the hidden cost of disconnected marketing: why alignment drives better roi.

the hidden cost of disconnected marketing: why alignment drives better roi.

laura headshot blogLaura Robbins, Corporate Marketing Manager

 

Most marketing budgets underperform because the system behind them is disconnected.

Organizations invest in websites, paid media, SEO, AIO, content, and reporting—often with capable teams and trusted marketing partners in place—and still struggle to produce consistent returns. Lead flow feels uneven. Costs rise without a clear explanation. Performance becomes harder to predict.

The issue is not always visible in a dashboard.

It often shows up in what we call the alignment tax: the hidden cost organizations pay when their website, traffic strategy, messaging, and reporting are not working together.

what disconnected marketing really looks like.

Disconnected marketing rarely looks broken at first. On the surface, everything appears to be moving:

  • rhe website is live and visually strong
  • paid media is active
  • SEO and AIO efforts are underway
  • reports are being delivered
  • internal teams and external partners are covering their scope

But strong activity doesn’t always produce strong system performance.

One team is focused on design. Another is focused on traffic. Another is focused on reporting. Each function may be doing its job well, but no one is fully accountable for how the entire marketing system performs together.

That’s when marketing becomes harder, slower, and more expensive than it should be.

where your marketing is breaking down.

Disconnected marketing typically creates drag in three places.

1. lost conversions you never see.

When websites, traffic sources, and conversion paths aren’t aligned around the same goal, small leaks start to affect performance.

Common signs include:

  • paid traffic landing on pages that don’t match intent
  • messaging that changes from ad to page to form
  • pages that look polished but don’t clearly guide action
  • conversion paths that create friction at the wrong moment

None of these issues looks catastrophic on its own. Together, they lower conversion efficiency month after month.

That’s how a few missed opportunities turn into a meaningful revenue problem.

2. slower learning loops.

Alignment isn’t only about execution. It’s about how quickly teams can learn and act.

When marketing systems are disconnected:

  • paid media insights don’t shape website updates quickly
  • website behavior doesn’t influence targeting fast enough
  • reporting explains performance after the fact instead of improving the next move
  • optimization cycles stretch from days into weeks

Speed matters because faster learning makes every marketing dollar more productive.

3. wasted spend that feels normal.

This is where disconnected marketing becomes especially expensive.

When systems aren’t aligned, inefficiency starts to feel routine. Teams begin to assume:

  • this is just what marketing costs
  • some channels are always difficult to make efficient
  • better results require more budget

In reality, the issue is the misalignment between the parts of the system that should be reinforcing one another.

why marketing alignment is a financial issue.

Marketing alignment is often framed as a workflow improvement. That undersells the impact.

When the system is aligned:

  • conversion rates improve without immediately increasing spend
  • teams move faster from insight to execution
  • performance becomes easier to explain and forecast
  • budget works harder because fewer dollars are lost to friction

This isn’t just a process benefit. It’s a financial one.

At some point, leadership teams stop asking, “Which channel should we invest in next?” and start asking a better question:

Is our marketing system built to work together?

what aligned marketing looks like.

Aligned marketing doesn’t necessarily mean centralizing everything. It means building around shared goals, faster feedback, and clear ownership.

In practice, that looks like:

  • websites and paid media built around the same conversion priorities
  • messaging that stays consistent from first click to final action
  • insights moving quickly between teams
  • website improvements happening in days, not weeks
  • performance visibility across the full journey
  • clear ownership of outcomes, not just deliverables

That last point matters most.

Execution at the channel level is important. But stronger performance usually comes when someone owns how the entire system works together.

how to tell if you are paying the alignment tax.

A quick gut check for marketing leaders:

strategy and ownership.

  • do your website and paid media efforts share the same primary conversion goal?
  • is there clear ownership over total marketing performance, not just channel activity?
  • can one person clearly explain how traffic becomes leads?

execution and speed.

  • can website updates happen in days, not weeks?
  • do paid media insights directly influence website changes?
  • are landing pages built for specific audience intent?

measurement and clarity.

  • can you see performance across channels in one place?
  • do reports explain why something worked, not just what happened?
  • can your team quickly identify the next highest-impact improvement?

cost and efficiency.

  • do you know where spend is being wasted, not just where it is being allocated?
  • does better performance usually require more budget?
  • does your marketing operation feel heavier than it should?

If you answered “no” or “not sure” several times, the issue may be structural rather than budgetary.

the takeaway.

If marketing feels expensive but underwhelming, the problem may not be talent, tools, or effort. It may be that your marketing system is disconnected.

The good news is that alignment fixes often improve performance before they increase cost. When websites, digital marketing execution, reporting, and optimization work together, marketing becomes easier to scale, defend, and more efficient overall.

Is your marketing system working together or in silos?
If your website, paid media, and reporting are all active but results still feel harder to explain than they should, alignment may be the issue. 

Marketing Communication In 2024: (What Works, And What Doesn’t.)

Marketing Communication In 2024: (What Works, And What Doesn’t.)

cody headshot threshold marketing blog

Cody Rudolph

 

 

 

 

Effective communication has always been the cornerstone of successful marketing. 

Nothing’s changed in 2024.

But many businesses still struggle with overly salesy copy and technical jargon that confuses potential clients. Or they use vague, “fancy pants” verbiage in an effort to sound clever. 

This article will provide clear, actionable advice on how companies can communicate effectively—and in a way that attracts clients, partnerships, and even envy from your competitors.

dangers of “salesy” copy and “fancy” words.

Imagine a scene from your favorite courtroom drama.

The “lawyers” speak to each other at a frantic pace, pausing every few seconds to toss in silly legal jargon that makes no sense to most of the viewers.  Now, this manner of speaking is part of the appeal of tv shows–the lawyers are supposed to know things the viewers don’t and appear more intelligent as a result.

But what if you were a juror in a real courtroom, listening to a real lawyer speak to the judge in the same way? You’d feel confused, alienated, maybe even embarrassed. Naive. These are the same negative emotions your clients and partners feel when they don’t understand your offer, your brand values, or the words you use.

Thankfully, there are ways for companies to avoid these pitfalls. Here’s how.

simplify and humanize your message.

Fun fact: 74% of adults in the US read at a 6th grade level. (Source.)

That means there are roughly 224 million people in the US that don’t know what “pro forma” or “TBD by EOD” means. 

Consider the words used during a conversation with a stranger at the supermarket. Or how you’d explain a mortgage loan to a teenager. How we talk in everyday life is more-or-less how companies should communicate in their marketing.

There are outliers, of course. For example, you wouldn’t want to send company shareholders an email that starts with “Hey fam!” But the goal is to use a common language that broadens your reach.

Here are three practical tips for simplifying your copy:

  1. Use short sentences and familiar words.
  2. Break down complex ideas into digestible parts.
  3. Avoid industry-specific terms unless they are universally understood by your audience.

Example: Instead of saying, “Our comprehensive asset management solutions are designed to optimize your property portfolio’s performance,” say, “We help you manage your properties better, saving you time and money.”

build trust through transparency and value.

It’s crucial to build trust and demonstrate the value your business brings to current clients, prospects and partners. 

Here are some strategies:

  1. Transparency: Be open about your processes, pricing, and results. People appreciate honesty and are more likely to work with a company that is upfront about what they can expect.

Example: Offer a clear breakdown of your services and costs, along with case studies that showcase your successes.

  1. Value Proposition: Be clear about the benefits of working with your company and how your services solve specific problems.

Example: Instead of saying, “We’re your premiere partner for growth capital acquisition,” say, “We find the money your business needs to keep growing.”

provide clear directions.

Finally, to drive action, make it very clear what you want people to do and encourage them to do it. How? Provide a clear offer, compelling calls to action (CTAs) and make the next steps straightforward.

here’s an example of providing clear directions for a newsletter sign up page and follow-up email sequence:

  • Offer: “Weekly newsletter with case studies, industry insights, and emerging trends. Sent to your inbox every Monday morning.”
  • CTA: “Sign up for our newsletter.”
  • Thank-You Page: “Thank you for signing up to our newsletter. You’ll soon receive a Welcome email guiding you through next steps and what you can expect in our weekly newsletter.”
  • Welcome Email: “Hello! Thanks again for signing up to receive our newsletter. It’ll hit your inbox every Monday morning! (Just in time for the day’s first coffee.) And comes packed full of useful information our team finds from across the web…”

See how each step of the process clearly communicates an offer, desired action, or next step in the process.

And if you think the copy sounds repetitive–you’re right. Clear messaging is repetitive by design.

That’s why there are road signs every few dozen yards along the highway. Because people need constant reminders about what we should be doing, where we’re headed, and what we can expect as we approach our destination.

conclusion: talk like you would to a stranger.

The nice thing about talking to strangers is that you don’t know what to expect. And because you don’t know what to expect, most people automatically revert to a simpler form of communication.

No lingo. No shared knowledge or experiences. No common phrases.

Instead, you have to explain who you are, the value you provide, what you want the other person to do, and walk them through the steps to get there—it’s the simplest, most straightforward kind of communication two adults can have.

And it’s a style of communication companies can adopt to speak more clearly, connect with a broader audience, and gain deeper trust with existing clients and partners.