224 episodes
- What if almost everything we've been taught about advertising is built on a sales model from 1904?
In this Sharp Cut, we unpack six of marketing's most persistent myths—from "digital has no waste" to "last-click attribution tells us what works"—before rebuilding a simpler, evidence-based explanation of how advertising actually works.
Rather than relying on theory, we challenge these ideas using our own careers, practical examples, and decades of marketing science from Byron Sharp, Les Binet, James Hurman, Orlando Wood and others.
In this episode
Why digital isn't actually waste-free
Why targeting isn't enough
Why advertising isn't sales
Why creative matters more than many marketers believe
Why personalization has been oversold
Why ROAS isn't telling the full story
Why advertising is better understood as planting and harvesting
If you've ever struggled to explain marketing to your CFO—or even to yourself—this episode is for you.
Chapters:
00:00 Welcome to Sharp Cut
00:15 Why Most Companies Misunderstand Advertising
02:13 Myth #1: Digital Has No Waste
06:36 Myth #2: Target High-Intent Audiences
09:36 Myth #3: Advertising Is Sales Done Over Media
11:03 Myth #4: Creative Is Just Decoration
12:34 Myth #5: Personalization Is The Future
14:29 Myth #6: Last-Click Attribution Tells Us What Works
17:10 How Advertising Actually Works
18:04 Why We're Still Using a Sales Model from 1904
19:55 Advertising Is a Weak Force
20:47 The Two Jobs of Advertising
21:39 Plant vs. Harvest: A Better Mental Model
22:04 The McCain Case Study
23:59 Why Most Companies Still Think Like Salespeople
25:12 Becoming Experts in Our Own Trade
26:20 Les Binet's One-Slide Explanation
27:29 Final Thoughts: Start Planting
Supporting Links:
Binkley, M., & Douros, V. (Hosts). (n.d.). What marketers still get wrong with Prof. Byron Sharp (No. 215) [Audio podcast episode]. The Sleeping Barber Podcast.
Hurman, J. (2026). Future demand. https://futuredemand.com
Iwamoto, A. (2024). The origin of AIDA: Who invented and formulated the AIDA model? Japan Marketing History Review, 3(2), 150-166. https://doi.org/10.51102/jmhr.3.2_53
Mulroney, R. (2024). McCain: When the chips are down, margins matter. How a focus on long-term emotional brand-building reduced price elasticity and increased profits for McCain [IPA Effectiveness Awards case study]. WARC. https://www.warc.com/content/article/mccain-when-the-chips-are-down-margins-matter-how-a-focus-on-long-term-emotional-brand-building-reduced-price-elasticity-and-increased-profits-for-mccain/156769
WARC. (2026). The multiplier playbook: The CMO's guide to integrating brand and performance. WARC.
Foundational sources (optional, for show notes)
Binet, L., & Field, P. (2013). The long and the short of it: Balancing short and long-term marketing strategies. Institute of Practitioners in Advertising.
Sharp, B. (2010). How brands grow: What marketers don't know. Oxford University Press.
To confirm before air: Hurman subtitle and publisher; the exact platform and date of Binet's How Advertising Really Works video (candidate: the Cannes Lions Advertising 101 course); the publication date of SBP episode 215; and a direct URL for the WARC Multiplier Playbook (produced with Analytic Partners, BERA.ai, Prophet, System1 and the ANA). - What do Netflix, Reddit, AI, M&M's and Lyft have in common?
More than you might think.
In this episode of The Barber's Brief, Marc Binkley and Vassilis Douros unpack one of the biggest strategic lessons in modern marketing: competitive advantages don't last forever.
From Netflix reconsidering binge watching, to Reddit fighting AI generated spam, to the explosion of Martech tools and one of the year's smartest advertising campaigns from Lyft, this episode explores why the brands that continue to grow are the ones willing to challenge yesterday's assumptions.
Topics include:
Netflix's changing release strategy
AI spam and Reddit's response
Are marketers buying too many AI tools?
Why one M&M mascot was banned
Lyft's brilliant "Save the Money" campaign
Why great advertising dramatizes problems instead of explaining benefits
If you enjoy evidence-based marketing, creative effectiveness and challenging conventional wisdom, subscribe for new episodes every week.
Chapters
00:00 Introduction
01:00 Netflix and the Innovator's Dilemma
05:30 Reddit vs AI Spam
10:05 AI Tool Overload
15:30 The M&M Mascot Ban
19:45 Ad of the Week — Lyft
23:20 Coming Next: How Advertising Really Works
News Links:
Did Netflix Break the Habit It Created? - https://techcrunch.com/2026/07/06/netflix-invented-binge-watching-now-it-may-have-outgrown-it/
Reddit Is Cracking Down on AI Marketing Slop - https://finance.yahoo.com/technology/ai/articles/reddit-cracking-down-ai-marketing-115000368.html
5 questions to ask AI vendors before buying a tool -https://searchengineland.com/ai-vendor-questions-481765
M&M’s brand character gets ad banned under unhealthy food rules - https://www.marketingweek.com/mms-brand-character-lhf-ad-rules/
Lyft. Save the Money - https://youtu.be/7KARBlOzx8E?si=a4ummQl8NvYFmPO8 SBP 217: The PostPod - Lessons from James Hurman. Ads Don't Persuade People to Buy.
09/07/2026 | 25 mins.What if marketing's biggest challenge isn't proving its value—but explaining it? Following our conversation with James Hurman, we reflect on one of the most practical frameworks we've encountered in years: Future Demand.
Rather than revisiting every topic from the interview, this Post-Pod explores what the ideas actually mean for marketers trying to influence leadership, defend budgets, and build long-term growth inside their organizations.
In this episode:
Why "future demand" may be better language than "brand awareness"
Why leadership teams naturally prioritize demand capture
The role of marketing during recessions - Why great campaigns wear in—not out
Why dashboards often tell an incomplete story
Objective truth vs. personal truth in marketing
How evidence-based marketing becomes repeatable inside organizations
If you've already listened to our interview with James Hurman, this conversation helps connect the dots between marketing theory and day-to-day practice.
Enjoy the show!
Chapters:
00:00 Welcome to the Post-Pod
00:45 James Hurman’s Core Idea: Advertising Creates Future Demand
01:40 Demand Creation vs. Demand Capture
03:55 Future Demand as a Leadership Conversation
05:00 The Smartphone Example and the 95/5 Rule
07:55 Market Dynamics and Performance Marketing Bias
08:50 Why Brand Matters Most in Recessions
11:05 Campaigns Wear In, Not Out
12:40 The Problem with Platform Metrics
15:15 Objective Truth vs. Personal and Political Truth
17:20 Why Future Demand Is Easier to Sell Internally
19:15 Evidence-Based Marketing and Organizational Buy-In
21:50 Why Repeatability Matters
24:20 Final Reflections on James Hurman’s BookSBP 216: SBP Interview - Ads Don’t Persuade People to Buy. With James Hurman.
07/07/2026 | 1h 6 mins.Advertising doesn't work by persuading people to buy. It works by creating future demand. James Hurman returns to unpack his new book: why the funnel is the wrong model, how the biggest group of buyers isn't in the market yet, why green dashboards can hide a dying brand, and how to make the case for brand spend to a CFO who only sees this year.
There are two types of demand in any market: the small group ready to buy now, and the much larger group who will come in later. Most advertising pours everything into the first group, watches the dashboards turn green, and wonders why the business numbers stay red. James Hurman returns to The Sleeping Barber to explain the fix at the heart of his new book, Future Demand.
Marc, V, and James work through the two-part funnel that replaces the old model, the myth that great companies don't advertise, why Volvo's Epic Split kept paying off for a decade, and why ads wear in rather than wear out. They get practical on the boardroom case: share of voice, the five to ten percent rule, and how to reframe brand as future cash flow for a finance team. They close on AI: the book's Pocket Advisor app, and how language models lean on brand signals when they choose what to recommend.
Enjoy the show.
Show note links:
Future Demand (book, ebook, audiobook, Pocket Advisor app, community): https://futuredemand.com
Future Demand community: https://community.futuredemand.com
James Hurman (website): https://www.jameshurman.com
Tracksuit (brand tracking): https://www.gotracksuit.com
The Creative Effectiveness Ladder (Hurman & Peter Field, WARC / Cannes Lions): https://www.warc.com
Volvo Trucks: Epic Split feat. Jean-Claude Van Damme (2013): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M7FIvfx5J10
Guest Social:
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jameshurman/
Substack: https://substack.com/@jameshurman
Website: https://www.jameshurman.com
Book / app / community: https://futuredemand.com
Chapters:
00:00 - The two types of demand, and why James rewrote the book
06:25 - Brand isn't a big-company luxury: the 18-month payoff
09:42 - Two types of demand, made visual
14:14 - Why the funnel is the wrong model
16:03 - The great-companies-don't-advertise myth
22:30 - Target tight for now, broad for later
26:32 - Volvo's Epic Split and the milk paradox
31:35 - Ads wear in, they don't wear out
37:21 - Boats and tides: why green dashboards lie
43:30 - The boardroom case: share of voice, budgets, and the CFO
52:51 - Recessions: cut performance, protect brand
56:40 - AI: the Pocket Advisor and how models pick brands- Byron Sharp — Professor of Marketing Science, Director of the Ehrenberg-Bass Institute at the University of Adelaide, and author of How Brands Grow — joins us at Cannes fresh off his sold-out Bassey Theatre session with Mark Ritson (a thousand people queued to get in).
We dig into the five fundamentals he and Ritson agreed on and, more usefully, where the industry keeps getting them wrong. Byron explains why mental availability is not the same as brand awareness, why “search advertising” was a branding con that confuses purchase availability with memory-building, and why your media metrics are lying to you about reach.
Along the way: the retail-media gold rush (sorry, Marriott Media), the AI hype bubble he expects to pop, why Elsa buried every other Disney princess, and the “non-artificial intelligence” agent Ehrenberg-Bass is building to stop corporate AI from breaking marketing’s laws of physics.
A masterclass in thinking clearly about what your marketing money is actually supposed to do.
Chapters:
00:00 - Welcome: Byron Sharp at Cannes, and why impact (not academic prestige) drives Ehrenberg-Bass
01:39 - The “two festivals” of Cannes: creativity awards vs. the serious fringe; the sold-out Ritson session
04:03 - What’s being sold to marketers on the Croisette — and the retail-media land grab (Marriott Media)
05:26 - Fragmentation, monetizing inventory, and why ~80% of this year’s AI vendors will be gone
07:02 -The five things Byron agreed with Ritson on
10:21 - #1 Mental availability — and the critical mistake of confusing it with awareness
12:27 - “You overestimate your reach”: fleeting exposures and inflated media metrics
14:19 - Why calling it “search advertising” was a disservice: purchase vs. mental availability
15:27 - #2 Distinctive brand assets — why a logo checkbox isn’t enough
17:46 - #3 Consistency — everyone agrees, nobody does it
18:50 - The “big idea,” category entry points, and the Frozen/Elsa problem
21:42 - Inside the How Brands Grow executive program
23:46 - “Non-artificial intelligence”: the AI agent Ehrenberg-Bass is building
25:20 - Wrap
Links:
Ehrenberg-Bass Institute: https://marketingscience.info/
Professor Byron Sharp: https://www.linkedin.com/in/professorbyronsharp/
How Brands Grow Live: https://marketingscience.info/learn-with-us/learning-opportunities/how-brands-grow-live-for-executives
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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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