Tag Archives: strategy

Marketing is full of dead ideas nobody has the guts to bury

A dark, stylized illustration of a graveyard with an orange sky, a zombie hand rising from the ground next to a tombstone marked “R.I.P.”, paired with large bold text reading “Marketing is full of dead ideas nobody has the guts to bury

Marketing today isn’t an industry, it’s a cemetery.A field of decaying ideas that everyone keeps pretending are still alive. People walk around acting like the smell isn’t real, like the corpse in the middle of the room is just “going through a phase.” Here’s the truth: half the strategies brands still use don’t work. The…

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The psychology behind the CHATA model: Why it works in real decision-making

A horizontal graphic showing a human head silhouette with a brain illustration and CHATA model icons—Connect, Humanize, Align, Transition, and Anchor—placed vertically inside the brain. The left side displays the title “The psychology behind the CHATA model: Why it works in real decision-making” in bold white text on a blue gradient background.

Marketing frameworks fail when they simplify human behaviour into linear formulas. Humans don’t think in steps. They don’t follow funnels. Instead, people navigate decisions based on context, identity, uncertainty, cognitive load, trust cues, relevance, and emotional resonance. CHATA model is based on psychology and built around these realities, not outdated sales logic. This is why…

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The most dangerous word in business: “Maybe.”

A minimalist horizontal graphic with a dark textured background featuring the bold white text “The most dangerous word in business: ‘Maybe.’” centered prominently.

“Maybe” doesn’t explode.It doesn’t collapse.It doesn’t make headlines.It doesn’t even announce itself. It just sits there, quiet, polite, disguised as caution, while it drains momentum from ideas that once had fire, teams that once had ambition, and projects that once had a pulse. “Maybe” is the corporate version of shrugging your shoulders and hoping the…

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SEO Core Web Vitals in 2026: What’s changed and what still matters?

Infographic titled ‘SEO Core Web Vitals in 2026’ displaying three circular icons representing LCP, INP, and CLS. The LCP icon shows a speedometer, the INP icon features a clicking cursor, and the CLS icon displays a webpage layout with a shifting element. All icons are set against a dark blue background with subtle graphic accents.

SEO continues to evolve at lightning speed, and SEO Core Web Vitals in 2026: What’s changed and what still matters? is one of the most important topics for site owners, developers, and digital marketers. As Google sharpens its focus on real user experience, Core Web Vitals have gone from “nice to have” to non-negotiable ranking factors. This guide…

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CHATA model for SEO: Aligning with SGE, entities & topical authority

Infographic titled ‘SEO in 2025’ showing how search has shifted from keywords to entities, text matching to meaning, and long-form content to structured insight, alongside a visual CHATA model cycle and an SGE preview box.

SEO is no longer keyword-driven, linear, or static. It’s shaped by Search Generative Experience (SGE), entity-based understanding, AI summarisation layers, topical authority, and user behaviour that moves in loops instead of funnels. Most SEO frameworks still focus on traditional mechanics: keyword research, on-page structure, link building, and technical health. These still matter, but they no…

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12 powerful white hat link building strategies that work in 2026

Illustration of link building with a globe, computer monitor, and connected chain icon representing SEO backlinks.

White hat link building strategies that actually work in 2026 are evolving fast. Learn the safest, most effective, Google-approved ways to build authority and boost rankings. Understanding White Hat Link Building in 2026 Search engines evolve every year, but 2026 brought one of the biggest updates yet. Google’s new real-time spam filters now read context,…

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CHATA vs AIDA: Why modern marketers need a more adaptive model

Horizontal comparison graphic illustrating the CHATA model vs the AIDA model, using modern gradient blocks, iconography, and a structured side-by-side layout showing Connect, Humanize, Align, Transition, Anchor contrasted with Attention, Interest, Desire, Action.

This article breaks down the real differences, the limitations of AIDA, and why CHATA is a more adaptive model for today’s marketing landscape. For decades, AIDA (Attention → Interest → Desire → Action) has shaped the way marketers write, persuade, and build communication.It became a universal template, simple, memorable, and easy to teach. But simplicity…

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