Limoncello Product Marketing Moments

Every product has a Sicily inside it.

Not the brochure Sicily. Not the airport Sicily. Not the polite little hotel lobby with the laminated map and the chair that looks like it has been waiting since 1973 for someone’s uncle to sit in it.

I mean the real Sicily.

The version where someone is three bites into pasta alla Norma, two sips into limoncello, and suddenly the tiny accountant inside their skull takes off his visor, throws the calorie ledger into the Ionian Sea, and says, “To hell with it. We live here now.”

That is the moment.

Every product or service has one. The moment when the user stops evaluating and starts believing. The moment they stop asking, “Is this worth it?” and start asking, “How much more of this can I get?”

For a trip, it might be the meal where restraint melts into olive oil.

For a gym, it might be the first time someone sees a muscle they thought had been discontinued.

For a procurement platform, it might be the second a finance leader sees the contract renewal, the duplicate spend, the supplier risk, and the savings opportunity all sitting together like suspects under a hot lamp.

Not data as decoration.

Data as a loaded fork.

Data as, “Oh. Now I know what to do.”

Behavioral science has been whispering this for years in its lab coat and sensible shoes. People do not remember every moment equally. We remember peaks. We remember endings. We remember the strange little emotional fireworks that tell us, “This mattered.” That means the job is not to make every inch of the experience equally delightful. That is how you end up sprinkling parsley on a vending machine burrito.

In product marketing, this is where the story gets useful. Not cute. Useful.

The value moment is not always the feature with the most engineering hours behind it. It is not always the thing sales likes to demo first. It is the moment when the customer feels smarter, safer, faster, more in control, more alive in their own job.

When someone is already deep into the limoncello, do not hand them a coupon for next Tuesday.

Hand them the bottle.

If the user is salivating over a piece of insight, make it shareable. Give them the chart they can send to the CFO. Give them the savings opportunity summary that makes procurement look like the heroic adult in the room. Give them the board-ready snapshot. Give them the internal “look what we found” artifact that travels through Slack, Teams, inboxes, budget meetings, and executive eyebrows.

This is remarkability at its finest.

Remarkable does not mean “better than average.”

Remarkable means worthy of being remarked upon; a feeling that must be shared about with words.

A few questions to force yourself to answer:

  • Where does the user lean forward?
  • Where do they stop clicking and start caring?
  • Where does the product stop being software and start becoming leverage?

Find that moment. Polish it until it winks. Package it until it travels. Name it so the customer can repeat it in a meeting without sounding like they swallowed a feature matrix.

Stay Positive & That Is Where You Build The Story

The Future Is A Drunk Hummingbird With A Calendar Invite

The future is never late because the future never arrives.

It just keeps changing costumes in the alley behind your roadmap.

One quarter it shows up wearing an AI badge and a suspiciously expensive blazer. The next quarter it arrives as a customer behavior shift, a budget freeze, a competitor launch, a regulatory sneeze, or a sales team saying, “Yeah, but the market is asking for something else now.”

This is the part that makes CPOs and CMOs either age like oak barrels or curdle like gas station yogurt. (That made me wince just typing…)

The trick is not to predict the future perfectly. That is fortune cookie theater. The trick is to build an organization that can move while the future moves.

Nature figured this out before the first quarterly business review was ever born. Rivers do not argue with rocks. Roots do not submit a business case before finding water. Bees do not spend six months debating whether flowers remain strategically relevant. They respond. They adapt. They keep the system alive.

Companies should try that sometime.

A few useful ways to work with a moving future:

First, treat your strategy like a compass, not a cage.
A good strategy tells you where north is. A bad one handcuffs you to a PowerPoint from six months ago and calls it discipline. Keep the direction sacred. Keep the path negotiable.

Second, listen for weak signals before they become screaming goats.
Customer questions. Sales objections. Support tickets. Churn reasons. Weird product usage. These are not random crumbs on the carpet. They are the early language of the market. Pick them up before someone else bakes a category out of them.

Third, build small bets into the operating system.
Not every idea deserves a task force, a kickoff call, and twelve people named Brad giving feedback. Some ideas need a landing page, a prototype, a customer conversation, or a quiet test with twenty users. Motion loves evidence. Evidence loves small bets. (My watch-out-for here is to at least get an executive to sign off. Soft-skinned colleagues will feel vulnerable not being engaged in this and that’ll hurt your trust bridges across the org.)

Fourth, stop worshiping certainty.
Certainty feels professional. It wears loafers. It says things like “we need alignment” while the market is outside stealing your bicycle. Progress usually starts with informed uncertainty. The brave teams admit what they do not know, then go learn faster than everyone else.

The future will keep moving. That is its whole personality. It is not malicious. It is just caffeinated. Just like me. Just like you?

The leaders who win are not the ones who guess every turn correctly. They are the ones who build teams with flexible knees, curious eyes, and enough nerve to adjust the plan without treating the old plan like a dead relative.

Stay Positive & Companies Die Standing Still (So Do We)

An Invisible Invoice Wearing A Fake Mustache

Procurement pain does not usually kick the door down wearing brass knuckles and a name tag.

It seeps.

It hides in the renewal nobody noticed (turnover never helps you here…). The software tool nobody uses but everyone pays for. The contract that rolled over like a lazy dog in a sunbeam. The vendor negotiation that never happened because the deadline was buried under nine tabs, three calendars, and one person named Brad who “thought Legal had it.”

This is the strange little circus of procurement pain: everybody owns a feather, nobody sees the ostrich.

That is where great product marketing earns its lunch money.

The job is not to say, “Our platform saves time and money.” That sentence has the emotional voltage of a beige stapler. True, perhaps. Useful, maybe. Memorable, absolutely not. (This was one of my favorite takeaways from Pendomonium 2026)

The real work is to make the invisible visible.

A CFO does not wake up in the morning craving another dashboard. A procurement leader does not lie in bed whispering sweet nothings to contract metadata. What they want is control. They want the fog machine turned off. They want to walk into the board meeting with the calm authority of someone who knows where the money is leaking and where the value is hiding.

That is emotional value.

Visibility is not just a feature. It is relief.

Spend intelligence is not just reporting. It is confidence.

Procurement orchestration is not just workflow automation. It is the difference between feeling like the organization’s financial crossing guard and feeling like the person holding the map, the flashlight, and the keys to the building.

And here is the punchline with teeth: in a crowded market, the best product does not always win. (The product guy in me winces just typing that…) The clearest story often does. (But the story guy in me is ecstatic typing that…)

If every company is shouting about savings, dashboards, integrations, and AI powered procurement wizardry, the category becomes a blender full of buzzwords.

Loud. Expensive. Difficult to clean. Grows mold fast.

The leader steps out of the blender and says: “You are not buying a procurement tool. You are building modern spend intelligence.”

That is the category frame.

Now the conversation changes.

It is no longer, “Which tool has the better feature checklist?”

It becomes, “Which company understands the future we need to operate in?”

That is positioning at the adult table.

That is the work: Collect the scattered pain, translate the spreadsheet into a human feeling, and name the category before the market names it for you.

My favorite moments in marketing: Once you define the problem better than anyone else, you do not just enter the conversation… You become it.

Stay Positive & Will You Be The Talk Of The Table?

The Free Test

Here is a strange little lantern to hold up to your work:

If you gave it away for free, would you still be excited to hand it to someone?

Not forever. Not as a business model. Calm down, capitalism, put the foam finger away.

But for one honest second, strip away the invoice, the title, the campaign goal, the quarterly goblin math. Imagine giving the thing to someone because you believe it should exist. Because it might help. Because it might make a person blink twice and say, “Well, hell, I needed that.”

If the answer is yes, there’s a good chance you’re building something with a heartbeat.

If the answer is no, that doesn’t mean quit. It means look closer. Sometimes the work is meaningful, but the method is murdering it. Sometimes the project is right, but the audience is wrong. Sometimes you’re not bored by the mission, you’re just buried under fourteen approvals and a spreadsheet wearing a little executioner’s hood.

A few other tests help.

Would you tell a friend about it without needing to sound important?

Would you put your name on it if nobody else’s name was attached?

Would you still care about the outcome if you didn’t get credit?

Would you defend the work in a room full of skeptics without turning into a PowerPoint raccoon?

Would you be proud to explain it to your kid, your neighbor, your bartender, your future self?

Would you feel a little electricity if someone improved it, shared it, stole the idea and made it bigger?

That last one is the spicy pickle. Meaningful work isn’t always precious. Sometimes it wants to travel. Sometimes the best ideas are less like trophies and more like seeds with suspicious little backpacks.

Stay Positive & Remarkable Work Has A Pulse Before It Has A Price

The Weather Inside The Room

When the room feels crooked, check your own pockets for the bent ruler.

It is easy to blame the meeting, the inbox, the traffic, the mood of the whole bewildered circus. And sure, sometimes the circus really is on fire and the clowns are unionizing in the parking lot.

But start inside.

Your tension leaks. Your hurry hums. Your resentment puts on boots and tracks mud across the room before you say a word.

The outside world is not always your fault. That would be too heavy a backpack for one bony little soul.

But your energy is often the first match.

Before you demand better from the room, become better in the room.

Take a breath. Loosen the jaw. Choose the next generous move.

The world may not change instantly…. but the weather might.

Stay Positive & What’s The Forecast Again?

Two Steps Back … Or Up?

“One step forward, two steps back” is one of those phrases we treat like wisdom because it has been wearing a cardigan in the attic of language for a hundred years.

But I don’t buy it.

Not always.

Sometimes what looks like two steps back is actually two steps up.

You move forward. You hit resistance. The project gets weird. The meeting gets foggy. The plan sprouts six elbows and starts tap dancing on the conference table. The old story says you’re losing ground.

Maybe.

Or maybe you’ve climbed high enough to see the shape of the thing.

That’s the strange gift of perspective. From the ground, a detour looks like failure. From the balcony, it looks like strategy. From the basement, a pause feels like a problem. From the roof, a pause feels like a moment to redefine the map.

Leadership lives in that difference.

The average panic merchant sees a setback and starts shaking the vending machine of certainty.

“We were making progress. Now we’re behind. Now we have to recover. Now somebody must be blamed, preferably someone not in this room. And definitely not me.”

But foresight leadership asks a better question: “What can we see from here that we couldn’t see before?”

That question changes the room.

A missed deadline might reveal that the goal was poorly defined.

A difficult conversation might reveal that two teams were using the same words to mean entirely different species of snake.

A failed launch might reveal the customer truth everyone politely stepped around because it smelled like emotional labor.

That is not always backward movement.

That is elevation.

Two steps back says, “We lost something.”

Two steps up says, “We gained a view.”

And the funny little cosmic banana peel of it all is that both people may be right. The person who says you moved backward is not necessarily wrong. There may be rework. There may be delay. There may be a spreadsheet somewhere wheezing like an asthmatic accordion. But the leader’s job is not to win the vocabulary argument.

The leader’s job is to choose the frame that helps the team move forward better.

Stay Positive & Perspective Is Not Decoration; It Is Equipment … If We Choose It To Be

The Gospel Of A Few Extra Bags

Life rarely arrives with exact change.

You think you need twelve bags of mulch. You buy fourteen because the flower beds look hungrier up close than they did from the driveway. Or maybe you buy ten and realize the backyard was less of a botanical empire and more of a polite suggestion. Either way, the yard gets covered. The flowers do not file a complaint. The universe does not send a certified letter informing you that your estimate lacked moral character.

Same goes for work.

You budget for a certain amount of paid support, a certain number of hours, a certain amount of effort, patience, runway, polish, stamina. Then reality comes swaggering in wearing muddy boots and a grin. Turns out the client needed more hand holding. Turns out the project needed less. Turns out your team moved faster than expected. Turns out your own energy tank was running on fumes and coffee-scented optimism.

The amateur gets offended by this.

The pro expects it.

That is one of the great secret handshakes of a sturdy life: assume some give and take. Assume the estimate is a sketch, not a commandment. Assume your first guess is a flashlight, not the sunrise. Build a little room into things. A little margin. A little mercy. An extra bag of mulch in the trunk.

If I can go on for one more moment…

There is a strange kind of freedom in expecting variance. A joyful realism. You stop demanding that life be a vending machine and start treating it like a garden. Gardens need adjustment. Weather changes. Soil surprises you. Some seasons ask for more water. Some ask for pruning. Some ask for patience and a better hat.

And here is the punch in the chest for anybody trying to build something meaningful: the people who leave room for reality tend to outperform the people who demand reality behave.

Not because they are smarter.

Because they are steadier.

Stay Positive & A Little Extra Goes A Long Way (Goes For Kindness To Yourself, Too)