Planning a marketing strategy for the coming year is, for many companies, a period of intensive work: defining objectives, setting budgets, and selecting channels and tools. At this stage, everything usually appears coherent and logical. The problem emerges later-when the strategy is expected to genuinely support business decisions, rather than merely exist as a document.
In practice, the challenge is increasingly less about a lack of ideas, creativity, or tools. More often, it stems from the absence of a coherent approach to data, decision-making, and the execution of the strategy over time.