Real news, real insights – for small businesses who want to understand what’s happening and why it matters.

By Vicky Sidler | Published 6 March 2026 at 12:00 GMT+2
Picture a group of well-meaning adults sitting around a conference table, drinking lukewarm coffee, and deciding that the solution to all their business problems is simply to get more leads. Someone casually suggests running paid advertisements, while another person enthusiastically points out that your biggest competitor is suddenly posting every single day on LinkedIn.
You eventually adjourn the meeting, clutching a handful of exciting new tactics and a heart completely full of good intentions.
A week later, everyone in your office is typing furiously and rushing to very important meetings, yet absolutely nothing has actually been finished. The crucial promotional email is waiting on the landing page, the landing page is waiting on the copywriter, the copy is waiting on final approval, and that final approval is waiting on some magical future date when the boss finally has free time.
According to John Jantsch from Duct Tape Marketing, you do not actually have a marketing problem. You have a workstream problem, which is just a polite way of saying your brilliant plan is permanently trapped in a group chat.
Excellent marketing plans frequently fail because teams lack a clear process for moving an idea from the drawing board to the public.
A Workstream Engine clarifies exactly who does what, how the work moves forward, and what the final product should look like.
Creating repeatable processes ensures your business results do not depend entirely on one employee having a good week.
👉 Need help getting your message right? Download the 5-Minute Marketing Fix.
Why Your Marketing Plan Is Stuck In A Group Chat
The Part Of Marketing Everyone Conveniently Skips:
Introducing The Workstream Engine:
The Five Pillars Of Getting Things Done:
Roles, Workflows, and Standard Operating Procedures:
Documenting Your First Process:
1. Brand Strategy Framework on One Page? Here is How
2. Content Marketing Strategy Framework Every Small Biz Needs
3. South African Small Business Boom R500m in Growth And How They Do It
4. Embedded Financing Boosts SMB Growth by Up to 50%
5. StoryBrand Marketing Works Everywhere. Here is Proof.
1. Why do marketing projects always get delayed?
2. How do I get my team to execute a marketing plan?
3. What is a marketing standard operating procedure?
Understanding why your projects constantly stall is the very first step toward building a system that actually works without your constant supervision. We absolutely love talking about strategy, but we consistently ignore the incredibly unglamorous mechanics of execution.
As a StoryBrand Certified Guide and Duct Tape Marketing Consultant, I see this exact scenario play out constantly. A passionate team does the heavy strategic work; they build a beautiful plan, and they pick out the perfect campaigns. Then they stare blankly at the finished document and realize they do not actually have a practical way to run it.
There are no assigned roles, no weekly rhythms, no quality control, and absolutely no clear handoff between having a great idea and actually showing it to the public. So, marketing simply becomes a frantic scramble.
This is precisely where the Workstream Engine comes to the rescue. It exists specifically to remove that daily chaos.
The Workstream Engine is the operational layer of your marketing where you clearly define how work moves through your business. When you build this engine, your entire marketing plan no longer depends on fragile human memory, endless redundant meetings, or heroic last-minute saves.
Breaking down your operational flow into five manageable categories makes the entire concept of business systems feel much less like a corporate punishment.
To build a functional engine, you need to establish five specific elements.
First, you must define clear roles and ownership. This is not about giving people fancy job titles like Vice President of Synergistic Ideation, but rather about deciding who takes actual responsibility for the brand and the growth campaigns.
Second, you need explicit workflows and handoffs that detail exactly how a campaign moves from a vague idea to a public launch. You need to know exactly who writes the content, who reviews it, and who presses the final button.
Third, you must create standard operating procedures. These are simple documents that prevent you from reinventing the wheel every single time you launch a campaign or train a new hire.
Fourth, you need quality control to define what constitutes good enough; otherwise, your core message will constantly drift depending on who had enough sleep that day.
Finally, you have to honestly evaluate your capacity and constraints to ensure you actually have the right people and skills in-house to run the plan.
Identifying these gaps is exactly how you stop stacking more responsibilities onto an already overwhelmed team.
You do not need to pause your entire business for a month to build these systems. You can start creating incredible momentum right now with just one single sheet of paper.
If you want to transition from chaotic hustle to smooth execution, try this remarkably simple exercise. Pick one campaign you are running right now and write down the answers to a few basic questions.
Identify exactly who owns the project, list the five to seven steps required to make it live, and pinpoint exactly where the process usually gets stuck. Note the specific handoff that breaks most frequently, and write down exactly what you would tell a brand new hire to do first.
When you finish answering those questions, you have successfully created the beginning of a standard operating procedure. It will not be perfect, but it just needs to exist so you do not have to start from absolute zero next time. The final step is deciding on one weekly meeting or check-in rhythm that keeps the work moving predictably so you do not devolve into a monthly panic.
If you want support getting your message simple and sharp so you can plug it directly into your new workstream engine, start right here.
Download my free 5-Minute Marketing Fix and get one clear sentence that describes what your business does and why it matters.
Now that you have a functioning assembly line for your marketing, you actually need something useful to put on it. This guide shows you how to compress your entire brand strategy onto a single piece of paper so your team stops pretending they lost the official manual.
Building a perfectly oiled marketing machine is entirely useless if you are just feeding it terrible ideas. Discover exactly how to map out a concrete content strategy so you can stop writing aimless blog posts and start producing material that actually attracts paying clients.
If you are wondering what happens when a business actually gets its operational act together, just look at these local success stories. This piece explores how entrepreneurs are using precise systems to turn their daily grind into serious revenue without losing their minds in the process.
Pouring extra money into a broken marketing system is exactly like putting premium gasoline into a car without a steering wheel. Read this before you spend another cent on advertising so you can learn how to pair financial growth with the reliable processes we just built.
Nothing clogs up a workflow faster than a sales team and a marketing team completely disagreeing on what your company actually sells. This article proves how getting everyone to use the exact same StoryBrand language will dramatically reduce your office friction and eliminate endless revisions.
Because everyone assumes someone else is doing the actual work. You leave a meeting with a brilliant idea and absolutely zero assigned responsibilities. The copywriter is waiting for the designer, the designer is waiting for the boss, and the boss is waiting for a miracle. A workstream engine fixes this by putting actual names next to actual tasks.
You have to stop relying on sudden inspiration and start relying on a very boring checklist. Inspiration is fleeting, but a weekly rhythm of knowing exactly who does what is wonderfully permanent. You need to clearly define the exact steps from the first brainstorm to the final published post so no one ever has to guess what happens next.
It is simply a written record of how you do a specific task so you do not have to completely reinvent the wheel every single Tuesday. It does not need to be a heavy leather-bound manual. It just needs to be a basic list of instructions telling the new employee exactly which buttons to press so the company newsletter actually goes out on time.
Focus entirely on ownership instead of fancy corporate titles. You do not need a Director of Synergistic Outreach. You just need to know exactly who owns the brand message, who owns the lead generation campaigns, and who is responsible for making sure the customer actually gets an email after they buy something. When everyone knows what they own, the finger-pointing miraculously stops.
Your marketing is inconsistent because your definition of "good enough" changes depending on who had their coffee that morning. Without clear quality control and documented handoffs, your brand voice will drift wildly. Systems ensure that your business sounds exactly like your business, whether your team is having a fantastic day or a terrible one.

Created with clarity (and coffee)