
Marketing News Reporter & Industry Journalist

Vicky Sidler is an experienced marketing industry journalist and strategist with more than 15 years in journalism, content strategy, and digital marketing. As a Marketing News Reporter for Strategic Marketing Tribe, she covers breaking developments, trends, and insights that shape the marketing world—from AI in advertising to the latest in customer experience strategy.
Vicky is an award-winning StoryBrand Certified Guide and Duct Tape Marketing Certified Strategist, combining two of the most effective marketing frameworks to help small businesses simplify their message and build marketing systems that work. Her journalism background ensures every piece she writes is fact-checked, insightful, and practical.
Her articles regularly analyze key marketing trends, platform updates, and case studies—offering small business owners, marketers, and industry professionals clear, actionable takeaways. She specializes in topics such as:
Digital marketing strategy
Content marketing and brand storytelling
Marketing technology and automation
AI’s impact on marketing
StoryBrand and Duct Tape Marketing best practices
BA in Journalism & English, University of Johannesburg
StoryBrand Certified Guide
StoryBrand Certified Coach
Duct Tape Marketing Certified Strategist
Over 20 years in journalism and marketing communications
Founder & CEO of Strategic Marketing Tribe
Winner of 50Pros Top 10 Global Leader award

By Vicky Sidler | Published 28 June 2026 at 12:00 GMT+2
Have you ever felt like you are running on a terrifying, greased corporate treadmill where the faster you sprint, the less money you actually make? You are desperately throwing proposals at anyone with a pulse, matching your competitors' bargain-bin prices, and wondering why your brilliant expertise is being rewarded with a salary that barely covers your electricity bill.
This nightmare scenario is not an accident; it is the default setting of the free market. In his brilliant book Oversubscribed, Daniel Priestley explains that the modern marketplace is a highly predatory environment designed to naturally resist your profit. If you are struggling to differentiate your service, you are completely trapped in what he calls the "Sea of Beige." In this dismal ocean, you are nothing but a commodity, and the market’s primary objective is to violently erode your margins until you are earning nothing more than a basic, miserable wage for your exhausting labor.
As a StoryBrand Certified Guide, I spend my life trying to rescue business owners who are drowning in this beige sludge because they refuse to boldly claim their territory. We are currently navigating a digital landscape aggressively drowning in fake, automated AI slop and generic corporate jargon. That means your ultimate weapon—your absolute biggest competitive advantage—is simply being an undeniably clear, verified human authority.
Let's rip apart the absolute absurdity of trying to serve everyone, explore why spending all your marketing money on cold leads is a mathematical disaster, and discuss how you can systematically construct an environment where customers literally beg you to take their money.
The free market actively wants to erode your margins. To survive, you must architect a strategic imbalance where your demand heavily outstrips your supply, giving you the ultimate "power of no."
You must abandon mass advertising and adopt a "Remarkable Budget," reallocating 50% of your marketing funds to intensely delight your existing clients instead of chasing cold, uninterested strangers.
Scaling a business is a brutal transition from a "Lifestyle" company of generalists to a "Performance" company of specialists. The zone between 12 and 50 employees is a dangerous desert where most businesses die.
👉 Your prospects are completely exhausted by desperate generalists who hide behind hollow corporate hype and automated slop. If your marketing sounds like a sterile, generic commodity, your audience will aggressively abandon you for the cheapest alternative. The fastest way to anchor your undeniable human authority and escape the Sea of Beige is to craft a razor-sharp StoryBrand One-Liner. Stop letting the market dictate your worth and claim your true position instantly with the 5-Minute Marketing Fix.
Oversubscribed by Daniel Priestley Summary: Stop Hustling and Start Profiting
Why Is The Free Market Actively Trying To Bankrupt You?
Are You A Desperate Hawker Or A Campaign Architect?
Why Is Your Marketing Budget Funding Complete Strangers?
Are You Armed With A Swiss Army Knife In A Chainsaw Fight?
How Do You Actually Escape The Sea Of Beige?
1. Book Yourself Solid by Michael Port Summary: Stop Begging For Bad Clients
2. Lean Marketing By Allan Dib Summary: Why Random Acts Of Marketing Are Bankrupting You
4. The AI Hangover: Why Corporate "Workslop" Is Rotting Your Business
5. Atomic Habits by James Clear Summary: Why "Breakthrough" Growth Is A Corporate Lie
1. What does it mean to be "Oversubscribed"?
2. What is the "Sea of Beige"?
4. What is the "Remarkable Budget"?
5. How does the Oversubscribed method relate to my StoryBrand marketing strategy?
If you believe that the marketplace is a fair and just meritocracy that will naturally reward you for working incredibly hard, you are setting yourself up for a spectacular financial tragedy.
Profit is not a magical reward for exhaustion; it is the strict mathematical result of a strategic imbalance. Priestley outlines a counterintuitive truth you must immediately accept: desirability is entirely fueled by scarcity. If absolutely anyone can have what you offer at any time of day, the perceived value of your service plummets to zero. You must be deeply willing to let some customers completely miss out.
Your operational reality exists in one of three states. You are either Undersubscribed, meaning supply exceeds demand and you are forced into a highly stressful, brand-devaluing race to the bottom. You are Balanced, meaning you are functionally busy covering your basic costs but experiencing zero equity growth. Or you are Oversubscribed, where demand wildly exceeds supply, granting you the coveted "power of no," premium pricing, and the ability to dictate your own terms.
Most small business owners operate like frantic street hawkers, wandering the digital pavement trying to sell one unit at a time to absolutely anyone who makes eye contact.
To achieve high-value growth, you must transition into a "Campaign Driven Enterprise" that moves the entire herd simultaneously. This requires establishing hard capacity limits and creating "Transparency of Movement"—letting the market visibly see that demand is high and your capacity is fiercely low. You do this by running structured campaigns rather than selling 24/7.
Instead of aggressively pitching, you deploy "signaling." You ask for a registration of interest to gauge demand without pressure. You only open the literal doors to sell when your signaling ratios hit critical mass: you want 5 times your capacity in pre-orders, 10 times your capacity in sign-ups, or 100 times your capacity in total views. When you have 10 open spots and 50 people on a waitlist, you aren't selling anymore; you are selecting.
If you are dumping thousands of dollars a month into Facebook ads trying to yell at people who have never heard of you, while completely ignoring the people who already gave you their credit card, your strategy is upside down.
Priestley mandates a radical shift: you must deploy a "Remarkable Budget." Stop paying for cold, apathetic leads and reallocate at least 50% of your marketing budget to intensely delighting your existing clients. This means creating surprise high-value gifts, delivering spectacular "wow" moments during onboarding, and solving client problems for free. When you do this, your existing clients naturally become your primary, unstoppable marketing engine.
To convert the people they refer to you, you must deploy the "7-11-4 Rule." Modern consumers buy based on deep trust, which is built through data-backed engagement. Before a sales conversation even occurs, a prospect needs to consume 7 hours of total engagement time, across 11 interactions, in 4 different locations (like a blog, a YouTube channel, a podcast, and a physical book). This ecosystem serves as a business card on steroids.
Everyone loves the sexy idea of scaling a business, right up until they actually have to manage the terrifying bureaucratic nightmare that comes with a massive payroll.
Scaling is an active choice between remaining a "Lifestyle" business and becoming a "Performance" business. A Lifestyle business (3 to 12 people) operates like a "Swiss Army Knife"—a family-style culture filled with generalists who do a little bit of everything. But a Performance business (50+ people) operates like a "Chainsaw"—it is a ruthless, highly specialized machine.
Priestley explicitly warns about the "Desert." The operational zone between 12 and 50 people is where most businesses violently die. The cozy, generalist "family" culture completely fails here. To survive the Desert, you must build robust Soft Assets: a recognizable brand, unique intellectual property, automated systems, and scalable products. Assets are what the market actually buys; your frantic "hustle" is merely the exhausting panic that keeps you trapped in the wilderness.
Knowledge is completely useless if it just sits in a notebook. Knowledge is a struggle game; aggressive implementation is the only way you enter the performance game.
To separate your business from the commoditized masses, you have to deploy the four drivers of market imbalance. You cannot compete on price alone. You must flip the script in these four key areas:
Innovation: You must abandon generic, "me-too" service offerings and build unique intellectual property with proprietary delivery systems.
Relationships: You must stop acting like a transactional, highly expendable vendor and evolve into a trusted Key Person of Influence.
Convenience: You must eliminate high friction and painfully slow responses, replacing them with absolute friction reduction and automated ease.
Price: You must escape the desperate, margin-crushing race to the bottom by maintaining high margins through ruthless internal systemization.
You cannot build these highly coveted soft assets if your fundamental message is confusing. You need a clear, structural foundation to secure your brand identity before you try to signal the market. Get my 5-Minute Marketing Fix. This rapid diagnostic tool uses your actual human brain to craft a crystal-clear StoryBrand One-Liner. It gives you a standardized, reliable framework to align your message with total authenticity. You cannot prompt your way to an oversubscribed waitlist. Prove to your buyers that your business isn't a generic commodity, but a fiercely authentic human operation that they simply cannot afford to miss out on.
Read our Book Yourself Solid by Michael Port Summary to discover how to use the Red Velvet Rope policy to dump bad clients and skyrocket your revenue.
Read our summary to discover why "random acts of marketing" are bankrupting you, and how the 1-Page Marketing Plan fixes it.
College students are suffering from resignation and despair as universities relentlessly pressure them to use AI. Discover why forced automation destroys trust.
Companies that went all-in on generative AI are experiencing severe knowledge decay and workslop. Discover how to protect your brand with real human strategy.
Read our summary to discover why obsessing over massive business goals is destroying your revenue, and how 1% daily systems win.
Being oversubscribed is a highly profitable market state where consumer demand for your service significantly exceeds your actual supply. It grants you the "power of no," allowing you to select ideal clients and command premium pricing.
The "Sea of Beige" is Daniel Priestley's term for a highly commoditized market where a business completely fails to differentiate itself. In this state, consumers only care about finding the cheapest option, actively eroding your profit margins to zero.
The 7-11-4 rule dictates the level of engagement required to turn a cold prospect into a trusting buyer. They need to consume 7 hours of total engagement, across 11 interactions, located in 4 different places (like a blog, a video, a physical event, and an email).
Instead of spending all your money on traditional mass advertising to cold leads, the Remarkable Budget mandates reallocating 50% of your marketing funds to intensely delight your existing clients with surprise gifts and high-value problem-solving, turning them into fierce advocates.
The StoryBrand framework requires absolute clarity to position you as a trusted Guide. By using your StoryBrand message to clearly communicate your unique value and proprietary systems, you naturally build the massive market tension required to become oversubscribed.

Created with clarity (and coffee)
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