The Most Dangerous Thing in Startups? Your Marketing Plan.
Why execution beats strategy (and what to do instead)
Beyond the Noise 🧭
Three stories that matter this week
BlueSky's Silent Storm (20M Users)
No hype. No master plan. Just ruthless execution and radical transparency. While others talked about being the "Twitter killer," BlueSky just... built. Results speak.Jaguar's Identity Crisis (Video)
Marketing X is on fire. Their rebrand video? 90% cringing, 10% defending. Traded British luxury for... whatever this is. When you forget who you are, no amount of planning saves you.
The Product Launch Lie
"Perfect, then launch!" is startup suicide. Your competition ships while you polish. Ship ugly. Learn live. Progress beats perfection.
Kill Your Marketing Plan Before It Kills Your Startup
That slick 20-slide deck? It's killing your startup.
While you're polishing slide 19, some kid in Iceland just launched your competitor.
What You’ll Get From This Post
A no-BS framework to replace planning with action.
How to leave your over planning competitors in the dust.
The hidden costs of planning (and how to avoid them).
A simple system to test, learn, and grow starting today.
Four Ways Your Marketing Plan is Killing You
1. The Planning Tax
You think that 12-month plan will take... 12 months? Wrong.
Add 50% more time, double the budget, and triple the headaches.
We suck at estimating—just ask anyone who’s ever renovated a house.
2. The Information Coma
More data = better decisions, right? Wrong again.
Studies show decision quality peaks at 4-5 data points. After that, you're just procrastinating.
But hey, keep making those PowerPoints.
3. The Competition Delusion
You're obsessing over established players while some kid in Estonia is building your replacement.
Your beautiful competitive analysis? Worthless.
4. The Channel Death Spiral
Marketing channels die faster than my interest in iron mans.
By the time your TikTok strategy is "approved," the platform's algorithm has changed six times and CPMs have tripled.
Why Winners Win
Look at the scoreboard:
Slack: Failed gaming company → $28B exit
Instagram: Check-in app → $1B acquisition in 18 months
Twitter: Podcasting platform → Global town square (X)
Their secret?
Ship first. Optimise later.
Your New Weapon - Minimum Viable Marketing (MVM)
Here's how you actually win:
1. The 5x5 Rule
Talk to 5 customers in 5 days.
No surveys. No personas.
Just real conversations about real problems.
Their words become your messaging.
2. The One Channel Domination
Forget being everywhere.
Pick one channel where your customers live.
Master it. Own it. Scale it.
3. The 24-Hour Sprint
Morning: Build something
Afternoon: Launch it
Evening: Learn from it
Tomorrow: Do it again, but better
4. The Only Metric That Matters
Revenue beats reach.
Customers beat clicks.
Cash beats concepts..
5. The Iteration Engine
What worked? Double down.
What flopped? Kill it fast.
Learn in days, not quarters.
My Final Thoughts
Many founders die on the hill of perfection.
They think perfect plans solve problems. They don't.
What actually matters:
Investors fund traction, not strategy decks.
Markets reward speed, not sophistication.
Customers buy solutions, not slides.
The winners aren't smarter. They're faster.
The Rabbit Hole - Go Deeper
Check out these hand-picked resources:
Essential Blog Reading
Book Recommendation:
"Traction” by Gabriel Weinberg and Justin Mares (One of the best books on planning)
This piece is part of our Growth pillar in the G.R.I.T. framework - focused on helping you scale intelligently without burning out or burning cash.
Join 5000+ Leaders Getting Weekly Growth Maps
Every week, Uncharted delivers:
Frameworks that work tomorrow, not next quarter
Real numbers from the trenches
Hidden pitfalls your competition won't tell you about
Access to our complete G.R.I.T framework
Want to join the rebellion?
Great post - your clear point about how speed beats perfection really makes sense for startups looking to make real progress instead of getting stuck in planning paralysis.
Talking to real humans is the most under utilized part of marketing. It's becoming a forgotten art with the rise of social and ai. Those who are willing to go low-tech will reap the rewards.