The Digital Marketing Gold Rush
Lately, it feels like everyone is jumping into digital marketing. Whether it’s people looking for a side hustle, entrepreneurs, influencers, or business owners looking for an easy way to add another revenue stream, starting a marketing business is more popular than ever. And I get it—on the surface, it looks simple. Digital marketing seems like something you can easily learn, automate, scale, and turn into an easy money-maker. But in this rush to scale and make money quickly, something important is getting lost: creativity, strategy, and trust.
The problem? Digital marketing isn’t just a business model. It’s an art and a skill. It requires deep understanding, adaptability, and, most importantly, a human touch. But today, everyone is treating it like a formula they can apply to any business, slap on some ads, and call it a day. And that’s why so much of today’s marketing feels uninspired and ineffective.
The Rise of Cookie-Cutter Marketing
A lot of these so-called marketing businesses rely on the same pre-made templates and automated processes. Instead of taking the time to understand each client’s business, audience, and goals, they push out the same cookie-cutter strategies for every client. And here’s the issue: real marketing isn’t plug-and-play.
Think about it. If every business were truly the same, marketing wouldn’t even be necessary. Customers could just pick whatever shows up first. But that’s not how people make decisions. Marketing should be about helping brands stand out, not blend in. Instead, these mass-market approaches are stripping away uniqueness, reducing brands to nothing more than generic messages that lack authenticity.
Automation has its place, but when marketing is only about automation, the results are robotic and lifeless. Strategy takes a backseat. Brand identity disappears. And instead of making businesses more competitive, these templated solutions make them indistinguishable from their competitors.
The Trust Issue: Why Real Relationships Matter
One of the biggest casualties of this mass-produced marketing approach is that it kills trust. The best marketing comes from actually knowing your clients—their industry, their challenges, their goals. But when agencies don’t take the time to dig deep, their work feels generic and out of touch.
Businesses that invest in these automated solutions quickly realize something’s off. Their marketing doesn’t speak their language. It doesn’t reflect their values. And worst of all, it doesn’t resonate with their customers. Why? Because it was never truly made for them in the first place.
Clients notice when they’re just another name on a list. They don’t feel heard, they don’t feel understood, and they definitely don’t feel confident in the marketing strategy they’re paying for. And let’s be real—when trust is gone, so is the business relationship. That’s why so many clients bounce from agency to agency, constantly searching for someone who actually gets them.
The Impact: When ‘Marketing’ Becomes a Commodity
Because marketing businesses are popping up everywhere, marketing itself is starting to feel like just another commodity. It’s no longer about strategy or creative execution—it’s just another service people are selling. The result?
– More agencies offering cheap, ineffective marketing that doesn’t drive results.
– Businesses struggling to tell the difference between legit experts and people
just trying to cash in.
– A market flooded with cookie-cutter campaigns that all look and feel the same.
The worst part? Bad marketing makes people think marketing doesn’t work. When businesses don’t see results, they assume marketing itself is the problem—not the quality of the marketing they’re getting. And that’s dangerous. It makes business owners skeptical of investing in marketing at all, even when they actually need it to grow.
The Alternative: Quality Over Scalability
So, what’s the solution? It’s not about rejecting scalability altogether—I’m all for efficiency. But there’s a right way to do it. The best marketing businesses scale without sacrificing quality, creativity, and relationships.
That means:
– Taking the time to actually understand each client’s industry and goals.
– Customizing strategies instead of copy-pasting templates.
– Using automation wisely, but never at the expense of originality.
– Building real relationships with clients, so they know you’re invested in their success.
This is what separates real marketers from those just trying to make a quick buck. Marketing is about creativity, psychology, and communication—not just slapping together some ads and calling it a day.
The Future of Digital Marketing
AI and automation aren’t going anywhere, and I’m not saying they’re all bad. But businesses need to be smart about how they use them. The brands that win will be the ones that invest in creativity, authenticity, and trust.
If you’re looking for marketing support, here’s my advice: choose your marketing partners wisely. Don’t just go for the cheapest or most scalable option—go for the one that actually understands your business and will take the time to get things right. Because at the end of the day, scalability should never replace strategy, relationships, and creativity.
That’s the difference between just selling marketing—and actually making marketing work.