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Your best campaign was also the last campaign where your tactic fully worked.

You just didn’t know it yet.

Here’s what actually happens to every marketing tactic over time.

It starts working because there’s a gap: you know how the mechanism works, your audience doesn’t. That gap is the leverage. Scarcity feels real. Social proof feels organic. The offer feels urgent.

Then you scale it. More spend, more reach, more formats and here’s the part nobody talks about: the moment you reach maximum scale is also the moment your audience starts learning how the mechanism works. They’ve seen it too many times. They recognize it. The counter-reflex develops.

Peak performance and peak immunity growth are the same moment.

Your dashboard shows one of them.

It gets more specific than that. Your best customers — the ones who drive referrals, who pay premium, who tell others — they figure it out first. 12 to 24 months before everyone else. So the overall numbers still look fine. The tactic is still “working.”

Just not on the people who matter most.

Eventually the numbers drop. The team meets. Someone says the creative needs refreshing. Someone says the targeting has drifted. Someone says the channel is saturated.

None of that is why the numbers dropped.

The tactic expired. Not because it was executed badly. Because it was executed so well, for so long, that the audience learned what it was — and the mechanism stopped working.

The brief asks: how do we produce more motion?

The numbers are asking something different: why is motion costing more than it used to?

Those are different questions. Most teams keep answering the first one.

One practical test: graph efficiency — return per unit of spend, not total results — for any tactic you’ve been running more than 18 months. If the line peaked and then declined despite multiple rounds of optimisation, you didn’t have a creative problem.

You passed the inflection point during your best quarter.

The dashboard cannot tell the difference.

The Trust Ledger. Out

Now you know! via

They say history tends to repeat itself. Strauss and Howe laid the groundwork for their theory in their book Generations: The History of America’s Future, 1584 to 2069 (1991), which discusses the history of the United States as a series of generational biographies going back to 1584.[1] In their book The Fourth Turning (1997), the authors expanded the theory to focus on a fourfold cycle of generational types and recurring mood eras[2] to describe the history of the United States, including the Thirteen Colonies and their British antecedents. However, the authors have also examined generational trends elsewhere in the world and described similar cycles in several developed countries. Fascinating to say the least

Click here to view the chart larger

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