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Sleeping Barber - A Marketing Podcast

Sleeping Barber
Sleeping Barber - A Marketing Podcast
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203 episodes

  • Sleeping Barber - A Marketing Podcast

    SBP 198: The Ads That Shouldn't Have Worked. With Terry O'Reilly

    12/05/2026 | 52 mins.
    There is a commercial in this episode that the president of Fibreglass tried to kill on a Thursday. By Sunday he had changed his mind, when his minister grabbed his arm and told him the pink panther ads were the funniest thing in advertising.
    That campaign went on to capture 70 percent of the Canadian insulation market.
    Every story Terry O'Reilly tells in this conversation is a campaign like that.
    A group of nuns who lost their habits and got an ad on the ceiling of a Sault Ste. Marie city bus. A Maine brewery that launched by promising never to mention its own name again, and trained a city to order beer by whistling. None of them would have survived a focus group.
    All of them built businesses.
    That's the spine of the episode: the work we remember almost never comes from the data. It comes from the moment a marketer trusts a calculated risk.
    Terry has hosted CBC's Under the Influence for two decades and directed roughly 14,000 commercials before that. He argues that the marketing industry has quietly traded its instincts for dashboards, and that the cost is most of the advertising we now scroll past without noticing.
    The episode lands on a single ask for any CMO listening: sit down with your agency tomorrow and tell them you want work that makes your palms sweat.
    Chapters
    00:00 - The Art of Advertising: Creativity vs. Data
    09:59 - Learning from Early Failures: A Journey in Advertising
    19:51 - Creative Campaigns: Success Stories and Lessons Learned
    29:58 - The Power of Distinctive Brand Assets
    40:04 - The Evolution of Advertising: From Jingles to Modern Mnemonics
    33:03 - Navigating Bureaucracy in Big Brands
    35:16 - The Importance of Effective Presentations
    41:15 - Creativity vs. Conventional Wisdom
    47:38 - Encouraging High Creativity in Marketing

    References
    • Under the Influence (CBC): https://www.cbc.ca/listen/cbc-podcasts/203-under-the-influence
    • Apostrophe Podcast Network: https://www.apostrophepodcasts.ca
    • Pirate Group: https://www.piratetoronto.com
    • Terry's books (Against the Grain, My Best Mistake, This I Know, The Age of Persuasion)
    • LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/terry-o-reilly
    • Website: terryoreilly.ca
    • Under the Influence: Available on CBC Listen, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and wherever podcasts are found
  • Sleeping Barber - A Marketing Podcast

    SBP 197: The Sharp Cut - Purpose is a promise most brands can't keep

    07/05/2026 | 24 mins.
    Most marketers believe brand purpose drives growth.
    The data says otherwise.
    In this episode of The Sharp Cut, we take on one of marketing’s most widely accepted ideas and put it under a microscope. Drawing on research from the Ehrenberg-Bass Institute, Peter Field’s IPA databank analysis, and perspectives from Mark Ritson and Roger Martin, we unpack a simple but uncomfortable truth:
    Brand purpose works… rarely.
    We explore why purpose has become so dominant despite weak commercial evidence, how industry incentives have turned it into a “comfort blanket,” and why the outliers like Patagonia and Dove don’t translate to most brands.
    Along the way, we break down:
    The “say–do gap” between what consumers claim and how they actually buy
    Why most purpose strategies show little to no impact on market share
    The hidden downside of poorly executed purpose campaigns
    How purpose often replaces the harder work of real positioning
    The three conditions required for purpose to actually work (and why most brands don’t meet them)

    This is not a takedown for the sake of it. It’s a reframing.
    Because the real question isn’t whether purpose is good or bad.
    It’s whether your organization has earned the right to use it.
    If not, you may be trading growth for a story that simply sounds good.
    Enjoy the show!
    Takeaways
    Consumers often express a desire for brands with purpose, but this doesn't always translate to purchasing behavior.
    Brand purpose has become an unfalsifiable idea in marketing, often lacking robust evidence.
    The say-do gap highlights the difference between consumer sentiment and actual buying decisions.
    Purpose campaigns can generate emotional engagement but may not lead to increased market share.
    Most brands adopting purpose strategies do not see meaningful commercial outcomes.
    The effectiveness of purpose campaigns varies significantly based on execution quality.
    Patagonia and Dove are often cited as successful purpose-driven brands, but their models are not easily replicable.
    Real purpose requires genuine commitment and often involves sacrifices.
    Purpose can enhance employee satisfaction and brand loyalty, but it is not a direct marketing strategy.
    The industry often conflates purpose with marketing effectiveness, leading to misconceptions about its value.

    Chapters:
    00:00 - Introduction
    02:29 - The Evolution of Purpose in Marketing
    06:31 - Research Findings on Brand Purpose
    10:51 - The Complexity of Purpose Campaigns
    14:40 - The Outlier Problem: Patagonia and Dove
    20:00 - Understanding the Value of Purpose
    23:16 - Conclusion: The Reality of Brand Purpose
    References
    Tait, V., Beal, V., Dawes, J., & Sharp, B. (2025). Brand purpose awareness: Evidence from 14 leading purpose brands. Ehrenberg-Bass Institute for Marketing Science.
    Dawes, J., Tait, V., Beal, V., & Sharp, B. (2026, March 31). Does having a brand purpose actually lead to growth? Marketing Week. https://www.marketingweek.com/purpose-brands-actually-grown/
    Ritson, M. (2022, January 19). Good purpose, bad purpose: Marketers shouldn’t oversimplify the arguments. Marketing Week. https://www.marketingweek.com/mark-ritson-good-purpose-bad-purpose/
    Ritson, M. (2019). Brand purpose doesn’t require a commercial excuse. Marketing Week. https://www.marketingweek.com/ritson-brand-purpose-commercial-excuse/
    Ritson, M. (2019). A true brand purpose doesn’t boost profit, it sacrifices it. Marketing Week. https://www.marketingweek.com/mark-ritson-true-brand-purpose-doesnt-boost-profit-sacrifices/
    Field, P. (2021, October). The effectiveness of brand purpose [Conference presentation]. IPA EffWorks Global 2021. https://ipa.co.uk/news/power-of-brand-purpose
    Shotton, R. (2021). Critique of IPA purpose methodology. Twitter/LinkedIn commentary, October 2021. As reported in The Drum, 14 October 2021.
    Field, P. (2019). The crisis in creative effectiveness. IPA / WARC. https://ipa.co.uk/knowledge/publications-reports/the-crisis-in-creative-effectiveness
    Sharp, B. (2010). How brands grow. Oxford University Press.
    Sinek, S. (2009). Start with why. Portfolio/Penguin.
  • Sleeping Barber - A Marketing Podcast

    SBP 196: The Barber's Brief - The Missing Layer In Performance Marketing?

    05/05/2026 | 29 mins.
    In this episode, we cover everything from the growing trust gap in performance marketing to the evolving role of attribution, AI, and search, and what it all means for how marketers prove impact.
    What we unpack:
    1. Performance marketing’s missing layer: proof
    Are clicks, conversions, and ROAS actually telling the truth — or just telling a story?
    We explore the growing need for verification, transparency, and accountability in a system built to optimize results… not validate them.
    2. Is last-click attribution… not completely broken?
    A new study suggests last-click might be more useful than we thought — but only in very specific scenarios.
    The catch? Most marketers are using it in the exact wrong places.
    3. The future of search: from clicks to answers
    With YouTube testing conversational search (“Ask YouTube”), we discuss the shift from search engines to answer engines — and what happens when platforms control not just discovery, but interpretation.
    4. The New York Times turnaround
    How a legacy publisher is redefining its ad model through games, cooking, and lifestyle content — and why “brand safety” might be the wrong lens entirely.
    5. Ad of the Week: Pinterest’s bold move
    Pinterest tells users to get off social media.
    A platform rejecting the attention economy? We break down why this might be one of the smartest positioning plays in years.
    Themes you’ll hear throughout:
    The difference between performance and truth
    Why measurement ≠ impact
    The growing importance of incrementality and validation
    And how platforms are reshaping the rules of attention and discovery

    Chapters:
    00:00 - Introduction
    02:19 - The Missing Layer in Performance Marketing
    08:05 - Last Click Attribution: A Double-Edged Sword
    14:26 - YouTube's Shift to Answer Engine
    18:56 - The New York Times: Reinventing Advertising
    23:04 - Pinterest's Bold Campaign Against Social Media
    28:22 - Upcoming Conversations and Closing Thoughts
    Links:
    Title: ​The Missing Layer In Performance Marketing: Verifiable Proof
    Link: https://www.forbes.com/councils/forbestechcouncil/2026/05/01/the-missing-layer-in-performance-marketing-verifiable-proof/
    Title: By Way of Nico Neumann Predicted Incrementality by Experimentation (PIE) for Ad Measurement
    Link: https://www.nber.org/papers/w35044
    Title: YouTube Testing New Search Experience - “Ask YouTube”
    Link: https://searchengineland.com/youtube-testing-new-search-experience-ask-youtube-475786
    Title: How The New York Times is using Games and Cooking to win over ‘never news’ advertisers
    Link: https://www.thedrum.com/news/how-the-new-york-times-is-using-games-and-cooking-to-win-over-never-news-advertisers
    Ad of the Week:
    New Pinterest campaign urges Gen Z to get off social mediaLink: https://youtu.be/qr8bNBuptpU?si=ArB2JWyeVGmMYW-f
  • Sleeping Barber - A Marketing Podcast

    SBP 195: The PostPod - Lessons from Dr. Nicole Hartnett: Loyalty is everywhere. Growth isn’t.

    30/04/2026 | 26 mins.
    In this episode, Marc and Vassilis revisit their conversation with Dr. Nicole Hartnett, reflecting on the enduring principles of marketing effectiveness. They discuss the importance of market penetration over customer loyalty, the significance of mental and physical availability for growth, and the need for marketers to understand their customer profiles better. The conversation emphasizes the simplicity of marketing laws and the necessity of consistency in branding.
    Enjoy the show!
    Takeaways
    Loyalty is not the primary focus for growth; market penetration is.
    Light buyers are crucial, contributing significantly to sales.
    Brands grow by increasing mental and physical availability.
    Understanding customer profiles is essential for effective marketing.
    Simplicity in marketing principles can lead to better strategies.
    Consistency in branding builds recognition over time.
    Marketers should focus on the jobs to be done rather than demographics.
    Reach is more important than frequency in marketing campaigns.
    The promise to the customer should be clear and consistent.
    Collaboration across departments is vital for achieving marketing success.

    Chapters
    00:00 - Introduction and Context
    04:02 - Revisiting the Laws of Marketing
    08:00 - The Importance of Market Penetration
    11:58 - Mental and Physical Availability for Growth
    15:52 - The Role of Customer Profiles
    19:57 - Simplicity in Marketing Principles
  • Sleeping Barber - A Marketing Podcast

    SBP 194: Loyalty Is Everywhere, Growth Isn't. With Dr. Nicole Hartnett.

    28/04/2026 | 1h 3 mins.
    Description
    Picture a marketing world flipped upside down: Where heavy buyers aren't your golden goose, where loyalty programs might be missing the point, and where the brands you think are exceptional actually follow surprisingly predictable patterns. Dr. Nicole Hartnett, senior marketing scientist at the world-renowned Ehrenberg-Bass Institute, joins Marc and V to demolish some of marketing's most sacred assumptions with cold, hard data.
    The Ehrenberg-Bass Institute is the world's largest centre for research into marketing and Dr. Nicole Hartnett has won the Market Research Society (MRS) Award for the best paper published by the International Journal of Market Research in 2022. Her groundbreaking research "When Brands Go Dark" analyzed 365 US brands from 22 consumer goods categories that stopped advertising for at least one year, revealing that brands experienced average sales declines of 16% after the first year, 25% after two years, and 36% after three years.
    In this episode, you'll hear Nicole explain why most customer bases are dominated by light buyers who contribute roughly 40-50% of sales, how the Double Jeopardy law proves that big brands don't just have more customers but also slightly more loyal ones, and why mental and physical availability matter more than differentiation. She breaks down the difference between repertoire and subscription markets, reveals why advertising effects are "spread out really thinly over time" like "hitting them with a feather," and shares the surprising patterns that hold true across everything from coffee purchases to B2B software.
    This isn't theoretical—it's the kind of evidence-based marketing science that's transformed how the world's biggest brands actually grow, backed by decades of empirical research that challenges everything you thought you knew about customer loyalty and brand building.
    Timestamps
    00:00: Welcome and introducing Dr. Nicole Hartnett from Ehrenberg-Bass Institute
    03:04: Defining repertoire vs subscription markets and loyalty patterns
    08:40: The Double Jeopardy law explained - why smaller brands suffer twice
    16:16: Light vs heavy buyers - who really drives brand growth?
    26:50: Mental and physical availability as growth drivers
    29:30: Reach vs frequency - the advertising convex response function
    36:45: "When Brands Go Dark" research findings on advertising cessation
    46:00: What makes great advertising - Old Spice campaign breakdown
    54:12: Distinctive assets and brand identity management systems

    References
    Primary Source
    Hartnett, N., Gelzinis, A., Beal, V., Kennedy, R., & Sharp, B. (2021). When brands go dark: Examining sales trends when brands stop broad-reach advertising for long periods. Journal of Advertising Research, 61(3), 247-259.
    Referenced Frameworks / Research
    Sharp, B. (2010). How Brands Grow: What marketers don't know. Oxford University Press.
    Sharp, B., & Romaniuk, J. (2021). How Brands Grow Part 2. Oxford University Press.
    Romaniuk, J. Building Distinctive Brand Assets. Oxford University Press.
    Sharp, B. (2018). Marketing: Theory, Evidence, Practice (2nd ed.). Oxford University Press.
    Referenced in Discussion
    Phua, P., Hartnett, N., Beal, V., Trinh, G., & Kennedy, R. (2023). When Brands Go Dark: A Replication and Extension: Examining Market Share of Brands That Stop Advertising for a Year or Longer. Journal of Advertising Research, 63(2), 172-184.

    Nicole on LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/nicole-hartnett/
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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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