Join the Buyer Narrative movement
The B2B marketing playbook is being optimized into irrelevance.
AI didn’t break marketing. It just made it obvious that everyone was running the same play.
Every framework that gains traction gets fed into AI and executed by your competitors before it compounds. The playbooks we all relied on — the ones that used to work for years — now degrade in a quarter. Maybe two. Your campaigns are being reverse-engineered before they even have time to work.
You used to be able to build on best practices. Run the proven plays. Let them compound. That window is gone.
02 · The trapPipeline slows. And nobody questions the playbook.
Because the playbook looks like it should work. Everyone else is running it. The ads should convert. The content should rank. So when they don’t, the only explanation is marketing execution. Fix the ads. Fix the headlines. Fix the page. Feed it into AI. AI does find things to optimize, and it should work. But you end up with 1% maybe 2% optimization improvements while your pipeline target is growing at 30%.
Meanwhile the marketing function itself is drifting away from marketing and toward operating the machine. One of the best CMOs I know said it straight — there’s been a tilt for marketing leaders to become coders, leading their teams into a revolution that might put them all out of a job.
That is one path.
03 · The other pathThe companies pulling away aren’t optimizing harder. They’re building a playbook only they can execute.
The best bets I’ve ever made in marketing didn’t come from a spreadsheet. They never came from an A/B test. They were judgment calls — human calls — about what a company uniquely had that nobody else could touch. That’s always been what actually moved the needle. And it’s the one thing AI can’t do for you.
That playbook has three parts:
A narrative that shifts the world.
A story about what changed in your buyer’s world — that only your company can credibly tell. Not pain points. A shift competitors can’t claim with a messaging refresh.
It requires organizational commitment to own.
A moat competitors can’t build.
An offer powered by something only your company has. Not a whitepaper. Not a recorded demo. Something so specific to your business that it’s still your core advantage five years later — because building it requires infrastructure investment competitors haven’t made.
Momentum that compounds.
A way to reach buyers that doesn’t reset to zero every quarter. Not just ads and content. A mechanism so tied to your narrative and your moat that it gets harder to replicate and cheaper to run the longer it goes.
Then you point AI at all of it. Not optimizing the same dead playbook as everyone else — scaling something that genuinely belongs to you.
The job now isn’t the coder. It’s the playbook builder.
04 · The proofThis is what it looks like when the playbook is right.
Revenue growth.
Built their playbook five years ago. Zero competitors have replicated it.
Cybersecurity · 2020 → presentNet-new ARR per quarter.
Named the crisis an entire industry was ignoring — in a category declining 9%.
HR Tech · 2024 → presentInbound growth.
Built the playbook that carried the business while the product caught up.
Real Estate Tech · 2024 → present05 · ElevateWe find the playbook worth building — then run demand gen on top of it while we’re building it.
“This is a person that’s gonna augment my team in a way I cannot possibly hire for. Not possibly.”
— Heather Smith, CMO
06 · Let’s talkNo pitch deck. No 47-slide capabilities presentation.
Just a conversation about what’s actually going on in your pipeline — and whether the playbook underneath it is worth running, or whether it’s time to build one that is.