Let’s make marketing feel less robotic and more real.
Find resources that bring your message—and your business—to life.

By Vicky Sidler | Published 12 January 2026 at 12:00 GMT+2
You know the feeling. You spend half an hour talking to a potential client. They seem interested, even excited. Then they ask for your price, pause politely, and say, “Oh, I found someone who can do it cheaper.”
If you’ve muttered something unrepeatable under your breath and slashed your rate just to land the job, you are not alone. You’re just stuck in the same trap as everyone else: trying to win business with tactics, not strategy.
In a recent YouTube video, John Jantsch (founder of Duct Tape Marketing) laid out the problem in plain English. He also handed us the solution.
No mystery. No marketing jargon. Just a clear explanation of why tactics without strategy push you into price wars you can’t win—and what to do instead.
Marketing tactics without strategy lead to price competition
A real strategy includes brand, growth, and customer experience
AI can’t replicate a well-thought-out strategy
Strategy builds trust, raises value, and attracts better clients
👉 Need help getting your message right? Download the 5-Minute Marketing Fix.
Marketing Strategy vs Tactics: Why One Builds Trust and the Other Kills Profit
Strategy Stops the Race to the Bottom:
1. Ideal Client Profile: The Marketing Shortcut Small Businesses Miss
2. Marketing Hourglass Explained: A Smarter Way to Grow Your Small Business
3. Performance Marketing Isn’t Real and Never Was
4. Define Your Brand Voice and Build Instant Recognition
5. Marketing Lead Generation Strategy: 5 Pillars for 2026
Frequently Asked Questions About Marketing Strategy vs Tactics
1. What’s the difference between marketing strategy and tactics?
2. Why do small businesses end up competing on price?
3. How do I stop my marketing from feeling random?
4. What is the Strategy Pyramid in marketing?
5. Can AI help with marketing strategy?
6. How do I make my service business look less like a commodity?
7. Should I still run ads and post on social media while building a strategy?
8. What if I’m not sure who my ideal client is?
Let’s get this out of the way first. Tactics are not bad. A tactic is a specific action you take to get a result. It might be running a Facebook ad, creating a lead magnet, launching a referral program, or building a website.
The problem is when tactics happen in a vacuum. Without strategy, tactics are just guesses. They often look like work. They even feel productive. But they’re like pushing random buttons in a lift and hoping one gets you to the penthouse.
If your only plan is to copy what everyone else is doing—because it’s trending, cheap, or fast—you’ve already lost. You’re not leading. You’re reacting. And when someone else offers the same tactic for less, guess who loses the client?
According to Jantsch, selling tactics without strategy is a race to the bottom. You compete on price. You look like every other vendor. And instead of being seen as a trusted partner, you become one more name in a long list of options.
That’s where strategy flips the script.
Instead of asking “What should I do this month?”, strategy asks “Where are we going, and what’s the best way to get there?” That sounds like a small shift, but it changes everything.
And no, “strategy” isn’t just a fancier word for planning. It’s a layered approach that aligns your marketing with your actual business goals. Done well, it creates structure, clarity, and consistency—things AI and templates still can’t fake.
Jantsch explains this using a simple model he calls the Strategy Pyramid. Three levels, all connected.
This is your foundation. What does your business aim to achieve? Who does it serve? What problem does it solve? If you’re not crystal clear on this, every decision above it will wobble.
This sits in the middle and includes three parts:
Brand Strategy: Who is your ideal customer? What promise do you make to solve their problem?
Growth Strategy: What channels will you use to reach people and grow the business?
Customer Strategy: What kind of experience will you intentionally create for people before, during, and after they buy?
This is where tactics finally come in. But here’s the catch: they only work if the two layers beneath are solid. Otherwise, you’re building on sand.
AI can build a landing page in five minutes. It can write ad copy, generate logos, and even schedule your content. Which means clients now expect all that for next to nothing.
If you’re selling tasks, you’re replaceable.
But if you sell strategy—if you help clients define goals, design experiences, and make better marketing decisions—you’re not just useful. You’re essential.
Strategy is where real value lives. It’s not something AI can replicate, because it’s based on judgment, experience, and understanding the client’s bigger picture. It also makes clients trust you more, stick around longer, and pay higher fees without blinking.
When you lead with strategy, something shifts. You stop attracting people who only care about the lowest quote. You start working with clients who want results, not just activity.
These are people who value insight, long-term thinking, and a partner who actually understands their business. They’re not perfect, but they’re willing to invest. That’s how you grow. That’s how you scale. That’s how you avoid the burnout that comes from constantly chasing short-term wins.
If you’re stuck in tactic mode, it’s time to zoom out.
Start by clarifying your own business goals. Then rebuild your marketing around a clear brand promise, a thoughtful growth path, and a repeatable customer experience. If that sounds like work, that’s because it is. But it’s the kind of work that makes the rest of your marketing easier—and far more effective.
Most small businesses don’t fail because of lazy execution. They fail because they try to execute without direction.
Strategy gives you that direction. It also protects you from the pressure to slash prices and race to the bottom. When clients understand your value, they pay for it. When they don’t, they compare you to a robot.
And no one wants to lose a job to something without a face.
Clarity is the opposite of guessing. If your marketing feels random, unappreciated, or unprofitable, the fix might not be another tactic. It might be the foundation underneath.
Start there. And if you want a simple way to get clear on your message, I’ve got something for you. Grab the 5-Minute Marketing Fix to get one sentence that actually explains what you do—clearly, quickly, and without sounding like everyone else.
The “tactic trap” often starts because businesses market to “everyone,” which forces price competition. This article helps you lock in who your strategy is actually for.
Strategy includes customer experience—not just execution. This post shows how trust is built across the entire journey, not just at the moment of sale.
If your marketing focuses too much on clicks and dashboards, you might be crowding out the strategic work that actually builds long-term growth. This explains why that happens.
Competing on tactics often leads to messy, inconsistent messaging. This article helps you build a brand voice that makes your marketing coherent, human, and easier to charge for.
After zooming out from tactics, the next step is building a system. This guide shows you what a complete lead generation strategy should actually include.
A strategy is your overall plan. It defines your goals, your ideal customer, and how you’ll position your business to grow. A tactic is a specific action you take, like running a Google ad or sending a newsletter. Strategy guides the tactics. Without it, tactics are just guesses.
Most often, it’s because they lead with tactics. They promote what they sell, not why it matters. Without a strategy to clarify value and target the right audience, businesses look the same—and customers choose based on cost.
Start with strategy. Get clear on your business goals, your ideal client, and the experience you want people to have. Use that to guide every marketing decision. It turns “random activity” into a system that builds trust and results.
It’s a simple framework from Duct Tape Marketing that shows how to build a strong marketing foundation.
Business Strategy sets the goals
Marketing Strategy covers brand, growth, and customer experience
Tactics come last, only after the first two are clear
AI can speed up execution, but it can’t build strategy. It doesn’t understand your business goals, customer journey, or value proposition. Use it for support, not direction.
Differentiate with strategy. Show how you solve a specific problem for a specific group. Make your messaging consistent, your process clear, and your customer experience memorable. That’s what makes people value you more than the cheapest option.
Yes—but be intentional. Don’t pause everything. Just make sure each tactic connects to a bigger goal. Even one clear change, like tightening your message, can improve your results fast.
Then start there. You can’t build a strong strategy without knowing who it’s for. Use interviews, surveys, or client history to find the common patterns. There’s a helpful article on that right here.
Not at all. Strategy matters even more for small businesses because your time, money, and energy are limited. A clear strategy helps you avoid wasted effort and focus only on what drives real growth.
You can start bydownloading the 5-Minute Marketing Fix. It gives you one simple sentence to describe your business clearly—which is the first step in any good strategy.

Created with clarity (and coffee)