In 1997, Apple launched a groundbreaking campaign that I often think about: “Think Different”. It celebrated those who dared to break the mold, challenging norms to change the world. Apple grasped a vital truth: the constraints stifling creativity weren’t real; they were assumed, passed down through tradition.
Fast forward to today, and I see that marketing finds itself in a similar “Think Different” moment. The barriers that once constrained our industry have vanished. Thanks to technology, AI generates countless variations, data platforms provide up-to-the-minute insights, and orchestration tools bridge every channel instantaneously.
Yet, I notice many marketers are still functioning within an outdated paradigm. They wait for others—the data teams, creative teams, or engineers—to move projects along, not realizing technology has already unlocked those doors.
We no longer need to follow a linear, assembly-line process that passes tasks from one department to the next. The box has disappeared, but old habits die hard.
Here’s to the marketers who refuse to wait for approval
I find inspiration in those who see a customer need at 3 p.m. and launch a personalized campaign by 4 p.m., driven by urgency rather than seeking permission.
These are the marketers who don’t send multiple briefs to multiple teams—they pull the data, create content, and execute campaigns independently. Not to sideline experts, but to seize on moments that matter now.
Their constant experimentation, running multiple tests and iterations, proves essential in crafting insights. They know, as I do, that perfection comes from trial and error, not waiting around for analysis.
Here’s to the ones who see campaigns where others see dependencies
For them, it’s not about passing data to an analytics team; it’s about directly accessing and utilizing customer insights instantly.
They bypass traditional creative approvals with AI tools that produce tailored assets swiftly, enabling personalization on a grand scale.
They aren’t beholden to engineering delays but leverage orchestration platforms to automate journeys smoothly, sans tickets.
They’re not reckless nor cowboys
Instead, they work at the speed technology allows, guided by strategic thinking and judgment rather than rigid processes.
This ethos is at the heart of Positionless Marketing: using Data, Creativity, and Optimization powerfully and in tandem, not due to a lack of specialists, but because technology removed those earlier dependencies.
This isn’t just about speed; it’s about potential
In times when marketers managed long processes, their role was merely about coordination. Today, I see it as enabling potential, pushing everyone, including you and me, to do what we’re capable of with unchained boundaries. I no longer see the brief as a roadblock, but a stepping stone to instant creativity and autonomous coordination.
Teach people to think outside the box by showing them there is no longer a box
Now, I can see how the data analyst can transcend report creation to build real-time predictive models. The campaign manager can independently design, test, and optimize entire journeys. The creative strategist can not only craft briefs but execute ideas across platforms.
This is the real impact of technology; not just getting the work done, but dismantling barriers that once held us back, releasing the talents we’ve always possessed.
The Positionless Marketers of today are doing the same thing
They refuse to delay action when immediate responses are needed. They reject the notion that insights take forever when available in seconds. They aren’t bound by bygone constraints.
By thinking differently, not for defiance’s sake, but because the past ways no longer align with the new potential.
Apple once said, “The people who are crazy enough to think they can change the world are the ones who do.” In our era, those who believe they can seamlessly deliver customized experiences and instigate rapid-fire campaigns without relying on dependencies will lead the charge.
The constraints are gone. The assembly-line marketing box can no longer exist.
Inspired by this post on Search Engine Land.


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