Why Marketing Isn’t About Trends (And Never Should Be)
Scroll LinkedIn for five minutes and you’ll see it.
New tactics.
New formats.
New “must-do” strategies.
Carousels.
Short-form video.
AI everything.
Personal brands.
Founder-led content.
All presented as the answer.
Here’s the problem.
Most of it isn’t wrong.
But most of it isn’t right for you either.
Trends aren’t strategy
Trends move fast because they’re visible.
You see what others are doing.
You see what’s getting attention.
You see what looks like success.
So you follow it.
But visibility doesn’t equal effectiveness.
What works for one business:
- Different audience
- Different buying cycle
- Different level of trust
- Different commercial model
You’re copying the output.
Not the context.
That’s where marketing starts to drift.
When you follow trends, you lose clarity
It usually starts small.
You try something new.
Then another thing.
Then another.
Before long:
- Your messaging becomes inconsistent
- Your channels feel scattered
- Your team is busy but not aligned
And performance becomes harder to explain.
Not because marketing “isn’t working.”
Because it’s not anchored in anything.
Your customer isn’t thinking about trends
They’re not asking:
- “Is this brand using the latest format?”
- “Are they posting enough video?”
- “Are they keeping up with LinkedIn tactics?”
They’re asking:
- Does this solve my problem?
- Do I understand what they do?
- Do I trust them?
That’s it.
That’s the job.
Resonance beats relevance
Trends make you look relevant.
Resonance makes you effective.
Relevance is:
- “We’re doing what everyone else is doing”
- “We’re part of the conversation”
Resonance is:
- “This feels like it’s written for me”
- “They understand my situation”
- “This is exactly what I need”
One gets attention.
The other drives action.
Most marketing doesn’t fail because of execution
It fails because it skips the thinking.
Clear positioning.
Defined audience.
Strong message.
These aren’t optional.
They’re the foundation.
Without them:
- Content becomes noise
- Campaigns lack direction
- Teams chase activity instead of outcomes
With them:
- Every channel has a purpose
- Every message connects
- Every action supports growth
The question to ask isn’t “what’s trending?”
It’s:
- Who are we trying to reach?
- What do they care about?
- What problem are we solving?
- Why should they choose us?
If you can’t answer those clearly, no trend will fix it.
This is where most businesses get stuck
They’re doing marketing.
But it feels:
- Unclear
- Underperforming
- Overly complex
So they look outward.
More tactics.
More ideas.
More noise.
What they actually need is to step back.
Simplify.
Refocus.
Marketing works when it’s grounded
Grounded in:
- Real customer insight
- Clear commercial goals
- Honest messaging
Not in what’s popular.
Not in what’s loud.
Not in what everyone else is doing.
What this means in practice
You don’t need to ignore trends completely.
You need to filter them.
Use them when:
- They fit your audience
- They support your message
- They serve a clear purpose
Ignore them when they don’t.
Simple.
Not easy.
Final thought
Marketing isn’t about keeping up.
It’s about connecting.
If your marketing feels like it’s drifting, it’s rarely a tactics problem.
It’s a clarity problem.
Fix that first.
Everything else starts to work.
If you want help cutting through the noise and focusing on what will actually work, get in touch
