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Sleeping Barber - A Marketing Podcast

Sleeping Barber
Sleeping Barber - A Marketing Podcast
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173 episodes

  • Sleeping Barber - A Marketing Podcast

    SBP 168: The Barber's Brief - Marketers beware! Less is not more.

    27/1/2026 | 24 mins.
    In this week’s Barber’s Brief, Marcc and Vassili unpack four timely stories that cut to the heart of modern marketing leadership: strategy clarity, AI’s real role in organizations, and why going small in marketing is often the riskiest move of all.
    The conversation starts with a sharp diagnosis of “strategy anxiety”—the condition where everything is labelled a priority, trade-offs disappear, and teams are left busy but directionless. From there, they examine why many organizations are stuck using AI to make marketing cheaper, not more valuable, and why that mindset risks turning marketing into a disposable cost center rather than a strategic function.
    The episode then tackles the growing backlash against “less is more” marketing, drawing on effectiveness research that shows scale, reach, and creative boldness still matter—even in a world obsessed with efficiency dashboards.
    They close with Ad of the Week, spotlighting Petro-Canada’s “No Time to Hibernate” Winter Games campaign, breaking down why distinctive assets, emotion, and long-term creative commitment still outperform cautious, forgettable work.
    If you’re feeling pulled in too many directions, overwhelmed by priorities, or pressured to optimize your way to growth, this episode offers a much-needed reset.
    Key Takeaways
    If everything is a priority, you don’t have a strategy.
    Strategy requires exclusion. Anxiety fills the gap when leaders avoid hard choices.
    Activity is not clarity. More dashboards, roadmaps, and urgency don’t replace direction—they often create noise.
    AI used only for efficiency shrinks marketing’s importance. Making content cheaper doesn’t make marketing more valuable or more defensible.
    AI is moving from experimentation to infrastructure.Organizations that fail to move from tools to orchestration risk building tech debt, not advantage.
    “Less is more” is often a trap.Small, fragmented marketing doesn’t reduce risk—it guarantees invisibility.
    Reach, scale, and salience still drive growth. Efficiency metrics are useful, but they don’t replace business outcomes.
    Brand vs. performance is a false dichotomy. Every marketing activity builds the brand—customers experience one system, not silos.
    Great campaigns compound over time. Distinctive assets and creative consistency matter more than short-term optimization.

    Chapters / Timestamps
    00:00 – Welcome to the Barber’s Brief - What caught Marc and V’s attention this week.
    01:00 – Strategy Anxiety: When Everything Is a Priority - Why lack of focus creates burnout, reactivity, and execution without confidence.
    04:45 – Strategic Drift and the Cost of Avoiding Hard Choices - Why exclusion matters as much as inclusion in real strategy.
    06:40 – AI, Davos, and the Efficiency Trap - Why using AI to do “more with less” risks shrinking marketing’s role.
    09:15 – From AI Pilots to Enterprise Infrastructure - How AI becomes tech debt without orchestration and outcomes.
    11:45 – Less Is Not More: Why Marketing Needs Scale - Why cautious, fragmented spend often delivers the worst ROI.
    14:45 – Efficiency Metrics vs. Business Outcomes - The danger of optimizing dashboards instead of growth.
    16:30 – Brand vs. Performance: A False...
  • Sleeping Barber - A Marketing Podcast

    SBP 167: The PostPod - The Only Growth Lever Marketers Control.

    22/1/2026 | 19 mins.
    In this post-pod discussion, Vassilis and Marc unpack the biggest ideas from their recent conversation with Dale Harrison on The Only Growth Lever Marketers Control — and what those ideas actually mean for marketers in practice.
    They explore a critical but often uncomfortable distinction: revenue growth is not the same as real growth. When categories expand, tides rise for everyone — but that doesn’t mean brands are gaining market share, competitive advantage, or long-term resilience.
    This episode digs into why marketers over-index on revenue and ROI, why market share is harder (but more honest) to use as a growth signal, and why a huge part of marketing’s job is simply not screwing things up. The discussion also reframes advertising as both an offensive and defensive investment, emphasizing the role of creative effectiveness, mental availability, and protecting existing demand — not just chasing new sales.
    If you’ve ever been told to “just grow revenue” without clarity on what growth actually means, this episode is for you.
    Topics covered:
    Why revenue growth can mask stagnation
    Market share vs. revenue: why they’re not interchangeable
    The danger of confusing category growth with brand growth
    Why marketers are often rewarded for being “in the right boat at the right time”
    Advertising as demand protection, not just demand creation
    The three levers marketers actually have (and why they’re mostly equalized)
    Creative effectiveness as the only real multiplier
    Why “don’t screw it up” is an underrated marketing strategy
    How to think about growth accelerants and external shocks
    Why long-term success depends on solving for the 95%, not the 5%

    Timestamps
    00:00 – Introduction
    02:00 – Revenue vs. Growth: The Core Misunderstanding - Why increasing revenue doesn’t automatically mean a brand is growing — and why market share matters.
    05:00 – Category Growth, Timing, and the Illusion of Marketing Genius - How external forces (COVID, category expansion, timing) create false signals of success.
    08:30 – Market Share Is Hard (But More Honest) - Why market share is rarely reported, difficult to measure, and still the most truthful growth signal.
    11:30 – Advertising as Protection, Not Just Growth - Why a major part of marketing’s job is maintaining demand and preventing decline.
    14:30 – The Three Levers Marketers Actually Control - Spend, creative effectiveness, and media quality — and why none are silver bullets on their own.
    17:00 – The Real Takeaway: Don’t Screw It Up - Creative quality, mental availability, and being ready when growth accelerants appear.
    19:30 – Final Reflections and Close - What marketers should do differently on Monday morning.
    19:25 – Final reflections and closing thoughts
  • Sleeping Barber - A Marketing Podcast

    SBP 166: The Only Growth Lever Marketers Control. With Dale Harrison.

    20/1/2026 | 56 mins.
    Most brands do not grow. Despite the industry's obsession with "growth porn," relative market share remains remarkably stable over decades. In this episode, Dale Harrison—physicist, former CFO, and consultant—joins Marc and V to dismantle the illusion of marketing-driven growth. He argues that most "hockey stick" curves are the result of external technological innovations or massive capital injections, not tactical marketing genius.
    For the mid-to-senior marketer, the reality is stark: your Reach is largely "locked" by your current market share and budget. This leaves you with a singular, high-stakes variable to manipulate: Creative Effectiveness. We explore why 90% of a campaign’s success relies on reach you often can't control, and why your only move is to ensure your creative isn't "pissing away" the precious budget you do have.
    Key Takeaways
    The Reach Limiter: 90% of effectiveness is driven by Reach (IPA data), but reach is a function of cash. Unless you have $700M in venture capital (like Warby Parker), your reach is capped by your existing revenue.
    The Price-to-Value Ratio: Real growth happens when technology drops the cost of a solution by 10x–100x (e.g., the iPod or Electronic Spreadsheets). Marketing merely rides the "rising lake" of these disruptions.
    The Zero Choice Rule: There is no statistical correlation between what a consumer bought last time and what they will buy next. Loyalty is a probability distribution, not a behavior to be "built."
    Creative as the "Last Resort": Because you cannot outspend the incumbent, you must out-think them. Creative is the only lever that can multiply your limited reach.

    Timestamps & Chapters
    02:00 – Why growth is the exception, not the rule.
    03:15 – Revenue Growth vs. Market Share Growth: Knowing the difference.
    08:30 – The "Rising Lake" Effect: How external factors mask marketing performance.
    13:45 – Case Study: How the iPod changed the price-to-value ratio of music.
    22:50 – Warby Parker and the $700M "Share of Voice" shortcut.
    31:10 – Creative: The only lever marketers actually control.
    38:55 – Deconstructing the Loyalty Myth and the "Zero Choice Rule."
    46:20 – The "Shape of Loyalty": Why market share is so stable over decades.
    51:30 – Practical Application: How to stop "pissing away" your limited budget.
    About the Guest
    Dale Harrison is a strategy consultant and former CFO with a background in physics. He is known for "slaying marketing’s sacred cows" by applying mathematical rigor and evidence-based principles to B2B and B2C strategy. His work focuses on market dynamics, the limits of loyalty, and the mathematical reality of brand growth.

    Reference Links

    Ehrenberg, A. S. C. (1988). Repeat-buying: Facts, theory and applications (2nd ed.). Oxford University Press.
    Harrison, D. (2024). The shape of loyalty: Why market share remains stable. LinkedIn Strategy Series.
    Sharp, B. (2010). How brands grow: What marketers don't know. Oxford University Press.
    Tellis, G. J. (2004). Effective advertising: Understanding when, how, and why advertising works. SAGE Publications.
  • Sleeping Barber - A Marketing Podcast

    SBP 165: The Sharp Cut - Right Message Wrong Everything: The Truth About 1:1 Targeting.

    15/1/2026 | 21 mins.
    Welcome to the first Sharp Cut from The Sleeping Barber Podcast — a tighter, opinion-led format designed to challenge marketing’s most persistent assumptions. In this episode, Vassilis and Marc take on one of the industry’s most widely accepted beliefs: one-to-one personalization.
    Despite overwhelming surveys claiming consumers want personalization and businesses need it, the evidence tells a very different story. Drawing on peer-reviewed research from Ehrenberg-Bass, MIT, Melbourne Business School, Nielsen, and the Journal of Advertising Research, this Sharp Cut separates belief from evidence.
    They unpack why personalization systems are built on inaccurate data, why targeting errors compound rather than optimize, why click-through rates are meaningless, and how narrow targeting actively undermines growth by excluding future buyers.
    Most importantly, they outline what actually works: reach, creative quality, mental availability, contextual relevance, and proper experimentation.If you care about effectiveness over mythology, this episode is for you.
    Chapters:
    00:00 - Introduction
    04:13 - Beliefs vs. Evidence
    07:48 - The Targeting Effectiveness Evidence
    11:07 - The Compound Problem
    12:54 - The Measurement Illusion
    14:47 - The Hidden cost of Narrow Targeting
    17:21 - What Actually Works
    20:00 - Our Final TakeKey
    Key Takeaways
    Personalization is widely believed, not well proven. Most supporting stats come from surveys and vendor case studies, not controlled experiments.
    Data accuracy is poor. Identity and attribute targeting accuracy often ranges between 32–69%, with many segments no better than a coin flip.
    Targeting errors compound. Stacking multiple “precise” attributes multiplies mistakes, not accuracy—often reaching less than 15% of the intended audience.
    Third-party targeting performs no better than random. This holds true in both B2C and B2B contexts, even for senior decision-makers.CTR is a vanity metric.
    Studies show click-through rates have near-zero correlation with brand outcomes or ROI.
    Narrow targeting hurts growth. It focuses spend on the ~5% in-market while excluding the 95% who drive future demand.

    What works instead:
    Reach over precision
    Context over profile
    First-party data for retention, not acquisition
    Creative as the real targeting lever
    Measurement tied to business outcomes
    Controlled testing with holdouts

    Links:
    The value of getting personalization right—or wrong—is multiplying. https://www.mckinsey.com/capabilities/growth-marketing-and-sales/our-insights/the-value-of-getting-personalization-right-or-wrong-is-multiplying
    Artist sells invisible sculpture—Adtech sells the same thing. Forbes. https://www.forbes.com/sites/augustinefou/2021/06/03/artist-sells-invisible-sculptureadtech-sells-the-same-thing/
    Yeo, T. E. D., Chu, T. H., & Li, Q. (2025). How persuasive is personalized advertising? A meta-analytic review of experimental evidence of the...
  • Sleeping Barber - A Marketing Podcast

    SBP 164: The Barber's Brief - Don’t Create Bite-Sized Chunks of Your Content

    12/1/2026 | 29 mins.
    In this Barber’s Brief, V and Marc cover the biggest marketing and platform stories from the last couple of weeks—plus introduce a new segment.
    First up, they unpack why marketers should stop trying to re-label marketing as CapEx, and why misusing finance terms (like ROI) can damage credibility with CFOs. Then they move into search and AI: Google’s Danny Sullivan warns publishers not to restructure content into “bite-sized chunks” just to appease AI search—because what works today may not work tomorrow.
    Next, they revisit Paul Feldwick’s classic “message myth” argument: advertising isn’t just a rational “message delivery” machine—it’s showmanship, emotion, and association-building that shapes preference and memory. Finally, they break down the strategic implications of the Google + Walmart partnership and what it signals about the future of retail discovery, closed-loop measurement, and platform power consolidation.
    Ad of the Week: Miller Lite starring Christopher Walken, a “masterclass in showing up without shouting,” built around a simple cultural truth: people aren’t showing up like they used to—and maybe we should.
    To close, they preview The Sharp Cut: an upcoming POV episode on one-to-one marketing, mass personalization, and whether the promise is real or overhyped.
    Listen, share, and stay sharp, everyone!
    Key Takeways
    Stop calling marketing “CapEx” to sound finance-savvy. If you misuse accounting language (ROI, CapEx/OpEx), you lose credibility fast—especially with CFOs.
    Marketing doesn’t cleanly fit CapEx logic. Brand value is uncertain, often maintenance-based, and hard to capitalize like a tangible asset.
    Better move: push for practical governance: separate marketing line items on the P&L, and treat “foundational” work (e.g., rebrand) more like development/R&D where appropriate.
    Google’s warning on AI-era SEO: don’t rebuild your site into short “LLM-friendly chunks” just because it may perform temporarily—optimize for humans, not the machine.
    The “Message Myth” still matters: effective advertising is often less about what it says and more about what it does—creating emotional associations and mental availability.
    Digital vs. analog communication: boards tend to prefer “digital” (logic, claims, propositions), but “analog” (music, mood, emotion, showmanship) is what drives preference.
    Google + Walmart = retail discovery power shift. Expect more closed-loop, AI-driven commerce experiences where media, merchandising, and checkout blur together.
    Ad of the Week insight: sometimes the strongest creative move is restraint—Walken’s presence sells “showing up” as a cultural reset, not a hard sell.

    Chapters
    00:00 Introduction and Marketing Moments
    01:14 The Language of Marketing and Finance
    07:47 Content Strategy in the Age of AI
    12:51 The Message Myth in Advertising
    18:57 Google and Walmart's Retail Partnership
    25:19 Ad of the Week: Miller Lite's Campaign
    27:43 Upcoming Changes in the Podcast
    Links:
    Marketing is Not CapEx—Stop Saying It Is - https://www.marketingweek.com/marketing-not-capex-ridicule-finance/
    Google doesn’t want you to create bite-sized chunks of your content -...

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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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