FORBES, FEATURED
This article was originally published on Forbes.com on July 18, 2025
Even the most creative marketing ideas can fall flat if they don't connect with the target audience. Whether it's a mismatch in tone, unclear messaging or a lack of customer insights, early warning signs often surface before a campaign goes live.
The key to long-term marketing success lies in recognizing those signs and making timely, strategic pivots. Here, 15 members of Forbes Communications Council share the telltale signs that a marketing idea might not land and how to shift direction in a way that better resonates with your customers.
OUR TAKE:
3. Offering Ideas That Don't Instantly Click
When you explain your idea to your team, do they all instantly get it, or is there a lot of resistance? Is it confusing? Generally, a good idea, and especially a great one, resonates quickly. You want to lean into the intuition of your team as an initial test run before expanding an idea more broadly. - Rachel Kule, Pursuit PR
FULL ARTICLE:
Even the most creative marketing ideas can fall flat if they don't connect with the target audience. Whether it's a mismatch in tone, unclear messaging or a lack of customer insights, early warning signs often surface before a campaign goes live.
The key to long-term marketing success lies in recognizing those signs and making timely, strategic pivots. Here, 15 members of Forbes Communications Council share the telltale signs that a marketing idea might not land and how to shift direction in a way that better resonates with your customers.
1. Earning Impressions Without Engagement
A clear warning sign is when a campaign gets high impressions but low engagement. People see it but don't act. That usually means the message isn’t resonating emotionally or solving a clear problem. To pivot, I revisit the customer's pain points and rewrite the hook to focus on a specific benefit they care about, such as saving time or achieving a key metric faster. - Lisa Maynard, Awin
2. Straying Too Far From Brand Authenticity
When a marketing idea feels off-brand, it’s a clear sign to pivot. Today’s consumers rank authenticity as one of their top priorities when it comes to branded content, and anything misaligned with your brand’s voice or values risks falling flat. You should start by realigning the idea with your brand pillars, and then engage with your audience to help shape effective campaign direction and execution. - Scott Morris, Sprout Social
3. Offering Ideas That Don't Instantly Click
When you explain your idea to your team, do they all instantly get it, or is there a lot of resistance? Is it confusing? Generally, a good idea, and especially a great one, resonates quickly. You want to lean into the intuition of your team as an initial test run before expanding an idea more broadly. - Rachel Kule, Pursuit PR
4. Ignoring Customer Insights In Favor Of Internal Excitement
A clear warning sign that a marketing idea might miss the mark is when internal excitement is high, but it’s not grounded in customer insights. If early feedback, A/B tests or past performance data suggest confusion, apathy or misalignment with audience needs, it’s time to reassess. You'll have to revisit Voice of the Customer (VoC) research and past campaign learnings to find where the disconnect lies. - Kurt Allen, Notre Dame de Namur University
5. Overlooking Feedback From Frontline Teams
When the internal team closest to customer interactions expresses significant confusion or skepticism about a new marketing idea's core message, there is an issue. They are often the canary in the coal mine. If this happens, you must pivot by immediately conducting small-scale qualitative testing. Revealing where the disconnect lies allows you to refine or even fundamentally rethink the concept before a costly public launch. - Patrick Ward, NanoGlobals
6. Prioritizing Internal Language Over Customer Benefits
One warning sign is when messaging feels disconnected from customer reality. I pivoted from legal-focused patent enforcement language to technology innovation stories, transforming Reuters coverage from "patent entity" to "technology company" by centering content on actual customer benefits rather than internal priorities. - JoAnn Yamani, Future 500
7. Following Trends Instead Of Customer Needs
One warning sign is when an idea prioritizes trendiness over customer insights. If it looks great in a pitch deck but doesn’t align with what your audience values or needs, it’s a red flag. To pivot, you must return to your data and customer feedback. You can then center the message on solving a real pain point or reinforcing brand trust—not just chasing clicks. - Maria Alonso, Fortune 206
8. Overloading Campaigns With Too Many CTAs
Sometimes you feel the urge to offer many different paths—“learn more,” “sign up,” “share now” and so on—so you can cast a wide net. Each marketing campaign should be focused on affecting a specific metric, and that needs to be the star of the show. If you're trying to be all things to all people, it's a sign to break up the campaign into more specific ones. - Ellen Sluder
9. Seeing Indifference Instead Of Engagement
A major red flag is when your audience’s first reaction is indifference. If early reactions are lukewarm—no pushback, but no spark either—it’s a sign the idea isn’t emotionally resonating. I pivot by shifting from product-centric messaging to story-driven content that speaks to real aspirations and challenges. Relevance creates energy; indifference reveals a disconnect. - Katie Jewett, UPRAISE Marketing + Public Relations
10. Mistaking Internal Consensus For Customer Validation
When an idea gets unanimous internal praise too quickly, that's my red flag. If there’s no friction, no challenge, it often means we’re in an echo chamber—building for ourselves, not the customer. I pivot by intentionally pressure-testing the idea with a few trusted, contrarian voices outside marketing—customer success, sales and even legal. Real insight lives where resistance begins. - Deboshree Sarkar, Titan.ium Platform
11. Sounding Too Promotional And Losing Trust
If a marketing idea feels too promotional, it’s a red flag and risks losing authenticity and audience trust. Today’s consumers crave value and connection. You can pivot by focusing on storytelling or utility and showing how your brand fits into their world rather than shouting for attention. - Lyric Mandell, PhD, MOXY Company
12. Sacrificing Clarity For Cleverness
One warning sign that a marketing idea may not land is when it leans too heavily on cleverness at the expense of clarity. If it needs too much explanation, it likely won’t connect. A better approach may be to refocus on the customer’s core needs—what they value, fear or aspire to. Ideas rooted in those truths tend to resonate and perform more effectively. - Rob Robinson, HaystackID
13. Making Claims That Don't Match Delivery
When campaign messaging and brand promise are not matched by actual delivery, consumer trust and brand equity erode. In 2025, toilet paper brand Charmin faced backlash after marketing itself as forest-friendly and sustainable while sourcing from suppliers linked to deforestation. This disconnect invited both reputational and legal risk, proving that marketing must align with operational truth. - Toby Wong, Toby Wong Consulting
14. Noticing Underperforming Performance Metrics
A warning sign that a marketing idea may not be effective is when the performance metrics, such as engagement rates, click-through rates or conversions, are underperforming. To pivot, I’d reassess these metrics, refine the messaging and adjust the targeting. This could include changing the content format or experimenting with different calls to action to better engage the audience and improve results. - Lauren Parr, RepuGen
15. Launching Without A Strong Customer Connection
A weak connection between the idea and customer insights will increase the risk of failing, regardless of how innovative or well-produced the campaign is. The pivot is about reconnecting creativity with commercial and customer relevance. A strong marketing idea sits at the intersection of brand purpose, customer insights and market context. - Khalid Al Awar, Dubai Sports Council