Most marketing needs 4-7 exposures to work. But exceptional creative messaging can convert in just one exposure. The industry's obsession with programmatic volume is destroying the craft that actually moves the needle.
Abba Newbery has spent two decades proving this argument across financial services, B2B and growth marketing. Her insight cuts straight through the performance versus brand debate that paralyses most marketing teams.
The problem isn't the channel, it's the messaging strategy.
Meta and Google have built entire business models on weak creative strategy. Their algorithms optimise for volume because most advertisers can't create messaging that converts in single exposures.
The platforms benefit when you need multiple touchpoints. More impressions mean more revenue. But this creates a feedback loop where marketers accept high-frequency dependency instead of improving message craft.
Habito proved the alternative. Their mortgage ads converted customers in one exposure because the creative strategy was precise enough to land immediately. No retargeting sequences, no nurture campaigns, just messaging that worked the first time someone saw it.
Audience strategy is key. When you know exactly who you are talking to and exactly what moves them, you can craft messages that connect immediately.
AI is making derivative content worse, not better. Most teams are using AI to generate more variants of messages that already don't work. The result is exponentially more mediocre creative at programmatic scale.
The creative should be ice bath or hot bath, never lukewarm. Messages that provoke strong reactions create memorable impressions; messages designed to offend nobody connect with nobody.
But AI trains on existing patterns. It can't generate breakthrough creative strategy because breakthrough creative challenges existing patterns. It can help execute great ideas faster but it can't replace the strategic thinking that creates great ideas in the first place.
Marketing directors already last just 18 months on average because they can't prove results. Adding AI-generated volume to weak strategy will not change this. It will just accelerate the cycle of disappointing performance and leadership churn.
Strategy is radar. Tactics are sonar. Radar scans the horizon for opportunities. Sonar measures immediate obstacles. Most marketing teams operate on sonar only, reacting to last week's performance data instead of building long-term positioning.
Plan measurement before launch, not after. Most campaigns fail because the measurement framework was an afterthought. You cannot retrospectively prove that creative strategy worked if you did not design the test to isolate creative impact from channel performance.
Sacrifice 10% of audience for measurement learning. Hold back a control group that sees no advertising during brand campaigns. This is the only way to measure true incrementality versus base demand.
The brand versus performance debate makes no commercial sense. Performance marketing is kindling. Brand is the log fire. You need both, but stopping PPC during brand advertising is like closing your shops during a TV campaign. Brand creates demand. Performance captures it. They work together or they both fail.
Marketing can't deliver brand experience alone. The creative strategy might be perfect but if the product, service delivery or customer experience contradicts the brand promise, the campaign fails regardless of message craft.
This is why measurement must extend beyond advertising metrics.
Brand building isn't about awareness or consideration scores. It's about whether the entire customer experience reinforces the positioning that creative strategy established.
Most marketing teams measure impressions, clicks and conversions. The teams that prove long-term value measure how advertising changes customer behaviour patterns, lifetime value and business economics. These are the metrics that keep marketing directors in post longer than 18 months.
Watch the full conversation on The Precision Brief to hear Abba's full argument on why creative craft beats programmatic volume every time. Subscribe to the newsletter for more conversations on what actually moves the needle in marketing effectiveness.