Marketing’s new story promises the world, but productivity without purpose is simply noise
May 08 2026
As a 30-year marketing veteran, I haven’t swapped out my experience for AI. Instead, I've paired decades of practical experience with the intelligent use of AI. As the architect of HARP Marketing, a KSIB endorsed brand, I have written this opinion piece to show why marketing must evolve beyond activity for activity’s sake.
Marketing has been flooded with a new promise: more.
By volume alone, we are living through marketing’s most productive era. More content, more campaigns, more personalisation, more automation. Delivered faster by AI.
Yet in reality, a different story is playing out. Pipelines are inconsistent, and many leadership teams are less confident than ever about what marketing is actually doing to influence revenue growth.
The uncomfortable truth is this: productivity without a clear commercial story is just noise.
Why productivity without purpose becomes noise
Calendars are full, dashboards are green, and AI tools are being used to generate copy at scale.
But strip away the activity and ask one simple question, 'Which marketing efforts actually generate qualified leads that sales converts into revenue?', and the answers get vague, fast."
In complex B2B buying, buyers are not short on information; they are drowning in it. AI has broken the old belief that more activity equals more pipeline: everyone can now send more emails, publish more posts, and launch more campaigns than buyers can possibly absorb.
When everything is “personalised”, nothing feels personal. When everything is automated, buyers assume less human. In this environment, productivity without a unifying purpose actively makes things worse:
It fragments your story. Different teams, tools, and campaigns tell different versions of who you are and why you matter. Buyers notice the contradictions and trust you less.
Faster content production (especially only AI-generated) floods the market with more noise
Automation at scale can efficiently deliver the wrong message to the wrong person at the wrong time
Costs can escalate. As attention gets scarcer, you pay more just to be seen over the background radiation of automated outreach.
Brands can quickly become diluted. When everything is “go”, your value proposition becomes lost. It becomes harder to see which activities actually move the needle and which are just keeping everyone busy.
Without a unifying strategic purpose, a clear positioning, differentiated value proposition, and cohesive narrative, increased marketing productivity just creates more mediocre touchpoints faster. You're efficiently doing the wrong things.
In HARP, we see three non‑negotiables for marketing in this new world
A strong brand foundation: Purpose-led
Your story has to do more than describe what you sell. It needs to articulate who you’re for, what problem you uniquely solve, how you create value across the buyer journey, and how that value shows up in measurable business outcomes. Without those foundations, AI will spin infinite variations on a vague idea.
Amplified Campaigns: Productivity amplified
Once the story is clear, AI becomes a force multiplier rather than a content factory. Humans set direction, make choices, and hold the line on quality; AI takes on the repetitive work, helps you test more intelligently, and shortens the cycle time between idea, experiment, and learning.
Revenue attribution: Proof qualifying leads
Productivity only matters if you can see its impact. That means connecting your campaigns, content, and channels to pipeline, opportunity stages, and closed‑won revenue, not just vanity metrics. With HARP Strings, our first‑party revenue-intelligence system, we design the buyer journey so that every meaningful interaction can be traced back to tangible outcomes.
Purpose shapes what you do. Productivity determines how efficiently you can do it. Proof decides whether you should keep doing it at all.
The organisations that will win this next decade are not the ones that can generate the most content
They’re the ones who can write the clearest commercial story, use AI to amplify it intelligently, and prove, with defensible, first party data, that it drives growth.
That is marketing’s new story if we choose to write it: not “look how much we can do”, but “here is the revenue we can prove”.
HARP exists to help leadership teams make that shift.
To learn more, contact KSIB or email Chantalle directly below
Chantalle Meijer, Managing Director, Growth
chantalle@ksib.com.au

