Why the Best Marketing Work Usually Feels Unproductive
by David Meyer
There’s a moment in almost every meaningful marketing conversation where things slow down, and it’s time to start working through questions that don’t have immediate answers.
Who are we trying to reach? What are we really trying to say? Why does this matter right now?
At some point, someone usually asks: “Is this the best use of our time?” (Spoiler alert: It doesn’t always feel like it.)
Most business leaders are wired for momentum. Activity feels productive because it’s visible. Progress is something you can point to. So when marketing slows down to think, it can feel inefficient – even uncomfortable.
But that discomfort is often a signal that something important is happening.
The work behind the work.
The most valuable marketing decisions rarely happen during execution. They happen before anything is made. At Spoke, the work really begins when ideas are tested, challenged, and sometimes discarded.
This is the work behind the work. And because it doesn’t produce something tangible right away, it’s easy to underestimate or skip.
Sometimes that works. More often, it creates a different kind of inefficiency – one that shows up later, when the message doesn’t quite land, or the work feels harder than it should.
Speed without alignment doesn’t compound. It just creates another starting line.
When teams move quickly without clarity, they create the illusion of progress. Campaigns go live. Content gets published. Everyone stays busy.
But underneath, something feels off.
The message isn’t as sharp as it could be.
Sales conversations take longer than they should.
Decisions require more back-and-forth than expected.
So the instinct is to add more – more content, more messaging, more effort.
But “more” rarely solves a clarity problem.
Clarity doesn’t always look efficient.
The work that creates real clarity often looks like nothing is happening at all.
It looks like revisiting the same question from different angles. It looks like pushing past the first “good enough” answer. It looks like slowing down when everything else is telling you to speed up.
And yet, this is where alignment is built.
Once that alignment is in place, everything downstream starts to move differently. Messaging sharpens. Decisions accelerate. Execution becomes easier.
What feels slow at the beginning becomes efficient later.
This is when it all begins to really happen.
The quiet turning point.
This kind of work tends to surface at specific moments — when growth changes the organization, when leadership shifts, or when the story no longer feels like it fits.
Not because anything is broken, but because something has evolved.
Those moments are easy to overlook. But they often signal a quieter turning point — one where slowing down to think isn’t a delay, but a necessary step toward what comes next.
The businesses that recognize that don’t always look the most efficient in the moment. But they’re the ones that move forward with far more clarity and far less friction.
And in marketing, clarity is what makes everything else work.
Now, let me be clear: I would love to hear from you. Let me know what you think.
Content Authenticity Statement:
98% of this content was written by a human. AI was used for final editing support.
David Meyer is the Chief Marketing Officer at Spoke Marketing. Spoke Marketing (www.spokemarketing.com) provides fully-integrated marketing and sales programs that define and activate the customer buyer journey.