A marketing strategy used to sit in a deck like a taxidermied elk.
Majestic. Still. Mounted above the conference room table while everyone nodded at it politely and then went back to being ambushed by reality.
That doesn’t work anymore.
The market is no longer a pond. It is a raccoon in a jetpack. Tech shifts. Buyer behavior shifts. Budgets freeze, thaw, refreeze, and come back wearing a clown nose. What worked in February may wheeze by April.
This doesn’t mean strategy is dead. It means strategy has to breathe.
The best companies don’t abandon their fundamentals. They keep them like a compass in the glovebox. Customer pain still matters. Trust still matters. Clarity still matters. Distribution still matters. Remarkability still matters. But the way those principles show up has to move faster than the old planning rituals allow.
A company’s offering should be treated the same way.
Not as a sacred stone tablet handed down from Mount Product. More like sourdough starter. Alive. Temperamental. Responsive to the room it lives in. You feed it. Watch it. Adjust it. Sometimes it bubbles like a miracle. Sometimes it sulks like a teenager asked to unload the dishwasher.
The companies that lead markets are not simply better at predicting the future. They are better at noticing the present before everyone else admits it is happening. (Probably worth reading that line again. It’s important.)
They listen for weird signals. A sales objection that keeps mutating. A customer workaround that becomes a shadow product. A feature nobody pitched that suddenly becomes the thing people salivate over. A budget holder who stops asking “What does it do?” and starts asking “How fast can this change how we operate?”
That is the moment.
That is where the offering bend.
Stay Positive & Markets Reward The Company That Can Keep Its Promise While Changing Its Posture
