Why every campaign should have one job, and one measurable business outcome.
Are Your Marketing Campaigns Actually Driving Growth—Or Just Staying Busy?
Marketing teams rarely struggle because they don’t have enough ideas.
They struggle because they have too many.
Every quarter brings another campaign, another webinar, another product launch, another paid media experiment, another executive request. Everyone is working hard. Everyone is busy.
But here’s the question very few leadership teams stop to ask:
Which of these initiatives is actually moving the business forward?
That’s the question behind the Gauge stage of my G-R-O-W-T-H Framework.
Before we optimize campaigns, change messaging, or launch another channel, we establish a baseline. We measure what matters and ensure every initiative is connected to a measurable business outcome.
Because growth doesn’t begin with tactics.
It begins with clarity.
Stop Talking About Marketing. Start Talking About Growth.
One of the biggest mistakes I see in B2B SaaS companies between $20 million and $50 million ARR is that marketing goals become disconnected from business goals.
Marketing talks about:
- Website traffic
- Brand awareness
- MQLs
- Social engagement
Leadership talks about:
- Revenue
- Pipeline
- Customer acquisition cost
- Expansion
- Retention
Both conversations matter.
But they’re often happening in parallel instead of together.
When that happens, marketing becomes activity instead of accountability.
Every Campaign Needs One Job
One of my favorite questions to ask a leadership team is surprisingly simple:
What is this campaign supposed to improve?
Not generally.
Specifically.
Every campaign should have one primary responsibility.
Examples include:
- Generate qualified pipeline
- Accelerate active opportunities
- Increase conversion rates
- Expand average contract value
- Reduce churn
- Drive expansion revenue
If a campaign is expected to accomplish all of those things simultaneously, it usually accomplishes none of them particularly well.
Focus creates performance.
The Problem Isn’t Execution. It’s Priority Drift.
This is where most organizations get into trouble.
Marketing optimizes for lead volume.
Sales optimizes for late-stage opportunities.
Product focuses on roadmap delivery.
Customer Success focuses on retention.
Every department is doing exactly what they’ve been asked to do.
Unfortunately, they’re often solving different problems.
The result?
Meetings about alignment.
Debates about attribution.
Arguments over lead quality.
Growing frustration despite increasing effort.
The solution isn’t another dashboard.
It’s creating a common growth language.
Measure What Matters
Before approving a campaign, leadership should already know which business objective it supports.
Some examples include:
- Net-new ARR
- Pipeline coverage by segment
- Sales cycle reduction
- Win-rate improvement
- Expansion revenue
- Net-new logos
When everyone understands these priorities, campaigns become easier to evaluate.
Success becomes objective instead of emotional.
Sometimes the Best Campaign Is the One You Never Launch
One of the hardest leadership disciplines is saying no.
Every organization has campaigns that continue because they’ve always existed.
Nobody wants to cancel them.
Nobody wants to admit they’re no longer contributing.
But if an initiative cannot clearly connect to:
- A measurable business objective
- A defined buyer stage
- A primary success metric
It deserves to be questioned.
Or stopped.
Growth requires subtraction just as much as addition.
Walking the Dogs
On my podcast, Walking the Dogs, Dusty and Tanner remind me of this every week.
We’ll be walking along just fine when Dusty suddenly spots a squirrel.
He freezes.
Then lunges.
For a few seconds, that squirrel becomes the most important thing in the world.
Marketing teams do exactly the same thing.
A shiny new channel.
A trending AI tool.
A new attribution platform.
A viral campaign idea.
None of those are bad.
Unless they pull you away from the destination.
The leash exists for a reason.
So does strategy.
Gauge Before You Grow
The Gauge stage isn’t about measuring more metrics.
It’s about measuring the right ones.
It’s about making sure every campaign earns its place.
Because clarity compounds.
Focus scales.
And growth happens when everyone is pulling on the same leash.
So before launching your next campaign, ask one simple question:
Exactly which growth goal will this move—and by how much?
If you can’t answer that, don’t launch it yet.
Grab the leash.
Walk the dog.
Then go grow.