Monday, March 9, 2026

Bad Markets Don’t Kill You … Standing Still Does

 

"Bad Market"

Everyone loves to swagger when the market’s booming.

Chest out. Pipeline fat. Every guru suddenly a genius, every agency “crushing.”

But then the wind shifts. The headlines are heavy with gloom and doom. Budgets sneeze and the whole world catches fear. And even brave brands become timid little field mice whispering the same sentence: “We’re just going to wait this one out.”

But markets don’t actually “go bad.” They don’t rot like fruit, they morph like weather.

Clients don’t stop needing help. They start needing different help. Problems don’t vanish, they upgrade into new, weirder, scarier shapes.

Slow markets are just crowded markets where everyone stopped talking at once. Which means there’s suddenly more oxygen for the ones still breathing.


Separating the builders from the bunker-dwellers:
When the environment changes, builders don’t fold. They mutate. Listening harder. Studying what’s breaking.

You gotta look for the “oh shit” moments inside your clients’ heads and run toward them while everyone else is guarding their lunch money.

You think it's optimism, but it's evolution.

Your offer isn’t carved in stone , it’s clay … re-shape it to serve the moment.


A “bad market” is not a crisis.
It’s a diagnostic tool. It reveals who was riding the wave … and who can surf when the ocean’s angry. It shakes out the hobbyists. It rewards the ones who bother to stay in the water when the weather shifts.

You don’t grow in spite of slow markets. You grow because of them. Because when the world panics, attention gets cheap. When your competitors curl up, loyalty goes on sale.

When buyers get scared, they cling to the ones who actually show up with a plan.


The market isn’t bad. Your old strategy is.
Thank God, because stale strategies deserve to die. Let the timid conserve their courage. Let the cautious take long naps. Let the “we’ll pick things back up later” crowd rehearse their comeback speeches … while you’re rewriting offers, solving the new problems, reallocating budgets, and planting seeds where the soil is suddenly wide open. Because slow markets aren’t a winter. They’re spring dressed as winter … waiting to see who still believes in growth.

And if you do the work now? You won’t just survive the storm. You’ll own the forecast when the sun comes back.

_________________________

 

Here are some responses to “Bad Market” concerns from your clients (courtesy of Jamie Brindle):

From the Client: We’re pausing all marketing until things pick up.  

Response: That’s when growth stalls for good. While others go quiet, let's build something that steals the attention they just gave up.

 

From the Client: Budgets are frozen right now.

Response: Understood. What’s still funded this quarter? Let’s align to that instead of waiting for the thaw.

 

From the Client: We just need to conserve cash.

Response: Then every dollar needs to perform. Let’s focus on the channels already producing and amplify what’s working.

 

From the Client: People just aren’t buying right now.

Response: They are. They’re buying from whoever helps them save, survive, or get leaner. Let’s reposition to speak to that.

 

From the Client: We’ll restart when the market rebounds.

Response: By then you'll be fighting every company who waited. Let’s build while they sleep so you’re ahead when the rebound hits.

 

From the Client: Maybe it’s just not the right time.

Response: Everyone in your industry is saying that. Which is exactly what makes this the right time.

 

From the Client: You really think we can grow right now?

Response: Absolutely. Slow markets concentrate opportunity ... but only for the ones still playing.


 

Thursday, March 5, 2026

AI … What Happens After the Hype?

 

AI's next phase

I keep seeing the same AI demos, just remixed. A model writes a poem, draws a picture, argues with confidence it hasn’t earned. It’s impressive in the way a street performer is impressive: crowd gathers, phones come out, everyone claps, then we all move on and forget the name.

That phase is fading.

The next phase of AI is less about imagination and more about infrastructure. Less “look what it can do” and more “can it run all day without breaking.” Power, memory, deployment … those unsexy words are starting to matter more than clever prompts and viral demos. The future isn’t being decided by who can make a chatbot sound the most human. It’s being decided by who can keep the lights on and the latency down.

You can feel the shift inside companies. The AI that actually survives doesn’t feel magical. It feels like software. It’s embedded into workflows, half-invisible, mildly annoying, and useful enough that no one wants to turn it off. Enterprises aren’t adopting AI because it’s inspiring. They’re adopting it because it saves time, reduces errors, and doesn’t call in sick.

This is where the romance drains out of the room. At scale, AI stops being a muse and starts being an appliance. And appliances live or die on reliability. Nobody brags about their dishwasher’s personality. They just want it to work every night without flooding the kitchen.

At the same time, AI is slipping out of the screen and into the physical world. Warehouses, factories, logistics … places where nobody cares about clever language but everyone cares about reliability. It’s less “humanoid robot walking like a toddler” and more “this machine never drops a box and never asks for a raise.” Quiet automation doing one task forever without complaining. Boring. Profitable. Real.

Who benefits? It won’t always the loudest AI brands or the ones with the best demos. Often it’s the companies doing the dull, foundational work: chips, power, data centers, deployment tools, integration layers. The ones who know where the breaker box is. When things flicker, suddenly they’re the most important people in the room.

And now the sorting begins. Winners and losers. Which is just another way of saying gravity is back. Not every model survives. Not every startup becomes a platform. Revenue, reliability, and maintenance matter again. The market has stopped being impressed by potential and started asking annoying adult questions.

This phase is less hype, more consequences. AI isn’t replacing imagination. It’s replacing chaos. Fewer fireworks. More wiring. That’s usually how technology actually changes the world: quietly, inconveniently, and all at once.

_________________________ 

NOTE: I’m still curious. I still think AI will reshape how we work, build, and automate the boring parts of life. But I’m no longer impressed by cleverness alone. Cleverness without infrastructure is a beautiful thought with no spine, collapsing the second it has to stand on its own.

Suggested Reading:

QUICK BRIEFING: Generative AI vs Agentic AI

Why Every Copywriter & Content Writer Needs an AI Usage Policy 

The Adolescence of Technology

Generative AI: TO BE (a tool) OR NOT TO BE (a tool)?

Don't Let AI Kill Your Analog Intelligence



Wednesday, March 4, 2026

Beverage Bucket

 

Dunkin' Beverage Bucket

Dunkin' just launched a 48-ounce coffee bucket.

The Beverage Bucket (with a handle) is priced so you can hydrate like a suburban livestock animal on your morning commute and still pocket change from a 10-dollar bill.

"Beverage Bucket." The name grabbed my attention: “bucket.” Not “carafe.” Not “jug.” The word “bucket” used to imply utility. You got water from a well with it. Now it’s a lifestyle accessory.

We’ve skipped past “cup,” blown through “large,” laughed in the face of “extra large,” and landed squarely in hardware-store chic. What’s next? A kiddie pool of cold brew?

Oddly, however, calling it a bucket feels honest in a way that marketing rarely is. No artisanal backstory. No whisper about origin farms. Just aggressively honest. Like, yes, this is excessive. Here’s the handle. Commit.

I sort of get it. In an economy where everything feels smaller and more expensive, a bucket reads like a win. Look at all that abundance. It’s less a drink and more a declaration: “I will not be rationed.” It’s Costco energy in liquid form.

And in our social media driven world, a bucket fits the feed. It’s absurd enough to grab attention ... subtlety never goes viral. A sensible 12-ounce cup doesn’t stand a chance against a beverage container you could use to bail water out of a canoe.

Anyway, I’ll probably try one.

Not because I need 48 ounces of coffee. But because I want to see what it feels like to carry my morning around like construction equipment.

Sometimes you have to hold the absurdity in your own hand.

Preferably with a handle.


Tuesday, March 3, 2026

Prospect Participation

 

When writing, leave a little air in the room.

Because the moment your reader starts painting their own picture, the message stops being yours and becomes theirs.

And that’s when it sticks.

Your job is to sow the seeds. And then step back and let their brain do what it’s built to do.





Bad Markets Don’t Kill You … Standing Still Does

  Everyone loves to swagger when the market’s booming. Chest out. Pipeline fat. Every guru suddenly a genius, every agency “crushing.” ...