CHALLENGES / THE OBSOLETE PLAYBOOK
Why Your Marketing Was Built for a World That No Longer Exists
The buyer journey your marketing was designed for has disappeared. What replaced it requires fundamentally different operations.
THE PROBLEM
Three shifts but none of them are in your old playbook.
The funnel collapsed
B2B buyers don't move through awareness to consideration to decision. They loop.
Buyers have stopped following the funnel. Google's research into what they call the "Messy Middle" confirmed what every marketing leader already suspected. B2B buyers don't move through a neat sequence of awareness, consideration, and decision. They loop. They revisit. They explore and evaluate in cycles that touch dozens of channels in no predictable order. Forrester's data shows the average B2B buying group now involves six to ten decision-makers, each conducting their own research across different platforms and timelines.
AI evaluates first
Before a buyer ever visits your website, AI has already formed an opinion about your brand.
ChatGPT, Perplexity, Google AI Overviews, and Gemini synthesize information from across your entire digital footprint and present it as a recommendation, a summary, or a notable omission. These systems don't evaluate your paid campaigns separately from your organic content or your LinkedIn presence. They evaluate you as a single entity. If the signals they find are inconsistent, incomplete, or contradictory, you get overlooked in favor of competitors whose presence is more coherent.
Discovery is entity-based
Search engines understand brands as entities, not collections of keywords.
The authority of your content, the consistency of your messaging across platforms, and the structural clarity of your digital presence all contribute to a single reputation score that determines whether you appear when buyers are researching your category. An SEO team optimizing keywords while your content team sends conflicting messages and your paid campaigns tell a different story creates precisely the kind of fragmented signal that entity-based systems penalize.
01 The funnel collapsed
The funnel collapsed
B2B buyers don't move through awareness to consideration to decision. They loop.
Buyers have stopped following the funnel. Google's research into what they call the "Messy Middle" confirmed what every marketing leader already suspected. B2B buyers don't move through a neat sequence of awareness, consideration, and decision. They loop. They revisit. They explore and evaluate in cycles that touch dozens of channels in no predictable order. Forrester's data shows the average B2B buying group now involves six to ten decision-makers, each conducting their own research across different platforms and timelines.
02 AI evaluates first
AI evaluates first
Before a buyer ever visits your website, AI has already formed an opinion about your brand.
ChatGPT, Perplexity, Google AI Overviews, and Gemini synthesize information from across your entire digital footprint and present it as a recommendation, a summary, or a notable omission. These systems don't evaluate your paid campaigns separately from your organic content or your LinkedIn presence. They evaluate you as a single entity. If the signals they find are inconsistent, incomplete, or contradictory, you get overlooked in favor of competitors whose presence is more coherent.
03 Discovery is entity-based
Discovery is entity-based
Search engines understand brands as entities, not collections of keywords.
The authority of your content, the consistency of your messaging across platforms, and the structural clarity of your digital presence all contribute to a single reputation score that determines whether you appear when buyers are researching your category. An SEO team optimizing keywords while your content team sends conflicting messages and your paid campaigns tell a different story creates precisely the kind of fragmented signal that entity-based systems penalize.
THE MISDIAGNOSIS
More spend won't fix a broken model.
THE INSTINCT
What teams reach for first
- Increase the marketing budget
- Changing agency partners
- Hire more in-house specialists
- Buy more marketing technology
Coordination is a tax on the existing model and not a solution to its structural limitations.
THE REALITY
Why the new world punishes the old approach
- Non-linear buyer journeys require every channel to reinforce the same message
- AI evaluates you as a single entity, fragmented signals undermine visibility
- Entity-based discovery rewards consistency over individual channel performance
- The sum of your marketing matters more than any one channel
When buyer journeys are non-linear, AI evaluates you as a single entity, and discovery is entity-based, the sum of your marketing activities matters more than any individual channel’s performance.
Your marketing isn't underperforming. It's obsolete.
The marketing model most companies run today isn’t underperforming, it’s obsolete. Optimizing within a broken structure produces incrementally better versions of the wrong approach.
THE ALTERNATIVE
Operating differently, not spending more.
What companies pulling ahead are doing instead.
They've replaced the fragmented model with integrated operations, including strategy, creative, data, and execution working as a single system, measured by revenue rather than channel metrics.
- Strategy, creative, data, and execution all run inside a single operation.
- Every channel reinforces the same message at every stage of the journey.
- Brand consistency feeds entity-based discovery, not the other way round.
- Performance is measured by revenue contribution, not channel metrics.
The companies are operating differently, replacing the fragmented model with integrated operations measured by revenue.
QUESTIONS
Frequently asked questions
Is this really affecting mid-market companies, or just enterprise?
Mid-market companies feel this more acutely than enterprise, not less. Enterprise organizations can absorb the inefficiency of fragmentation because they have the budget and headcount to paper over the cracks. A company between fifty and five hundred million in revenue typically runs a lean marketing team supported by external partners, which means the structural problems of fragmentation hit harder and show up faster in pipeline and revenue data. The shift to AI-driven buyer behavior doesn’t discriminate by company size.
We’ve already invested in marketing technology to solve this. Why isn’t it enough?
Marketing technology solves data and workflow problems within the tools themselves. It doesn’t solve the organizational problem of teams operating under different strategies and metrics. A marketing automation platform can’t fix the fact that your paid team and your content team have never compared notes on which accounts are showing buying signals. The tools work when the operation feeding them is integrated. Without that, you’re running better technology on top of a broken process.
How do we know this isn’t just another agency trying to sell consolidation?
Fair question. The evidence for non-linear buyer journeys comes from Google’s own research. The shift to entity-based evaluation is documented in how search algorithms and AI systems actually work. Forrester’s data on buying group complexity is independent. The structural argument for integration follows from those external realities, not from any particular vendor’s business model. Whether you solve it with Somebody Digital or another approach entirely, the underlying problem remains the same.
Can we fix this incrementally, or does it require a full overhaul?
Most companies start by fixing the area that’s causing the most visible pain, usually attribution and reporting, brand consistency, or campaign coordination. The key is that whatever you fix first connects to everything else from day one. Incremental improvement within the existing fragmented model just produces a slightly better version of the same problem. Incremental improvement within an integrated framework compounds because each piece reinforces the others.
What does Forrester’s prediction about agency headcount reduction mean for us?
Forrester projected a 15% reduction in agency headcount driven by AI and consolidation pressure. For B2B companies, this signals that the market is moving toward fewer, more integrated partnerships rather than larger rosters of specialists. The companies that move early get to choose their structure. Those that wait will be forced into it by market pressure, talent availability, and the rising cost of maintaining fragmented operations.

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