- "Yeah, that's what we want to do. We want to tell our competition what our best selling items are."
- Average Rank of Sales, Units, and Conversion Rate, for instance.
Helping CEOs Understand How Customers Interact With Advertising, Products, Brands, and Channels
In our modern world, we like to think we can solve any problem without added expense. The kids on YouTube call it a "hack".
For instance, we have a minor plumbing problem. In our bathroom sink, sediment sits on top of the aerator, reducing the flow of water to a trickle. Do I want to call a plumber? No! I'm sure there is a hack out there to solve the problem.
You search YouTube and Reddit. There is always some guy named @bigideas47 who says "trust me". If you can't get the aerator off because it has been fused into the threads by calcium buildup (and with that little locking device, no, you cannot get it off), you just need to soak the aerator with CLR or vinegar via the following contraption.
"Trust me, works every time" says @bigideas47.
It does not work every time.
YouTubers with names like @problemsolver5G offer solutions like needle nosed plyers or WD40.
Phrases like "impossibly simple hack that actually works" pepper the screen images of the YouTube videos.
Turns out, it does not work.
You eventually punch through the aerator to get water flowing ... and then you realize the importance of an aerator in a modern bathroom.
You know what you do next?
You call a plumber.
There's a reason why @bigideas47 and @problemsolver5G populate Reddit and YouTube with ideas ... they're not actual plumbers.
It's the same way in marketing. Except the folks with the hacks populate LinkedIn.
Marketing is teeming with Lemonheads that have hacks and fake solutions to real problems.
If you have actual problems ... and most companies have actual problems, you can't solve actual problems with hacks from third parties. Better paper stock doesn't solve a problem. Digital engagement doesn't solve a problem. You need smart people who implement actual solutions.
Eventually, you'll call the plumber.
I'm watching the Badgers Men's Basketball team blow the absolute doors off of (checks notes) conference rival Washington.
The announcer asks the color commentator an interesting question.
Here's one. Fifteen years ago, a LinkedIn warrior touted the "power" of digital analytics. "It will render how we do things useless, we'll #measure everything ... data driven organizations will reap the rewards, leaving everybody else in the rear view mirror." I was on Twitter at the time, and his nonstop cheerleading of using Google Analytics to replace old-school channels / tactics / metrics allowed him to build himself a nice little presence online.
Here's his quote from Saturday.
Yeah, this one from Wednesday Night / Thursday Morning (click here).
It was "click fest", peeps!
You really liked the image below, with a whopping 20% of you clicking on it.
So, it made you think.
Now go do something about it. This stuff isn't difficult, it isn't expensive, but it is fully different than getting a soulless package of printer cartridges from Amazon.
No, not the Ryan Seacrest version in 2026. I'm talking about the Casey Kasem version from the 1970s and early 1980s. You can hear the ol...