflection on their work. This lack of "intellectual curiosity" is what makes workers susceptible to AI replacement.
    The Outsourcing Trap: Companies often pay 7.5x the cost of a consultant because they have fixed "flat" structures and can't find the right 50 people for a project. The future belongs to project-based organizations.

    About Roger
    Roger Martin is a trusted strategy advisor to CEOs and the author of Playing to Win and The Design of Business. He is a former Dean of the Rotman School of Management and was named the #1 management thinker in the world by Thinkers50.
    Website: RogerMartin.com
    LinkedIn: Roger Martin

    Timestamps
    01:02 – Why the "Decision Factory" is more relevant in the age of AI.
    04:42 – Breaking down the Knowledge Funnel: Mystery to Heuristic to Algorithm.
    10:16 – The McDonald’s Example: Turning a heuristic into a billion-dollar algorithm.
    13:43 – Why management is failing the 21st-century knowledge worker.
    23:28 – The "Sad Irony" of AI: Why managers are terrified of mystery work.
    35:58 – Understanding AI as a "Mode-Seeking Device".
    41:26 – The "Grief and Woe" of the 1% reflection rate.
    01:01:25 – Roger’s personal origin story: Why his mother never gave him answers.

    References
    Martin, R. L. (2009). The Design of Business: Why Design Thinking is the Next Competitive Advantage. Harvard Business Review Press.
    Martin, R. L. (2010, July-August). The Execution Trap. Harvard Business Review, 88(7/8), 64–71. https://hbr.org/2010/07/the-execution-trap
    Martin, R. L. (2013, October). Rethinking the Decision Factory. Harvard Business Review, 91(10), 96–103. https://hbr.org/2013/10/rethinking-the-decision-factory
    Martin, R. L. (2024, March 11). Strategy & Artificial Intelligence: A Story of Heuristics, Means, and Tails. Medium. https://rogermartin.medium.com/strategy-artificial-intelligence-6f719015b8fc
    Martin, R. L. (2025, March 24). Will Artificial Intelligence Eradicate Practitioners of Strategy? Medium. https://rogermartin.medium.com/will-artificial-intelligence-eradicate-practitioners-of-strategy-dead2f716e8d
    Martin, R. L. (2025, December 8). A Leader’s Role in Fostering AI Superpowers. The Strategic Practitioner. https://rogerlmartin.substack.com/p/a-leaders-role-in-fostering-ai-superpowers
    Martin, R. L. (2025, December 15). Strategy & Artificial Intelligence: Entry-Level Hires. Medium. https://rogermartin.medium.com/strategy-artificial-intelligence-entry-level-hires-4da6cab808f0
  • Sleeping Barber - A Marketing Podcast

    SBP 181: The Sharp Cut - The Incentives Trap: Revenue is a Vanity Metric [Part 2]

    11/03/2026 | 16 mins.
    Why do smart marketing teams keep optimizing for the wrong things?
    In Part 1 of this Sharp Cut series, we explored Goodhart’s Law — when a measure becomes a target, it stops being a good measure.
    But the real problem doesn't start on the marketing dashboard.
    It starts two floors above it.
    In this episode of The Sharp Cut, Marc Binkley and Vassilis Douros trace the incentive problem all the way from the boardroom to the media buy, showing how the pressure to maximize shareholder value, hit revenue targets, and prove short-term ROI cascades through the organization — eventually shaping how marketing is measured.
    Drawing on insights from seven past Sleeping Barber guests, including Roger Martin, Peter Field, Avinash Kaushik, Dale Harrison, Herman Simon, Augustine Fou, and Koen Pauwels, this episode breaks down why marketing metrics often drift away from real business outcomes.
    We explore:
    Why shareholder value maximization may distort strategic decision-making
    The difference between revenue growth and real competitive growth
    How efficiency metrics like ROI and ROAS can mislead organizations
    Why marketing dashboards are often 90% activity and only 10% outcomes
    Why CPM may be one of the most dangerous metrics in media planning
    How platform data quietly shapes the decisions marketers make

    When incentives reward the wrong signals, even brilliant organizations can optimize themselves into decline.
    Takeaways
    Goodheart's Law illustrates how metrics can become targets, leading to poor decision-making.
    Shareholder value maximization is a flawed approach that can harm long-term business health.
    Revenue growth does not equate to market growth; understanding this distinction is crucial.
    Short-term metrics can mislead organizations into making detrimental decisions.
    Effective marketing requires a balance between efficiency and effectiveness.
    Dashboards often reflect activity rather than meaningful outcomes, leading to misinterpretation of success.
    CPM is a dangerous metric that can create a false sense of accountability.
    Data reporting without context can lead to 'data puking' and poor decision-making.
    Organizations must evaluate whether their primary metrics truly reflect business health.
    Good measurement practices should focus on long-term outcomes rather than short-term gains.

    Chapters
    00:00 - Introduction to the Incentive Series
    01:00 - Understanding Goodheart's Law and Its Implications
    03:02 - The Shareholder Value Maximization Trap
    04:56 - Revenue vs. Growth: A Misunderstanding
    09:04 - The Dangers of Short-Term Metrics
    12:08 - The Role of Dashboards in Marketing Decisions
    14:59 - The Need for Better Measurement Practices

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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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