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The ad is not the magic. The truth is underneath it, and that comes from doing the unglamorous work first. If you ask people what they remember about a great campaign, they will tell you about the ad, the line, the film, the image. But the advertisement is the last thing that happens, not the first.
The best brands know that memorable campaigns are built on strong marketing insights long before the creative team starts writing copy or designing visuals.
Why Marketing Insights Matter More Than Creative Execution
Almost every memorable campaign is built on a single, sharp insight about people, and that insight came from someone doing the least glamorous part of the job: research. The creative is simply insight, well dressed.
You can see it every time. Dove’s entire Real Beauty movement was born out of a 2004 global survey that revealed just 2% of women described themselves as beautiful, a statistic so shocking it demanded action. Old Spice’s revival was based on research showing that women buy 60% of men’s body wash, which is the only reason the ad was talking to women. Even “Not Just a Cadbury Ad” started with a simple fact about the business: that small traders are the engine of most Celebrations festive sales and were being crushed by the pandemic, and a truth about the brand, that its whole purpose is generosity.
Find the marketing insight, and the campaign almost writes itself. If you miss, all the clever execution in the world will not help.
That is the difference most juniors do not understand: the difference between data and insight. Data is what is happening. Sales went down. This group over-indexes. Women buy the body wash. Insight is the “so what” behind it, the human rationale that points to what to do. The data reads, “Women buy 60% of men’s body wash.” The insight is, “The person buying the product is not the person using it, and nobody is talking to her.” One is a fact. The other is a door. This does not come from a survey asking people what they want.
As we already know, what people say and what people do are different things. Marketing insights come from watching real behaviour, sitting with real customers, and hunting for tension, the gap between what people claim and what they do, and between what a category assumes and what is actually true. The Old Spice team did not get their insight from asking men about body wash. They found it by looking at who was standing at the checkout.
This changes the starting point for a young brand manager. Do not begin with, “What should the ad say?” That is the last question, not the first. Instead, ask, “What do we really know about this person that nobody is acting on?” Write it in one sharp sentence. A brief based on real insight does most of the creative work before there is a single line. A brief based on vague ambition, such as “appeal to young, aspirational Indians”, just sends everyone in circles. The ceiling on any campaign is the quality of the marketing insights underneath.
Research has a reputation problem. It sounds like the dull stage that gets in the way of the good part. It is not. That is where the campaign is truly won or lost. The ad is the visible tip. The insight is the iceberg beneath. First do that work. Everything else becomes easier after that.