Friday, March 6, 2026

Why Great Sales Strategies Still Fail – and How to Fix Them

 WOW! The last 2 posts were hard to retrieve because of the glitch in my system... instead of not publishing them, I pulled in everything in the files at once and, while its still readable, I apologize foo IT the two articles for being a little taxing to consume! Now, the system looks fixed and please let me know your thoughts! Love hearing from you at drphilipjay@gmail.com.



Why Great Sales Strategies Still Fail – and How to Fix Them

Eduardo UmanzorCorey Jacobs

March 5, 2026

 Why Great Sales Strategies Fail

The playbook still works. The pipeline is still filling. And the pitches still land – on paper.

But somewhere between first contact and final decision, even the best go-to-market strategies are stalling out. Teams chase leads. Stakeholders nod along. Value is quantified and customized. And yet deals linger, momentum fades and complexity creeps in.

It’s not because the product, pricing or messaging is wrong. It’s because the systems we’re selling into aren’t ready to buy.

According to Gartner, 77% of B2B buyers found their last purchase “very complex or difficult.” Not because of confusion about the solution, but because of what was happening inside their organizations: competing priorities, internal friction and the fear of getting it wrong.

Today’s buyer isn’t simply comparing vendors. They’re trying to align internal teams, justify timing, and weigh the cost of a wrong move.

The real challenge for sellers isn’t delivering value. It’s activating it.

Why Traditional GTM Models Are Failing

Over the past few decades, GTM strategies have evolved from product-led approaches that emphasized technical specs and features, to solution selling focused on addressing customer pain points, and eventually to outcome-based models centered on ROI and business impact. Despite this progression, 62% of organizations still describe their GTM motion as primarily product-led, according to Gartner, highlighting how deeply entrenched older models remain, even as the buying landscape has fundamentally changed.

That disconnect is becoming harder to ignore. In fact, 58% of companies plan to update their GTM strategies within the year, per Gartner. The shift underway isn’t just about messaging tweaks. It’s a reset in purpose: Stop chasing decisions. Start enabling them.

The Rise of Activator Selling

Today, speed and scale matter less than clarity. Buyers aren’t just looking for solutions; they’re trying to navigate ambiguity and align decision makers. Activator Selling meets that need by helping customers make sense of complexity so they can move forward with confidence.

This is a shift from selling a solution to co-creating strategic movement. Instead of pitching value, sellers work with buyers to uncover risks, align stakeholders and build paths forward. It’s not about having all the answers; it’s about helping the customer ask better questions.

Three principles define this approach:

Proactive Anticipation – Rather than react to known pain points, activator sellers help buyers think ahead, surfacing risks, clarifying priorities and preparing for what’s next.

Ecosystem Thinking – No single offering solves it all. Activator sellers connect tools, services and teams into a larger structure that supports decision-making and implementation.

Collaborative Solutions – Instead of presenting a fix, sellers work with buyers to build one, accounting for internal dynamics, timelines and political realities.

Case Study: How Mars Petcare Activated Its GTM Ecosystem

Mars Petcare offers a clear example of Activator Selling in action. The company didn’t abandon its successful GTM playbook overnight. It evolved through each stage – product, solution and outcomes – before making a broader shift toward enablement.

Initially, Mars focused on product quality and variety. Then came tailored nutrition solutions tied to specific pet needs. Later, it leaned into services and convenience to deliver better outcomes and experiences for pet owners.

The turning point came when Mars stopped thinking in terms of offerings and started thinking in terms of enablement. Today, Mars Petcare exemplifies Activator Selling. The company operates as a proactive ecosystem partner, helping pet owners and veterinarians manage care holistically. It offers telemedicine tools that support real-time health decisions, diagnostics solutions that catch issues earlier, and veterinary networks to integrate nutrition, treatment, and ongoing care.

Mars stopped asking, “What more can we sell?” and started asking, “How can we help our customers stay ahead of what’s next?” That’s the pivot from solution delivery to value activation. It’s not about controlling the sale, but enabling progress. In doing so, Mars deepened customer loyalty, increased relevance, and created a differentiated role in a crowded, competitive market.

Building Your Activator GTM System

Making this shift takes more than new messaging. It requires structural change across the GTM system. Here’s where to start:

1. Reframe Engagement

The most effective GTM leaders are moving from transactional outreach to transformational partnerships. Instead of asking, “What do you need?” ask, “What are you trying to navigate?” When engagement is rooted in helping the customer move forward, trust accelerates and decisions stick.

2. Redefine Success Metrics

Traditional KPIs like closed-won rates still matter, but they don’t show whether buyers are truly ready. Metrics like stakeholder clarity, internal traction, and speed-to-consensus offer better insight into whether GTM strategies are actually activating movement.

3. Orchestrate Across Functions

Activator Selling requires marketing, digital, enablement and sales to operate as one system. That means aligning not only on messaging, but also on customer readiness. The best teams build GTM ecosystems where insight flows in both directions, and content, conversations and tools evolve in tandem. In fact, in a typical mid-market B2B organization with a scaled GTM strategy, marketing makes sales about 8 times more effective and 5 times more efficient.

4. Elevate Enablement As a Strategic Lever

Traditional enablement focuses on training. Activator enablement focuses on fluency, preparing teams to lead complex conversations, navigate ambiguity, and support customers who haven’t yet reached consensus. The shift is from teaching what to say to building the capability to sense what’s needed.

5. Use Rev Ops to Sync Strategy and Execution

When aligned with the buyer journey, Rev Ops synchronizes systems, data and decision-making across the GTM org. The shift is from managing processes to activating momentum: Using insights to adapt in real time, closing the gap between intent and execution, and helping every team move in rhythm with the customer.

The New Advantage

Today’s buyers aren’t stalled because they don’t understand your product. They’re stalled because they’re overwhelmed, under-aligned and unsure how to move forward. In that environment, selling harder won’t help. But enabling clarity will.

That’s the work of Activator Selling. And for companies navigating change, it’s quickly becoming the edge that separates those who close deals from those who create momentum.

  

Don't Be Delulu: Why Chasing 'Cool' Repels Gen Z

 

Commentary

Don't Be Delulu: Why Chasing 'Cool' Repels Gen Z

As words like “delulu” and “tradwife” have made their way into the Cambridge Dictionary, we’re seeing the virality of Gen Z slang transcend the internet and become part of culture. 

As a mom of three school-aged kids and a self-proclaimed Rizzler from Ohio, I can tell you that knowing words like “delulu” isn’t about being trendy, it’s about being fluent in how late Gen Z and Gen Alpha actually talk.

From jumping into pop culture trends on social media to referencing Gen Z slang in a campaign, there are many ways to speak the language of young consumers. But it has to be done strategically, because the moment marketers—or parents—start spitting it back, it’s over and on to the next phrase.

Understanding Gen Z beyond the lingo

As a mom to a 14-year-old, I have a front row seat to how quickly language evolves for Gen Z. By the time delulu made it to the dictionary, they've created, abandoned, and resurfaced fresh lingo into their vocabulary (the resurgence of “cooked”’ has been a personal favorite). As the cycle continues, it’s important for marketers to remember that we don’t need to be using these words along with them, but we need to understand what they’re trying to say.


Slang is an emotional shorthand, and it’s important to recognize the words Gen Z and Gen Alpha use as more than internet lingo. Understanding their vocabulary is key to understanding how they communicate humor, emotion and their reality. 

Recognizing the influence of Gen Z

Younger generations have always dictated trends, but the internet allows us to view this en masse. In many ways, Gen Z is the first generation of viral tastemakers, and they're steering culture accordingly.  Their fingerprints are all over fashion, humor and communication at large. 

From memes to political activism to emotional honesty on subjects like mental health, what they embrace becomes mainstream. It’s important for marketers to understand the influence of the younger generations and make an earnest effort to understand their communication style in order to meet them where they’re at.

For instance, social media will always be an essential medium for engaging with this age group, but Gen Z also watches YouTube the way we used to watch TV, while Gen Alpha loves short-form content and gaming. 

Building authentic connections

When forging connections, remember that Gen Z has zero tolerance for fakeness. They know what's authentic and when marketers are faking it, so don’t use a trend just to decorate a campaign idea. Only use what truly aligns with your brand and your message. 

Trends have a short shelf life, tied to context and humor, so there is a lot to get right when considering jumping into a viral pop culture moment. Pursuit of virality is not worth sacrificing a long-term strategy, and Gen Z will always see through a cheap attempt to capitalize on the trends they’ve created. 

When searching for the right moment, think beyond the slang words and listen to what they’re actually telling you. Above all else, keep it authentic -- or you’re cooked.

This post was previously published in an earlier edition of Marketing Insider.

Legacy Media Mergers: Layoffs, Cost-Cutting

Commentary Legacy Media Mergers: Layoffs, Cost-Cutting - And Few Uplifting Answers


by Wayne Friedman , Staff Writer, March 3, 2026 

TV stations, including their programming and news business, are expected to see continuing cutbacks and staffing layoffs. What’s the end game? -- Massive layoffs are coming to Paramount Skydance in the wake of the news that it will buy Warner Bros. Discovery for $110 billion. -- Nexstar Media Group, which has a $6.2 billion planned deal to buy Tegna later this year, is expected to lay off workers at some of its major market TV stations. Expect more of the same as Sinclair Inc., Scripps, Gray and other remaining major TV station owners continue to fight for survival. These billion-dollar deals look to disrupt the employment picture of the legacy TV-media ecosystem. TV stations continue to be left in the lurch when disruptive industry moves affect network affiliation deals, while local digital-first competition becomes stronger. TV Watch has talked up the issue of syndicated daytime talk programming becoming much weaker while the ranks of mainstay shows are disappearing or experiencing their producers and distributors considering non-TV station efforts. What real alternatives remain for TV stations? Doing more local newscasts, already at multiple hours a day? Weary but loyal local TV news viewers, who are typically older audiences, need a break. There has been much discussion of the growth of video podcasts. But YouTube-like podcasts that are plain-looking, with underwhelming production attributes, may not represent a total replacement for daytime talk or perhaps general local TV news shows. Expanding local TV news content has well passed its saturation point. All major TV station groups -- Nexstar, Sinclair, Grey and Scripps -- now see airing video podcasts as part of their core programming. Where do we go from here? What remains of “premium” newscast content? Nexstar Media says one piece of the puzzle will come with standardizing local connected TV (CTV) for all its 100-plus markets, where its stations and newscasts air. Nexstar is already in the national news business with its NewsNation cable TV channel. Do all local TV station groups need to do the same -- just for survival? Where else can they cut costs -- while at the same time not alienating long-time viewers? Those viewers may increasingly now see local TV station content as being only slightly better than what’s on YouTube or via their favorite social media outlet. For TV stations, that can’t be a good place to be in. The answers aren’t easy.

MRC Blows Whistle On Nielsen Big Data


MRC Blows Whistle on Nielsen Big Data + Snafu by 

Joe Mandese , 

Yesterday Industry ratings watchdog the Media Rating Council (MR) this week disclosed major problems in Nielsen's Big Data + panel measurement service that have caused "seemingly unusual changes" in its audience estimates, including a double-digit decline in adults 25-54 viewing, as well as other issues. In a statement published on its website Tuesday the MRC said it became aware of the issues during the first half of 2025 from undisclosed sources, as well as part of its ongoing auditing of Nielsen's service and described the unusual changes as: Decreases in audiences for certain demographics, including an average 10% decline in total day impressions for persons 25-54 vs. the same period a year earlier. Issues with representation levels in Nielsen’s panel, including household viewing technology, as well as demographic characteristics. Changes in the general variability associated with reported audience estimates and between audience estimates originating from panel-only vs. Big Data + panel measurements. advertisement BISRetail-sp26-InsiderCircle-640x480dbl.gif advertisement In its statement, the MRC did not explain why it is disclosing the problems now, but it said that it informed Nielsen in September 2025 that it needed to do four things in order to maintain MRC accreditation for the service: Implementation of an independent media-related universe estimate source. Changes to Nielsen’s modeling processes to increase demographic assignment accuracy. Changes to Nielsen’s weighting process to help simplify the overall process and reduce standard error levels in reporting. Improving underrepresented demographic segments in Nielsen’s panel (e.g., Hispanic, Spanish-dominant). Regarding the first area, the MRC noted that Nielsen began implementing the Advertising Research Foundation's DASH (Universe Study of Device & Account Sharing) service, which the MRC previously accredited and which is increasingly becoming an industry default standard for media universe estimates. Regarding under-represented demographic segments, the MRC characterized Nielsen as making "notable progress in quarters three and four 2025 and into January 2026," and disclosed that Nielsen will make "adjustments" to its modeling and weighting processes beginning in April. The timing of those changes could be disruptive for the advertising marketplace heading into 2026-27 upfront negotiations, in which Nielsen still remains the default currency, though a number of alternative currencies are also being implemented by buyers and sellers. "We understand and we regret that these changes will be disruptive to business processes of the marketplace; we are encouraged that Nielsen is actively working to address the priority areas for improvement that have arisen in their Big Data + Panel measurement.," the MRC stated, adding that the Nielsen service remains accredited for now, but is "under evaluation at this time."

Paramount Hints At 'Iconic' Cable Brands Moving to Streaming

Paramount Hints At 'Iconic' Cable Brands Moving To Streaming Commentary Paramount Hints At 'Iconic' Cable Brands Moving To Streamingby Wayne Friedman , Staff Writer, 6 hours ago Paramount Skydance has hinted at what will become of its linear TV networks' business, which will soon be growing via its acquisition of Warner Bros. Discovery. “There are several iconic brands, both at Paramount and Warner Brothers, we can transition to streaming,” said David Ellison, chairman and CEO of Paramount Skydance, speaking with CNBC on Thursday. “So we see significant value there.” He did not provide many details. At the same time, he revealed there is some concern -- especially when looking at where the broadcast and cable business are currently. For many analysts, this includes those entertainment, non-sports cable TV networks. “You have to basically separate broadcast and cable. You know CBS is an incredible reach asset... an incredibly healthy business.” Ellison then went on to say that CBS has eight of the top ten shows on TV, along with the strongest viewership for an NFL season network in years. advertisement WBNR117-Tubi-001-640x480dbl.gif advertisement This comes as the NFL, a key programming content provider, will pursue higher rights fees from Paramount and all other NFL TV networks/streamer partners-- as much as 50% rise -- starting negotiations this year. In response to this from CNBC, Ellison said: “On specifics and the ongoing negotiation, I really can't comment on that. What I can tell you is we do plan to, you know, continue our relationship and I do believe we have planned accordingly there.” He went on to say that with the support of other healthier parts of the Paramount Skydance, the company can ease the decline of cable TV networks. “When you put all these portfolios together, we absolutely believe we can bend the decline basically of cable.... We can rationalize the cost and actually keep those brands healthier for longer.” Still, underneath it all, we know there will be some significant cutbacks to those networks -- staffing and otherwise. Currently, cable networks at Paramount and Warner Bros. Discovery still sees benefit from TV distributors (cable, satellite, virtual) carriage fees. All this might be a heavy lift -- especially when negotiating a shifting mix of networks/streaming distribution deals with legacy TV distributors (Comcast, Charter, DirecTV, Dish and others). Can Paramount Skydance find the precise formula to keep the transition moving in the right direction?

Monday, March 2, 2026

Commentary The 3 A's of Marketing to The Gen Z Parent

 







The 3 A's of Marketing to The Gen Z Parent


Comment

Gen Z parents are not shopping the way millennials did. They’re not starting with a brand website. They’re not relying on polished ads. And they’re definitely not trusting one sponsored Instagram post. Gen Z moms and dads are intentional and purposeful as they curate parenthood. They are discovering, validating, and deciding what to buy in entirely new ways.

If you want to win with Gen Z parents, you need to master the 3 A’s.

AI: Be Where Discovery Starts

Discovery no longer begins with a Google search bar. It begins inside AI tools. You may have seen this in your own online behavior.  When was the last time you clicked on a blue link?

Parents are asking: 

  • What’s the best stroller for city living?
  • Is this diaper brand worth the price?
  • What baby wash is safest for sensitive skin?

And long language models are delivering answers from AI-driven environments like ChatGPT, Google AI Overviews, and search engines that summarize the web instead of sending traffic to it.


For brands trying to reach Gen Z moms and dads, it’s imperative to show up in AI search. If your product is not mentioned in trusted content across blogs, Reddit threads, YouTube transcripts, reviews, and retail listings, AI will not surface it.

AI does not invent authority. It pulls from it. Brands have to be smarter in the content they create and the strategy behind their influencer or content creator partnerships.

Brands must:

  • Create content that answers real parenting questions
  • Ensure product details are consistent across retail, blogs, and social whether you create it or someone posts about your products
  • Show up in long-form, searchable formats not just short social posts, this means mom blogs count more than followers on a single Instagram post.

Discovery is now conversational. Your content needs to be, too.

Authenticity: Trust Is Built on Reddit, Not Ads

Gen Z parents are skeptical by default. They question brand claims. They know everything can be altered with technology.

When they want truth, they go to community. Platforms like Reddit have become modern word-of-mouth engines. A mom will search:

  • “Is Brand X actually worth it?”
  • “Has anyone tried this for eczema?”

She wants lived experience. Not marketing copy or perfectly curated sponsored monotone images on Instagram.

Reddit works because:

  • Conversations feel unfiltered
  • Real parents share long-form feedback
  • Pros and cons are discussed openly

For brands, this changes the strategy. You cannot control Reddit. But you can influence what shows up there by encouraging real, authentic reviews, listening to comments online and create communities around your brand.

Authenticity isn’t a message. It’s proof that Gen Z parents demand proof before purchase.

Algorithms: Visibility Is Earned, Not Assumed

Even great content doesn’t matter if algorithms don’t serve it up to viewers. It’s important to know the ecosystem of each popular social platform even in its simplest form.

  • TikTok prioritizes watch time and engagement
  • Instagram rewards engagement- saves, shares, and consistency
  • YouTube values retention and searchable titles
  • Amazon ranks based on conversion rate, reviews, and sales history

What Brands Need to Do to Capture the Gen Z Parent’s Attention

The good news is that brands don’t need to throw out the baby with the bathwater and start over with Gen Z parents.  Instead, brands need to be more strategic with the tactics many are currently doing.

  • Search-optimized titles and descriptions in Influencer content
  • Add FAQs to enrich product pages
  • Ensure consistency across all channels including paid content
  • Make sure Influencer content is indexed for AI

Brands that understand the 3 A’s stop thinking in campaigns and start thinking in systems. Gen Z parents grew up with systems, and they win for today’s moms and dads.

'26 Ad Market Begins on A Decelerating Note: January +0.7%

 A quick update for ad spending going forward as February 28, 2025: Philip Jay LeNoble, Ph.D.

'26 Ad Market Begins on A Decelerating Note: January +0.7%


The U.S. ad economy entered 2026 on a tepid note, expanding less than a point over January 2025, according to Guideline's just-refreshed U.S. Ad Market Tracker.

January marks the second month of deceleration for the U.S. ad economy, which ended 2025 up 1.9% -- the worst monthly expansion in 2025 except for two year-over-year Olympic comps in July and August.