Strategy First—But Not the One You Think
You’ve heard “start with strategy” a thousand times. That’s noise. The real question is: whose strategy? Whose goals? And how much of it survives contact with real users scrolling at midnight on a cracked phone screen? A strategy isn’t a deck. It’s a living argument between data and instinct. I am convinced that most digital strategies fail not from bad ideas but from borrowed frameworks—plugged into businesses that don’t fit. Take a bakery in Lisbon trying to scale using a Shopify playbook built for Silicon Valley DTC brands. Context collapses the model. Strategy works only when it’s ugly, specific, and a little uncomfortable. It has to smell like your industry, your customers, your flaws. Because that changes everything. A 2022 HubSpot survey found that 68% of businesses without documented strategies felt “constantly reactive.” Meanwhile, the 32% with adaptable, living strategies reported 2.3x higher conversion growth over 18 months. But—and this is critical—documented doesn’t mean rigid. The best strategies are annotated, messy, full of margin notes: “this part failed in Q3,” “try TikTok with the team in Lisbon,” “customer service holds more data than analytics.” That’s strategy with skin in the game.
And that’s exactly where most consultants drop the ball. They sell you a symmetrical diagram. Life isn’t symmetrical. A campaign in Jakarta doesn’t mirror one in Dublin. Time zones, cultural humor, even loading speeds (Indonesia averages 19 Mbps vs. Ireland’s 132 Mbps) warp what “engagement” even means. So your strategy must be elastic. It should bend, not break.
Setting Objectives That Don’t Lie to You
SMART goals are everywhere. Too bad most are fictional. “Increase brand awareness by 40% in six months” tells you nothing unless you define how you measure “awareness”—and whether anyone outside the boardroom cares. Try this instead: tie objectives to behavior. “Get 1,200 existing customers to share our referral link via WhatsApp within 90 days.” That’s measurable. It’s social. It leverages existing trust. And it costs less than cold ads. The issue remains: too many digital marketers chase vanity metrics because real ones require patience. But real growth? It’s quiet. It happens in DMs, in repeat purchases, in support tickets turning into testimonials.
Storytelling That Doesn’t Sound Like a Press Release
People don’t buy products. They buy the story that lets them become someone else—even if just for a moment. A coffee isn’t caffeine. It’s the 6:47 a.m. pause before the chaos. A CRM isn’t software. It’s the relief of not forgetting your biggest client’s anniversary. The best digital campaigns understand this alchemy. Yet so much content reads like a robot summarized a Wikipedia page. Why? Because teams outsource voice to AI or agencies that mimic “professional” tone—which translates to soulless. Let’s be clear about this: if your brand voice could be used by three competitors without anyone noticing, you don’t have a voice. You have noise. I find this overrated: consistency at the cost of character. Yes, brand guidelines matter. But so does surprise. Dove’s “Real Beauty” didn’t win because it was on-brand. It won because it was brave. It disrupted its own category. And that’s the bar: not consistency, but resonance.
Because stories scale only when they’re specific. A generic “we care about sustainability” post gets 14 shares. A video of your team hand-washing reusable packaging after a flood that shut down the warehouse? That hits 12,000. Why? It’s human. It’s imperfect. It’s real. And that’s what sticks.
The Role of Emotion in Conversion Funnels
You map the funnel. Awareness. Consideration. Decision. All neat. Logical. Except humans don’t move in straight lines. They spiral. They backtrack. They buy at 2 a.m. after a podcast mention. Or abandon carts until a rain delay triggers a memory of your product. Emotion cuts the funnel. Fear of loss. Joy of discovery. Even boredom. A 2023 Nielsen study found that emotionally charged video ads (positive or negative) had 5.7x higher completion rates than “informational” ones. So why do so many brands play it safe? Because measuring emotion is hard. But not impossible. Sentiment analysis tools, heatmaps on storytelling pages, even comment tone tracking—these are your dials. Use them.
Speed: The Invisible Advantage
You can have the best strategy. The deepest story. But if you move like molasses, you’re dead. The web rewards velocity. Not recklessness—speed with direction. When Kylie Cosmetics dropped a new lipstick shade exclusively on Instagram Stories for 48 hours, they sold out in 37 minutes. Not because the product was revolutionary. Because the scarcity was real and the channel was fast. Compare that to a legacy brand taking 14 days to approve a tweet. Who wins? Speed wins. Data from Adobe shows that companies with sub-24-hour campaign deployment cycles see 28% higher engagement on average. And that’s not just for launches. It’s for responses. A support reply in 9 minutes vs. 9 hours? That single metric can lift retention by 15% (based on a 2021 SuperOffice study). But speed requires trust. You can’t move fast if every tweet needs five approvals. So the real bottleneck isn’t tools. It’s culture.
Agile Marketing in Practice—Beyond the Buzzword
Agile isn’t just stand-up meetings. It’s small bets, rapid iteration, and killing what doesn’t work without shame. Spotify’s marketing teams operate in “squads” with full autonomy. One squad owns playlist virality in Latin America. Another focuses on AI-generated cover art testing. They don’t wait for global sign-off. They learn. They adapt. You don’t need Spotify’s budget. You need their mindset. Run a Facebook ad variant for 48 hours. Check ROAS. Kill or scale. No post-mortems for failures under $500. That’s how you build pace.
Systems Over Heroes—Because Burnout Isn’t a Strategy
We love the “marketing genius” trope. The lone wolf who pulls off a viral stunt. Cute. Unsustainable. Real growth runs on systems: automated email sequences, CRM tagging rules, content calendars synced to product updates, UTM templates. One B2B SaaS company reduced lead response time from 42 hours to 9 minutes just by connecting form submissions to Slack and assigning leads rotationally. Result? 33% more demos booked in Q1. Systems compound. They don’t crash. They don’t take vacations. A 2022 Gartner report found that organizations with documented, automated workflows grew 2.7x faster than those relying on individual initiative. And yes, systems feel boring. Until you scale. Then they’re oxygen.
Structure and Skills: The Hidden Mismatch
Here’s a dirty secret: most org charts lie. They show clean lines. In reality, marketing teams are spaghetti junctions of overlapping duties. A “content creator” doing SEO, video editing, and community management isn’t versatile—they’re stretched. And that’s where the skills gap widens. You might have a wizard at Google Ads, but if they can’t explain bid strategies to the product team, the structure fails. The problem is alignment. One HBR case study showed that cross-functional alignment—not budget—was the top predictor of campaign success in 78% of mid-sized firms. So fix the wiring. Not just the workers.
Digital Literacy Across Departments
Marketing doesn’t own digital. Finance approves tools. HR hires talent. Legal reviews claims. If only marketing “gets” digital, you’re building on sand. Run quarterly workshops. Not just for tips—but to align on risks, opportunities, and shared KPIs. Even better: rotate a non-marketer into a campaign sprint. Nothing educates like immersion.
Soul: The X-Factor No Dashboard Measures
You can copy tactics. You can’t copy soul. It’s why some brands feel alive and others feel like tax forms. Soul is the reason people tattoo Patagonia’s logo. It’s why fans defend Apple during PR crises. It’s not “values” printed on a website. It’s action. When Ben & Jerry’s takes a stand on social issues, even if it costs sales, they gain trust. Soul builds equity beyond transactions. But be warned: fake soul backfires. Remember Pepsi’s protest ad with Kendall Jenner? Exactly. It looked like activism but felt like appropriation. The internet remembers. And mocks. So if your brand’s soul is “maximize shareholder value,” say it. Don’t pretend you’re saving the rainforest. Honesty has its own magnetism.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the 7S Model Widely Recognized in Marketing?
Not officially. Unlike McKinsey’s 7S, this version isn’t taught in business schools as doctrine. It’s more of a practitioner’s mnemonic—a way to pressure-test digital efforts. Some experts use it; others prefer AIDA or RACE. Data is still lacking on its universal effectiveness. But as a thinking tool? It works. Especially when teams get stuck in silos.
Can Small Businesses Use the 7S Framework?
Absolutely. In fact, they might benefit most. A bakery owner can ask: Do I have a real strategy (not just “sell more croissants”)? Can I tell my story clearly online? Am I responding fast to messages? Do I have simple systems (like auto-replies)? And do customers feel something when they walk in? You don’t need seven full teams. You need seven lenses.
How Is This Different from Traditional Marketing Models?
Traditional models often focus on linear processes: product, price, place, promotion. The 7S for digital marketing emphasizes adaptability, emotion, and infrastructure. It treats speed and soul as assets. It’s less about control, more about flow. Think of it as marketing for the attention economy—where trust decays fast and tech shifts overnight.
The Bottom Line
The 7S aren’t gospel. They’re a compass. Use them to ask sharper questions. But don’t expect a magic formula. The web evolves too fast for that. What matters is staying fluid. Testing fast. Letting go of what’s comfortable. And admitting when something’s not working—without drama. Because in digital marketing, stagnation isn’t slow death. It’s instant irrelevance. Suffice to say, the brands that last aren’t the biggest. They’re the ones that keep listening, adapting, and meaning something. That’s the real 7th S. Not just soul—but survival.
