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Sleeping Barber - A Marketing Podcast

Sleeping Barber
Sleeping Barber - A Marketing Podcast
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210 episodes

  • Sleeping Barber - A Marketing Podcast

    SBP 205: The Sharp Cut - Busy Is Where Strategy Goes to Die

    04/06/2026 | 33 mins.
    What if the biggest threat to your strategy isn't a competitor, a budget cut, or AI?
    What if it's busyness?
    In this Sharp Cut, Marc Binkley and Vassilis Douros tackle one of marketing and leadership's biggest comfort blankets: the belief that activity equals progress.
    Drawing on the work of Roger Martin, Richard Rumelt, Michael Porter, Henry Mintzberg, and decades of research in strategy, psychology, and organizational behaviour, they explore why so many companies mistake plans, initiatives, and corporate buzzwords for actual strategy.
    The conversation unpacks:
    Why strategy is fundamentally a series of choices
    How organizations become trapped in the illusion of progress
    Why indecision is often the most common strategic outcome
    The hidden cost of strategic ambiguity
    What B2B buying behaviour can teach us about leadership
    Why marketing departments produce more content than ever while achieving less impact
    How AI accelerates both good strategy and bad strategy
    Three practical actions leaders can take immediately to make better strategic decisions

    This episode is ultimately about one uncomfortable truth:
    Most organizations don't have a strategy problem.
    They have a choice problem.
    And until they're willing to make difficult choices, strategy remains little more than activity wearing a strategy costume.
    Takeaways
    Most strategies presented are often just lists of initiatives.
    Real strategy involves making explicit choices and trade-offs.
    Indecision can be a strategy, but it's not an effective one.
    Ambiguity can be useful short-term but harmful long-term.
    Fluffy language often indicates a lack of real strategy.
    Marketing and strategy should be aligned for effectiveness.
    The say-do gap reflects a disconnect in organizational goals.
    AI can exacerbate existing strategic issues if not managed properly.
    Effective strategy requires clear, actionable frameworks.
    Leaders must be willing to make specific, falsifiable choices.

    Chapters
    00:00 - The Illusion of Strategy
    03:13 - Defining Real Strategy
    05:49 - The Challenge of Decision-Making
    08:49 - Indecision as a Strategy
    11:59 - The Role of Ambiguity in Strategy
    14:50 - The Cost of Fluffy Language
    17:48 - Marketing and Strategy Alignment
    21:04 - The Say-Do Gap in Organizations
    23:52 - The Impact of AI on Strategy
    27:03 - Practical Steps for Effective Strategy
    References
    Cappellaro, G., Compagni, A., & Vaara, E. (2021). Maintaining strategic ambiguity for protection: Struggles over opacity, equivocality, and absurdity around the Sicilian Mafia. Academy of Management Journal, 64(1), 1–37.
    Dixon, M., & McKenna, T. (2022). The JOLT effect: How high performers overcome customer indecision. Portfolio.
    Drucker, P. F. (1967). The effective executive. Harper & Row.
    Eisenberg, E. M. (1984). Ambiguity as strategy in organizational communication. Communication Monographs, 51(3), 227–242.
    Hurman, J. (2024). The case for creative effectiveness. Cannes Lions / WARC.
    Kantar. (2024). How optimized touchpoint planning drives brand growth. Kantar Insights.
    Kapero. (2024). Channels and content: The state of the marketing department. Kapero Management Consultants.
    Kim, W. C., & Mauborgne, R. (2005). Blue ocean strategy: How to create uncontested market space and make the competition irrelevant. Harvard Business Review Press.
    Lafley, A. G., & Martin, R. L. (2013). Playing to win: How strategy really works. Harvard Business Review Press.
    Martin, R. L. (2020, October 5). The role of management systems in strategy. Roger Martin Substack. https://rogerlmartin.substack.com
    Martin, R. L. (2021, April 19). It's time to accept that marketing and strategy are one discipline. Medium. https://rogermartin.medium.com
    Martin, R. L. (2023, January 23). Being ‘too busy’ means your personal strategy sucks. Roger Martin Substack. https://rogerlmartin.substack.com
    Martin, R. L. (2026, March 16). Becoming an AI-augmented enterprise. Roger Martin Substack. https://rogerlmartin.substack.com
    Mintzberg, H. (1973). The nature of managerial work. Harper & Row.
    Mintzberg, H. (1987). The strategy concept I: Five Ps for strategy. California Management Review, 30(1), 11–24.
    Morgan, A. (2024). The cost of dull. Cannes Lions / System1 Research.
    Porter, M. E. (1996). What is strategy? Harvard Business Review, 74(6), 61–78.
    PwC. (2025). 28th annual global CEO survey: Reinvention on the edge of tomorrow. PricewaterhouseCoopers.
    Rush. (1980). Freewill [Song]. On Permanent Waves. Anthem / Mercury Records. (Lyrics by Neil Peart.)
    Rumelt, R. P. (2011). Good strategy, bad strategy: The difference and why it matters. Crown Business.
    Strategic ambiguity systematic review (Authors, 2025). Strategic ambiguity: A systematic review, a typology and a dynamic capability view. Management Decision, 63(13), 123–xx. [Full citation TK once confirmed]
    Turner, M. (2024). How buyable B2B emotions unlock $19 trillion in category growth. LinkedIn / The B2B Institute.
    WARC. (2026). The Multiplier Playbook. WARC.
    Waytz, A. (2023, March-April). Beware a culture of busyness. Harvard Business Review.
    Wilson, T. D., Reinhard, D. A., Westgate, E. C., Gilbert, D. T., Ellerbeck, N., Hahn, C., Brown, C. L., & Shaked, A. (2014). Just think: The challenges of the disengaged mind. Science, 345(6192), 75–77.
  • Sleeping Barber - A Marketing Podcast

    SBP 204: The Barber's Brief - AI Won’t Save Bad Marketing

    02/06/2026 | 30 mins.
    Everyone is talking about AI replacing marketers.
    But what if the bigger problem isn't AI at all?
    In this episode of The Barber's Brief, Marc Binkley and Vassilis Douros explore a series of stories that challenge some of marketing's biggest assumptions.
    They unpack new research showing that most CMOs aren't worried about AI replacing jobs. They're worried about whether their teams have the skills to use it effectively. The conversation quickly expands into a deeper question: is marketing facing an AI skills gap, or are we simply exposing a fundamentals gap that has existed all along?
    The discussion also covers:
    Why only 40% of marketers believe advertising is understood in the C-suite
    The eight barriers preventing organizations from integrating brand and performance
    What H&R Block learned when its marketing mix model became too slow to be useful
    Why marketers continue to retreat to last-click attribution during moments of uncertainty
    The rise of AI as an "Iron Man suit" that amplifies marketers rather than replaces them

    Plus, Ad of the Week goes to Brazilian beer brand Brahma for a brilliant World Cup campaign that transforms 24 years of disappointment into hope by reminding Brazilians not what happened, but who they are.
    This episode is ultimately about one question:
    Are we optimizing for the dashboard, or are we optimizing for the business?
    Key Takeaway
    Three-quarters of CMOs are concerned about the AI skills gap.
    AI is transforming marketing into a talent transformation.
    Understanding marketing fundamentals is crucial in the age of AI.
    The effectiveness say-do gap highlights a disconnect in marketing.
    Dynamic marketing mix modeling can enhance decision-making.
    Measurement should build confidence, not just justify spending.
    Less than half of marketing decisions are evidence-based.
    AI should be seen as a tool to enhance human capabilities.
    Brahma's campaign focuses on identity and belief, not just sales.
    Nostalgia can be a powerful motivator for consumer engagement.

    Chapters
    00:00 - Introduction
    01:12 - The AI Skills Gap in Marketing
    04:21 - Understanding Marketing Fundamentals
    07:47 - The Effectiveness Say-Do Gap
    11:54 - Dynamic Marketing Mix Modelling
    18:52 - The Future of AI in Marketing
    24:18 - Ad of the Week: Brahma's World Cup Campaign
    News Links
    Three-quarters of CMOs are grappling with AI skills gap
    Link: https://www.marketingweek.com/cmos-grappling-ai-skills-gap/
    WARC - The Multiplier Playbook for CMO’s looking to integrate brand & performance
    Link: https://www.warc.com/en/the-multiplier-playbook-2026
    How H&R Block rethought attribution and modelling – and found more confidence in brand and business outcomes
    Link: https://www.mi-3.com.au/01-06-2026/when-marketing-mix-modelling-isnt-working-how-hr-block-rethought-attribution-and
    Robo-dogs, driverless cabs, AI perfume & the GTM singularity: Forrester B2B Summit 2026
    Link: https://www.thedrum.com/news/robo-dogs-driverless-cabs-ai-perfume-and-the-gtm-singularity-forrester-b2b-summit-2026
  • Sleeping Barber - A Marketing Podcast

    SBP 203: The PostPod - Lessons from David Lui: Retail Isn't Dying. The Operating Model Is.

    28/05/2026 | 15 mins.
    Most marketers talk about growth through media, performance, and digital channels.
    But what happens when growth comes from stores, people, and product instead?
    In this PostPod discussion, Marc and Vassilis reflect on their conversation with David, exploring the resurgence of iconic Canadian brand Kit and Ace and what modern marketers can learn from retail done properly.
    The conversation moves beyond dashboards and attribution models into something much more foundational:
    Product quality
    Customer promise
    Physical availability
    Brand consistency
    Retail experience

    And the overlooked role of people in building a brand
    Marc and Vassilis unpack:
    Why physical retail still matters in a digital-first world
    How stores can function as media channels
    The relationship between product, place, and brand growth
    Why scaling too aggressively can destroy a brand
    The forgotten importance of the “place” P in marketing
    How employee belief can become a marketing engine
    Why some brands quietly disappear — and how they come back stronger

    This episode is ultimately about something simple: Great brands are not built by advertising alone.
    They’re built through consistency across product, people, place, and promise.
    Chapters
    00:00 - Introduction
    03:00 - The Importance of Brand Promise
    05:55 - Strategic Growth and Market Positioning
    08:54 - Cultural Insights and Market Adaptation
    11:55 - The Role of People in Brand Success
  • Sleeping Barber - A Marketing Podcast

    SBP 202: Retail Isn't Dying. The Operating Model Is. With David Lui

    26/05/2026 | 51 mins.
    The Bay closed. Frank and Oak shuttered. Insolvencies have been climbing for years and the narrative everyone's repeating is that retail is in trouble. David Lui has a different read. Retail isn't dying. The operating model is. And the brands going under aren't the ones customers stopped loving, they're the ones whose people, product, and place stopped working.
    As CEO of Kit & Ace and co-founder of Unity Brands, David is doing almost the exact opposite of what you'd expect. He's buying beloved Canadian brands that almost didn't make it, and he's opening stores.
    In this episode, Marc and V sit down with David, a former colleague from their Canadian Tire days, to unpack what changes when a marketer crosses over to the P&L seat. We get into why every store opening is a bigger marketing spend than any ad campaign, the P's most marketers consistently underrate, what David learned scaling Korite into China through live-streaming when North America wasn't ready for it, why he calls his stores billboards, and the metric he ignored as a CMO that he refuses to take his eyes off as a CEO.
    If you've ever defended a budget, sat through a quarterly review, or wondered why a brand you loved quietly disappeared, this one's for you.
    Timestamps
    00:00 Cold open and intro: the Canadian retail paradox
    03:34 David's origin: Hong Kong factories and a counselor who got it wrong
    10:25 Canadian Tire days and the move to Mark's
    15:11 Selling Korite in China: live-streaming before North America was ready
    19:51 Kit & Ace's origin story and the DNA Unity Brands kept
    22:32 Building the Unity Brands portfolio: Tilley, Mastermind, and operational synergy
    28:02 From marketer to operator: the P&L reframe
    30:23 Why every store opening is the single largest marketing spend
    33:08 The P's marketers underrate: people and place
    35:06 The metric David ignored as a CMO and refuses to lose as a CEO
    40:34 Premium positioning and why fast fashion is fading
    43:36 What the next Canadian challenger brand has to get right
    46:24 Where Canadian retail is headed
    About David
    David Lui, CEO, Kit & Ace; Co-founder, Unity Brands
    LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/davidymlui/
    Kit & Ace: kitandace.com
    Tilley: tilley.com
    Mastermind Toys: mastermindtoys.com
  • Sleeping Barber - A Marketing Podcast

    SBP 201: The Sharp Cut - A Tale of Two Frequencies

    20/05/2026 | 23 mins.
    For decades, marketers have debated one question:
    How much frequency is enough?
    But what if the industry has been arguing about two completely different things the entire time?
    In Part 2 of this Sharp Cut series, Marc Binkley and Vassilis Douros revisit the reach vs frequency debate after a wave of listener feedback challenged, refined, and strengthened the original episode. What emerges is a far more nuanced framework built around one critical distinction: burst frequency vs drip frequency.
    Drawing on work from Byron Sharp, Les Binet, Hermann Ebbinghaus, Stu Carr, Dale Harrison, Paul Hindle, and real-world incrementality testing from industry practitioners, this episode breaks down:
    Why frequency is not one thing
    The difference between burst and drip frequency
    How memory actually works in advertising
    Why brands quietly lose effectiveness when they go dark
    The hidden risks of streaming frequency caps
    Why low frequency can appear more effective than it really is
    The three real jobs of frequency: building, refreshing, and activating
    Why impressions and average frequency often mislead marketers
    How last-click attribution continues to distort decision making
    The planning mistakes quietly wasting media budgets today

    This episode reframes one of marketing’s oldest debates through the lens of memory, incrementality, and effectiveness.
    Because the real question was never reach versus frequency.
    It was burst versus drip.
    Chapters
    00:00 - Introduction to Comfort Blankets in Advertising
    03:40 - Understanding Memory in Advertising
    08:05 - Building and Refreshing Memory Structures
    10:08 - The Impact of Streaming on Frequency
    13:50 - The Three Jobs of Advertising
    20:38 - Measurement Challenges in Advertising
    Original LinkedIn Post: https://www.linkedin.com/feed/update/urn:li:activity:7453434962604691457/
    Special thanks to all those who inspired this follow-up episode:
    Stu Carr, Dale Harrison, Paul Hindle and Dennis A.
    Resources
    Binet, L. (2024, January 17). How advertising REALLY works [Video]. YouTube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B9EDJs3evCI
    Binet, L., & Davis, W. (2025, October). Go big or go home [Conference presentation]. IPA Effectiveness Conference, London, UK. https://ipa.co.uk/news/go-big-or-go-home
    Binkley, M. (2025, August 7). 4Ps - Promotion: Why your customers say ads don't work on me. WARC. https://www.warc.com/en/article/4ps---promotion
    Carr, S. (2026, February 2). Why a frequency of 1 works, and why it isn't nearly enough. Mi3. https://www.mi-3.com.au/02-02-2026/why-frequency-1-works-and-why-it-isnt-nearly-enough
    Ebbinghaus, H. (1885). Uber das Gedachtnis: Untersuchungen zur experimentellen Psychologie. Duncker & Humblot.
    Gordon, B. R., Moakler, R., & Zettelmeyer, F. (2026). Predictive incrementality by experimentation (PIE) for ad measurement (NBER Working Paper). National Bureau of Economic Research.
    Harrison, D. W. (2022, November). Ad reach and frequency are not independent variables [LinkedIn post]. LinkedIn. https://www.linkedin.com/posts/dale-w-harrison
    Klepek, M. (2025). Duplication of purchase and double jeopardy in social media markets [Working paper]. Silesian University of Technology.
    Krugman, H. E. (1972). Why three exposures may be enough. Journal of Advertising Research, 12(6), 11-14.
    Ritson, M. (2023, October 16). Consumers don't get tired of ads, only marketers do. Marketing Week. https://www.marketingweek.com/consumers-tired-ads-marketers/
    Sharp, B. (2010, September 4). Frequency and frequency: Something to watch out for [Blog post]. Marketing Science. https://byronsharp.wordpress.com/2010/09/04/frequency-and-frequency-something-to-watch-out-for/
    Sharp, B., Romaniuk, J., & Kennedy, E. (Eds.). (2021). Marketing: Theory, evidence, practice (3rd ed.). Oxford University Press.
    Taylor, J., Kennedy, R., & Sharp, B. (2009). Is once really enough? Making generalizations about advertising's convex sales response function. Journal of Advertising Research, 49(2), 198-200.
    Thomaz, F. (2024, October 15). Reach sufficiency and the missing dimension [Conference presentation]. SXSW Sydney, Sydney, Australia. Reported in Mi3. https://www.mi-3.com.au/15-10-2024/really-mediocre-outcomes
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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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