TL;DR: I built a client a technically brilliant website, got them ranking, and still got sacked two years later. Why? Because the strategy was never sorted. No positioning. No market prioritisation. No clear direction. They’ve since repeated the same mistake with two more agencies. This is what happens when you commission execution before you’ve done the strategic thinking.
At a Glance
-
A website without a strategy is just a well-designed brochure.
-
Clients asking for a website usually need something deeper: positioning, market focus, and a proper go-to-market plan.
-
Delivering exactly what a client asks for can still end in failure if the underlying strategy is missing.
-
The discovery phase isn’t optional. It’s the part that makes everything else work.
-
Without someone owning the strategy, businesses repeat the same expensive cycle, agency after agency.
The Story
Let me tell you about a client I worked with years ago. Great product. Real potential. Multiple industries they could sell into, each one a genuine opportunity.
I built them a website that did everything they wanted. And more.
Clean. Fast. Well-structured. I even got them ranking for several important phrases. By every technical measure, it was a success.
Two years later, they sacked me.
Here’s the part that stings: they hired another agency, went through the whole thing again, and sacked them too. Last I heard, they’d done it a third time. Same cycle. Same outcome. Same frustration.
Years of spinning their wheels because nobody, including me early on, sat down and asked the right strategic questions before anyone touched a brief.
I’d given them precisely what they asked for. The problem was, neither of us had properly figured out what they actually needed.
When “I Need a Website” Doesn’t Mean “I Need a Website”
Here’s what I’ve learned working with clients across a range of sectors: when someone says they need a website, they rarely mean they need a website.
What they actually need is growth. New markets. A clear story that resonates with the right buyers. A way to turn a strong product into consistent, scalable revenue.
The website is the solution they’ve landed on because it’s visible. Tangible. Something they can point to and say “we’re doing something.”
But a website without strategy behind it is just a brochure. A well-designed, fast-loading, SEO-optimised brochure, but a brochure nonetheless. It doesn’t position the business. It doesn’t choose which markets to prioritise. It doesn’t tell a compelling enough story to make the right buyers take notice.
This client had a product that could serve several different industries. That sounds like an advantage, and it is, but only if you’re strategic about it. Without a clear positioning decision, you end up with a website that tries to speak to everyone and connects with no one.
They didn’t need a better website. They needed a strategy that decided who they were for, what made them different, and which channels would actually reach their best-fit buyers.
Bottom line: A website is a tactic. Growth is the goal. Don’t confuse the two.
The Real Problem Hiding Behind the Brief
Most businesses, even ones with strong products, are operating without a clearly defined marketing strategy. No documented positioning. No deliberate channel mix. No decision about which market segment to go after first, and why.
Delivering the website they asked for doesn’t solve any of these problems. You’re building a front door for a house where nobody’s agreed on the address yet.
The hardest part of my job as a fractional CMO isn’t the marketing. It’s diagnosing what’s actually holding the business back before we spend a single penny on execution.
In this client’s case, the underlying issue was a lack of strategic confidence. They had options: multiple industries, genuine product strengths, real differentiation. But no framework for deciding which direction to commit to. So they defaulted to the safest-feeling request: “just build us a website.”
And I, not yet confident enough to push back hard enough, largely obliged. I tried to steer them. I raised the strategic questions. But I didn’t hold the line firmly enough when they resisted the harder conversations.
Bottom line: When the brief is missing the strategy, the brief is wrong. Full stop.
What I Should Have Done Differently
After losing that client, and watching them repeat the same pattern with agency after agency, I changed how I approach every engagement.
Now, before anyone talks about deliverables, I ask different questions:
-
Which market are we actually targeting first, and why?
-
What does this product do that nothing else does quite as well?
-
Who is the most valuable buyer, and what do they actually care about?
-
What does success look like in 12 months, in business outcomes, not deliverables?
The answers shape everything else. The messaging. The channel mix. The content strategy. Even the website, which suddenly becomes a much more purposeful tool once there’s a strategy sitting behind it.
With this client, there were multiple industries they could have targeted. Some were higher value. Some were easier to penetrate. Some had longer sales cycles. The strategic work would have been to map those out, score them, and make a deliberate call about where to focus first.
That decision alone would have changed every piece of marketing we produced.
Instead, we tried to be relevant to all of them simultaneously. The website reflected that ambiguity. Ambiguous marketing, no matter how well executed, doesn’t drive growth.
The SEO work I did got them ranking. But ranking for what, and for whom? Without a clear positioning strategy, even good visibility doesn’t convert the way it should.
Strategy first. Always.
Bottom line: The questions you ask before the project starts are more important than anything you build during it.
The Discovery Phase Nobody Wants to Pay For
Proper strategic discovery takes time. It requires deep conversations, market analysis, and an honest assessment of where the business actually stands versus where the leadership team thinks it stands.
Most clients want to skip it. They’ve already decided they need a website, or a campaign, or a rebrand. The strategic work feels like delay. It feels like paying for something invisible.
But the businesses that get the strategy right before they invest in execution get dramatically better results from the same budget. Because every pound spent on marketing is pointed at the right target, with the right message, through the right channels.
This client had budget. They had appetite. They had a strong product. What they lacked was a strategic framework to channel all of that effectively. Without someone holding that line firmly, the budget got spent on execution that looked impressive but didn’t move the needle.
That’s on me, partly. I knew the strategy wasn’t solid. I raised it. But I didn’t push hard enough. I let the client’s urgency override my better judgement, and we both paid the price.
Bottom line: Skipping discovery doesn’t save time. It just moves the problem further down the road, where it costs more to fix.
Why Clients Resist What They Actually Need
Clients want momentum. They want to feel like things are happening. Strategic thinking requires slowing down before you speed up, and that feels deeply counterintuitive when there’s commercial pressure to show results.
They want the new website but resist committing to a clear positioning. They want leads but won’t make the tough call about which market to prioritise. They want growth but push back on the foundational work required to sustain it.
This is especially common in businesses with multiple potential markets. The fear of narrowing focus feels like the fear of leaving money on the table. But trying to serve everyone with equal energy is usually how you end up resonating with no one particularly well.
A fractional CMO’s job isn’t to produce marketing. It’s to hold the strategic line even when the client is pushing for shortcuts. To be the voice in the room that says: “Before we brief the agency, let’s make sure we’ve answered these questions.”
Giving clients exactly what they ask for often fails, because what they ask for is a tactic. What they need is the strategy that makes the tactic work.
Bottom line: Narrowing focus isn’t losing opportunity. It’s how you actually win.
The Questions That Uncover What’s Really Going On
Before any work begins, here’s what I now make sure to explore:
-
What problem are you actually trying to solve? Not what deliverable do you want, but what business challenge is keeping you up at night?
-
Who is your most valuable customer, and why? Not just demographics. Motivations, triggers, objections.
-
If you could only target one market this year, which would it be? Forces prioritisation and reveals how clearly the leadership team has thought this through.
-
What have you tried before, and why didn’t it work? Tells you where the real gaps are.
-
What does success look like in 12 months? In revenue terms, not deliverables.
These questions make clients uncomfortable. They force a level of clarity that many businesses haven’t done the work to achieve. But they’re the foundation of everything. Skip them and you’re executing in the dark.
Bottom line: Uncomfortable questions upfront beat uncomfortable conversations six months in.
What a Proper Strategic Foundation Actually Looks Like
When I work with clients now, the strategy comes before everything else. Not as a theoretical exercise, but as a practical decision-making framework that shapes every piece of marketing that follows.
That means getting clear on:
-
Positioning: Who you’re for, what you do better than anyone else, and why that matters to your best-fit buyer. Not a generic value proposition. A clear, defensible point of difference.
-
Market prioritisation: Which segment to focus on first, based on value, accessibility, and strategic fit. Especially important for businesses with multiple potential markets.
-
Channel mix: Where your buyers spend their time and attention, and how to reach them there effectively. Not “let’s do social media.” A deliberate, evidence-based decision.
-
Messaging architecture: How the brand story is told consistently across every touchpoint, from the website to sales conversations to thought leadership content.
-
Measurement framework: What success looks like, how it’s tracked, and how quickly the strategy needs to adapt based on what the data tells you.
The website, the campaign, the content strategy: these come after all of this. They’re the expression of the strategy, not a substitute for it.
Bottom line: Strategy isn’t the overhead before the real work starts. Strategy is the real work.
What This Means If You’re Working Without a CMO
If you’re a growing business making marketing decisions without senior strategic input, there’s a reasonable chance you’re doing what my old client did: commissioning executional work before the strategic questions have been properly answered.
It’s not the agency’s fault. Most agencies are briefed on deliverables, not on strategy. They build what they’re asked to build. They can’t be held responsible for a brief that was missing the foundational thinking.
That strategic layer, the thinking that happens before the brief, is exactly what a fractional CMO brings. It’s:
-
The person who asks the uncomfortable questions before any budget is committed
-
The voice who pushes back when the stated request won’t solve the actual problem
-
The framework that ensures every piece of marketing is pointed at the right target, with the right message
-
The experience to recognise when a business is about to repeat a cycle it’s already been through before
Without that, you can hire the best agency in the country, spend a significant budget, and still end up exactly where you started, wondering why the website isn’t working.
My old client has now done this multiple times. Great product. Real potential. Genuinely capable team. And yet they keep arriving at the same destination because the strategic foundation was never properly built.
That’s not a marketing problem. That’s a strategy problem. And strategy is no one’s responsibility if there’s no one in the room whose job it is to own it.
Bottom line: A great agency with a bad brief will still deliver the wrong thing. Brilliantly.
The Uncomfortable Reality
The client who sacked me taught me the most valuable lesson of my career. Not about marketing, but about what marketing actually requires to work.
Execution without strategy is just expensive activity.
A brilliant website with no clear positioning is a brochure for a business that hasn’t decided who it’s talking to. A well-run SEO campaign without a defined target market is traffic without intent. A strong product without a go-to-market strategy is potential, indefinitely deferred.
This client had all the ingredients. What they were missing was someone to hold the strategic line. Someone to sit across the table from the leadership team and say: “Before we talk about the website, let’s talk about the strategy. And let’s not move forward until we’ve got that right.”
I tried. But I wasn’t yet confident enough to push hard enough when they resisted. That’s a mistake I don’t make anymore.
Now, I tell clients upfront: the strategy isn’t optional. It’s not a nice-to-have. It’s the foundation everything else is built on. Skip it and we’re both wasting our time.
Some clients don’t want to hear that. They’ll find someone who’ll just crack on with the brief.
And a few years from now, they’ll be sacking that person too, starting again, still wondering why nothing ever quite works.
I’ve seen it happen. More than once. With the same client.
Don’t let that be you.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why do clients get sacked even when they deliver exactly what was asked for?
Because the stated request is usually a tactic, not a strategy. Delivering a website, a campaign, or a rebrand without a clear strategic foundation means the work can’t generate the outcomes the client actually needs. The deliverable is correct. The direction isn’t.
What is a fractional CMO and why does strategy matter so much to them?
A fractional CMO is a senior marketing leader who works with a business on a part-time or project basis. Their primary role isn’t to produce marketing output. It’s to ensure that every marketing decision is grounded in a clear strategy, so that the execution, whoever does it, actually moves the business forward.
What should happen before a website brief is written?
Before any brief, a business should have clear answers to: who their primary target market is, what their positioning is, what makes them genuinely different, which channels their buyers use, and what success looks like in measurable business terms.
Why do businesses skip the strategic discovery phase?
Because it feels slow and intangible. There’s commercial pressure to show visible progress, and a website feels like progress. Strategic thinking feels like delay. In reality, skipping it just pushes the problem further down the road, where it costs more to fix.
What happens when a business tries to target multiple markets at once without a strategy?
The marketing becomes diluted. Messaging tries to speak to everyone and ends up resonating with no one. Even technically strong work, including good SEO, won’t convert well because there’s no clarity about who the business is actually for.
What does a proper marketing strategy include?
At minimum: clear positioning, a prioritised target market, a deliberate channel mix, a consistent messaging architecture, and a measurement framework. The website and campaigns come after these decisions, not before.
How do you know when a client is about to repeat the same mistake?
They ask for a specific deliverable without being able to clearly articulate the underlying business problem. They resist questions about positioning and market focus. They want to move quickly to execution and treat strategy as an optional extra.
Key Takeaways
-
A website without a strategy is a brochure. A well-made one, but a brochure all the same.
-
Clients asking for executional deliverables usually have an unanswered strategic question sitting underneath.
-
The discovery phase is the most important part of any marketing engagement. Most clients want to skip it. Don’t let them.
-
Trying to market to multiple industries simultaneously, without prioritisation, produces ambiguous marketing that converts poorly.
-
A fractional CMO’s core value is holding the strategic line before, during, and after execution begins.
-
Execution without strategy is expensive activity with unpredictable outcomes.
-
If no one in the room owns the strategy, the same expensive cycle will repeat, agency after agency.

Leave a Reply