It’s been a quieter period than usual.
Enquiries have slowed.
Sales cycles are stretching.
Decision-making is taking longer.
Like many businesses right now, one of our clients has been feeling the effects of the broader economic climate.
So we stuck to the plan.
Consistent activity.
Regular touchpoints.
Nothing reactive. Nothing desperate.
Just showing up.
A routine campaign… with an unexpected result
As part of that consistency, we sent a standard email campaign to their database.
No major promotion.
No heavy discounting.
No “this will change everything” expectations.
Just a simple reminder that the brand exists.
That evening, a sale came through. But here’s the interesting part: It wasn’t for the product featured in the email.
The Email Didn’t Sell the Product
It triggered the purchase. The customer didn’t see the email and think, “I want that.”
They saw the email and thought, “I need to buy from them.”
That distinction matters. Because in this case, the campaign didn’t create demand. It captured it.
> Read Why Email Marketing Is More Effective Than Ever
Marketing isn’t always linear (even if we want it to be)
We like to think marketing works like this:
See Product → Click → Buy Product
But in reality, it looks more like this:
See something → Remember the brand → Come back later → Buy something else
Customers don’t move in straight lines. They move in moments. And your job isn’t to perfectly control those moments. It’s to show up in them.
> Read Journey Marketing: Turning Email Engagement into Conversion
Visibility beats precision
There’s a common trap in marketing, especially during slower periods.
We start overthinking the message.
Is this the right product?
Is this the right offer?
Is this what people want right now?
But this example is a reminder: You don’t need perfect alignment between message and purchase.
You need presence. Because when someone is ready to buy, they rarely go searching for the perfectly matched campaign. They go with the brand that’s top of mind.
The real risk of “quiet periods”
When things slow down, the instinct is to pull back.
Pause campaigns.
Send fewer emails.
Wait until demand picks up again.
But that creates a bigger problem. You disappear. And when you disappear, you’re no longer in consideration when buying decisions happen. Not because you weren’t the best option. But because you weren’t there.
Demand hasn’t vanished
It’s just more sporadic.
More considered.
More delayed.
Less predictable.
Which means:
- You can’t rely on perfectly timed campaigns
- You can’t rely on short-term bursts of activity
You need consistency. Because you don’t know when someone is going to be ready. But you can control whether you’re visible when they are.
- All
- AI Search & Marketing
- Digital Marketing
- Digital Strategy
- Ecommerce
- Google Analytics
- Instagram Stories
- Marketing
- Meta
- Search Engine Marketing
- Search Engine Optimisation
- Social Media
- Social Media
- Social Media Advertising
- Social Media Marketing
- Social Media Strategy
- Uncategorized

Quick Website Audit Checklist When was the last time you really looked at your website through the eyes of a customer? We often assume that once [...]

For years, SEO strategies have revolved around keywords. The approach was simple: identify the terms people were searching for, create pages that matched them and optimise around [...]

We recently posted a simple promotion on a client’s social media account. It was about a niche product - nothing flashy, not designed to go viral, just [...]

Starting July 10, 2025, public posts from professional Instagram accounts will start appearing in Google search results. That means your photos, Reels and videos could soon show [...]

One of the most common concerns we hear from clients is: “I feel like we’re repeating ourselves too much.” They worry that saying the same message more [...]

Quick Website Audit Checklist When was the last time you really looked at your website through the eyes of a customer? We often assume that once [...]

In a world where marketers battle for every second of audience attention, Labubu – a quirky character from Pop Mart’s “Monster” series - has done the seemingly [...]

Social media marketing is full of outdated advice, bad habits and half-truths that get repeated so often they start to sound like facts. But just because you’ve heard [...]

In our last article, we tackled a common misconception in digital advertising: Ads don’t fail because of the algorithm - they fail because of the offer. The [...]

We’ve seen it many times before. A campaign launches on Meta or Google. The creative looks schmick. The ad set enters the learning phase… and then, crickets. [...]

With the release of Google AI Overviews, we were left wondering what will become of Google Ads. If AI Overviews sit at the top of search results, [...]

For years, SEO strategies have revolved around keywords. The approach was simple: identify the terms people were searching for, create pages that matched them and optimise around [...]

