The Musings Of An Opinionated Sod [Help Me Grow!]


Beware Of Expensive Immitations, Posing As Cheap Alternatives …

So the good news for you all is this is the last post for 2 weeks.

Yep, you’ve guessed it – I’m on a holiday, I mean a work trip.

Or should I say trips. Plural.

First to Europe. Then Australia. Then LA … I know, I know, I’m a prick.

Now given I pre-write my posts [for example today is the 25th Jan] I appreciate I could still cover this period, but let’s be honest – after 18 years, I’m running out of things to say so we could both do with the break from each other.

What that means is this is the last post until March 4.

MARCH!!!

How the fuck have we got there so soon? Oh, I suppose we haven’t yet have we … but anyway, March 4 is a Monday, so you get to have multiple weekends before I ruin your week again.

You’re welcome.

So now what do I do after writing that long-winded introduction?

Fuck knows.

But recently I saw a couple of things that I thought were particularly good and both revolve about intelligence in marketing rather than the egotistical commodification of it.

As I’ve written a few times before, I’m a bit fed up of the ‘hustle culture of commentary’ that our industry has got itself into. Where everyone seems to speak like they’re gods and gurus who have invented or reinvented the World.

That doesn’t mean they’re idiots – many say stuff that is genuinely interesting – but so much of it has an air of self-interest. Hijacking topicality for self-capitalisation.

Though the ones who claim they’ve got the answers to everything make me laugh – especially when they do nothing with it other than pedestal spouting. I mean, how stupid is that if they think it’s going to change the world. But maybe its because somewhere along the way, they’ve realised what they’re claiming is not ‘new’, just new to them and all they’re doing is reinforcing how little they know about their industries history or life outside their bubble.

That’s not wrong, we all do that to a degree, but it tends to lead to people changing their ways rather than doubling-down on their ego.

But even those people aren’t as annoying as the ones who claim some sort of ownership over something someone has actually done, because they spouted something vaguely associated with the topic on Twitter/X about 6 years earlier.

As I said a while back, it will only be a matter of time before someone makes a paper plane and claims they’ve invented flight.

Look, I’m all for thinking out loud – hell, I’ve been doing it on here for almost 2 decades – but when it’s conveyed with the confidence of a mediocre white man [copyright Chelsea] then that’s where the problems start. At least for me.

There are some brilliant people out there … genuinely brilliant. People who do stuff or try stuff with what they think and say. And a lot of them aren’t even on social media. But unfortunately there seems to be a lot more who are camped out on social platforms … churning out an endless stream of strategic myths, obviousness or bullshit … using a tone that suggests they’re innovators and anyone who dare challenge them, is a luddite.

It’s kind of the Trump strategy and sadly, like Trump, it works with many.

Which makes me wonder, ‘what if I’m wrong?’.

And you know what … I could be. And I’m open to be.

But popularity is not a sign of originality … or accuracy … or smarts … and I think those things are pretty important too.

That said, if we’re going down this imitation intelligence path, at least make people think rather than try to demand how they should think. And recently I saw two things that did just that.

The first was this:

Now I appreciate a strategist supporting a message of not getting lost in planning may sound a bit weird … but apart from everything else, it makes a welcome change from the overly complex schtick we seem to be celebrating and advocating for right now.

Of course thinking things through is important. But one thing we don’t seem to talk about a lot is the importance of knowing when to stop. So you can put things into motion rather than putting them into an endless loop of consideration.

I got given a piece of advice once I’ve held on to for a long time.

“Be rigorous as hell until you find something exciting …

… then stop and protect it at all costs.”

Now I appreciate the person who told me this was very successful so could afford to say that, but their point was that it was this approach that had got their position. In essence, they advocated for planning to show them the way not obscure it.

I like this view.

When I was starting out, strategy was valued when it was powerful simple … delivering a path to the bigger, better places with sharpness, potency and focus.

But now it seems we’re not like that.

The general narrative appears to be ‘we live in different times with different considerations’ and so we need a completely different approach to the work we do.

And while they’re not wrong about a lot of that … we’re forgetting what strategy is for so now we’re at this weird place where it appears the value is in the complexity rather than the potent, fierce, simplicity.

Please note I say simplicity, not simplistic – which is another thing some people do in an attempt to look like Einstein, when all they’ve done is reduce Liquid Death’s success to “a can that looks different to all other water cans”.

But I digress …

The reality is strategy that is all about complexity is harder to execute, easier for people to hide and more focused on what is done rather than why we’re doing it in the first place.

And that’s why I liked the clip above … because it was a reminder we need to protect what we want to do rather than only care about where the process will lead us.

Which is why I also liked this:

Sure, I get it’s a retrospective, observational view … but it’s interesting and simple.

And funny.

Plus if it was true, it would be a piece of fucking amazing reframing strategy.

Not that people would say that or see that.

Or at least not as simply as the originator articulated.

Which reminds me of the image we used in our Cannes Strategy Is Constipated, Imagination Is The Laxative talk with the image of all the different strategic frameworks that say the same thing in ever more complicated ways.

My Dad once said that people who want to show how smart they are, aren’t that smart.

That their need to demonstrate their brain is a demonstration of their insecurity.

I wonder what he’s say if he was alive today and saw how a lot of my industry was behaving.

Because I think he’d have a different view.

That their talk is not about insecurity, but distraction.

It’s why I loathe when I hear people say ‘we’ve done all the work so you don’t have to’.

Oh my fucking god.

But I appreciate this post is getting so long that I’ll be back by the time you’ve finished reading it. That is if anyone did read this, so I’ll just leave you with this …

There is no ‘secret’ to being good.

Even the most talented people work hard at developing it.

In a world promoting hustle, we need to give more value to graft.

I get that’s not a popular thing to say, but that doesn’t mean it’s wrong.

So stay open to different views but be cautious of definitive claims.

Especially from people who can’t point to what they’ve done beyond how many people follow them. Because you just might find they value speed over substance and you don’t want their ego to be at the expense of your growth.

Huge apologies for the epic rant, a bit like old time – ha.

See you in March.

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