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Why Marketing Has a Credibility Problem

Marketing has a credibility problem, and most business owners know exactly what that feels like.
They have sat through agency presentations full of enthusiasm but thin on commercial logic. They have been shown dashboards packed with clicks, impressions and engagement, only to be left wondering whether any of it actually made the business more profitable. They have approved budgets for campaigns, websites, content and ads, only to discover months later that nobody can clearly explain what worked, what failed, or what should happen next.
That is where the trust begins to break down. The uncomfortable truth is that marketing has spent too long allowing itself to be defined by activity rather than outcomes. In many organisations, particularly SMEs, marketing is still seen as the function that “does the promotion”, organises the brochure, updates the website, posts on LinkedIn, or adds a bit of colour when sales are under pressure. The commercial purpose has become blurred. As a result, marketing is often treated as an optional extra rather than a serious business discipline.
Marketing perception vs marketing performance
That is not just a perception problem. It is a performance problem.
When marketing is misunderstood, it is managed badly. Businesses end up investing in tactics before they have agreed the strategy. They measure what is easiest to report rather than what matters most. They celebrate visibility without proving value. And eventually, leadership teams start questioning whether marketing is worth the money at all.
You can hardly blame them. From a commercial point of view, most senior decision-makers are trying to answer a simple question: what return are we getting? If the answer is hidden behind vague language, creative subjectivity or surface-level metrics, confidence erodes very quickly. Finance teams do not care how many people liked a campaign if revenue has not moved. Directors are unlikely to be persuaded by “brand engagement” if customer acquisition is still inconsistent. Business owners become sceptical when they feel they are buying motion rather than progress.
This is where marketing lost ground.
Over the last two decades, the explosion of digital channels has made the problem worse. More platforms created more activity, more reporting and more noise. Marketing teams became busier, but not always more effective. In many cases, the sheer amount of tactical output masked a lack of strategic discipline. Businesses became obsessed with being visible everywhere without asking whether those efforts were commercially justified.
The result is the marketing equivalent of a full diary and an empty balance sheet. Of course, creativity still matters. Messaging matters. Design matters. Brand matters. But none of these things should exist in isolation from commercial purpose. Creativity should not replace strategy. It should serve it. The role of marketing is not to create attractive activity for its own sake. It is to help a business identify opportunities, communicate value, influence buying decisions and generate measurable growth.
Marketing as a commercial function
That is a very different brief.
It also requires a different mindset. Marketing must stop presenting itself as something soft, intuitive and difficult to measure. It needs to be framed and managed as a commercial function. That means better alignment with business goals, clearer financial accountability, stronger reporting, and far less tolerance for vague success measures.
In practical terms, that starts by asking better questions. Who are we trying to reach? Why them? What problem are we solving? What value are we communicating? What is the likely cost of acquiring a customer? What is that customer worth over time? Which channels genuinely contribute to profitable growth? What should success look like in revenue terms, not just marketing terms?

Those are the questions that rebuild credibility because they move marketing out of the realm of opinion and into the realm of evidence.
This is especially important for SMEs. Larger companies can sometimes absorb poor marketing decisions for longer simply because they have deeper budgets and more internal resource. SMEs do not have that luxury. Every pound has to work harder. Every decision carries greater weight. If marketing lacks structure, the financial consequences show up quickly.
The importance of marketing clarity
When marketing is grounded in clear strategy, measurable objectives and commercial logic, the conversation changes. Business owners begin to see it differently. Marketing no longer feels like a gamble or a creative indulgence. It becomes a growth mechanism. Something that can be reviewed, improved and scaled. Something that earns its place alongside finance, sales and operations rather than sitting on the edge of the business as a support function.
That shift is long overdue. The businesses getting the best results from marketing are rarely the ones making the most noise. They are the ones with the clearest thinking. They understand that marketing is not a collection of random tactics. It is a structured process that starts with business goals, moves through customer insight and positioning, and ends with activity that can be measured against commercial outcomes.
In other words, they treat marketing seriously. And that is really the answer to the credibility problem. Marketing regains trust when it behaves in a way that deserves trust. Not by demanding a bigger seat at the table, but by proving that it understands the language spoken around the table in the first place.
That language is not hype. It is evidence.
It is not busyness. It is contribution.
And it is not vanity. It is value.
If more businesses started judging marketing by those standards, they would not just improve performance. They would finally restore confidence in one of the most misunderstood functions in business.
Download our latest Ebook
If your marketing feels busy but commercially unclear, that is usually a sign that strategy has been overtaken by activity. The Maths Behind Marketing explores how to restore that clarity and make marketing accountable again.



Ian Kirk
Founder at Opportunity Marketing
Ian is the founder of Opportunity Marketing marketing, with over 18 years of experience in successfully setting up marketing departments, creating marketing strategies and implementing these strategies across a wide number of SME companies in both the B2B and B2C sectors through a variety of channels.






