PODCAST · business
Marketable World Podcast
by Marketable
At Marketable, we understand that the best way to learn marketing isn't through textbooks. It's by engaging with people. Throughs, strategies, and career shifts, we share the voices that drive the industry forward. real experienceFrom boardrooms to startups, we share unfiltered journeys, celebrate wins, and learn from missteps through podcasts, features, and events.WE’RE CREATING A SPACE WHERE MARKETERS GROW TOGETHERA Podcast spotlighting the marketers behind powerful campaigns. Discover the journeys, struggles, and wins of those shaping the industry. A Marketable World.
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11
Vulnerability - The Secret Sauce of Great Brands.
Vulnerability is the secret source of great brands because it creates the one advantage money can’t buy: trust.Brand vulnerability cuts through because it signals honesty and lowers the defenses people carry online. When a company admits a struggle, shares a hard lesson, or speaks in a human voice, it feels more like a relationship than a transaction. That emotional connection is the foundation of customer trust, brand authenticity, and long-term brand loyalty, especially on social media where people reward realness and punish obvious spin.Perfect branding is easy to scroll past. The risky move is saying what’s true and that’s exactly why it works. We dig into brand vulnerability as a real marketing strategy, not a feel-good slogan. When a brand drops the polished mask and talks like a human, it creates connection. And connection is what turns casual buyers into people who actually care, recommend you, and come back. If you’re building a brand community, shaping a social media strategy, or trying to grow brand loyalty, this conversation gives you a clear takeaway: vulnerability isn’t weakness, it’s relatability.
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10
What You Say vs Who You Are: Who Really Shapes A Brand Personality.
Are brands truly who they say they are..Brand personality is one of the most overused phrases in marketing, and it often gets treated like a few adjectives in a brand book. Companies write lines like “fun,” “bold,” “innovative,” or “customer-centric,” then expect the world to believe it. See, brand personality is not a claim, it is a pattern. It shows up in customer/consumer experience, product decisions, hiring choices, tone of voice, and the speed and courage of everyday tradeoffs. If the ads look stale, the website reads like unfriendly, or approvals take forever, the brand is communicating something very different than the words on the page. Authentic brand strategy starts by admitting that behavior is the message.The fastest way to spot a credibility gap is to compare what a brand says with what it does when things get hard. - “Bold” brands do not hide behind endless layers of approval or avoid clear points of view. “Innovative” brands ship, learn, and invest, instead of celebrating old wins. - “Customer-first” brands design support systems that respect time, fix root problems, and treat complaints as signal rather than nuisance. This is where brand values become real: in the unglamorous moments, not the campaign slogans. Strong brand positioning comes from consistency, because trust grows when customers can predict how you will act, not just what you will promise.Leadership influence is the quiet force that shapes almost everything people feel about a company and brand. Culture, priorities, and decision-making start at the top, so the CEO or leadership team often becomes the brand’s default personality. - A visionary leader tends to create an inspiring brand that takes smart risks. - A risk-averse leader produces safe marketing and cautious products. - A profit-only mindset can make a brand feel hollow, even if the messaging sounds warm. On the other hand, leaders who genuinely care about people often create brands that feel human, because customers can sense how teams are treated. In practice, brand identity and leadership behavior are inseparable, which is why “brand voice” without leadership alignment usually collapses.So who defines brand personality: the brand platform or the executive suite? The most accurate answer is both, but with a clear hierarchy. The brand personality framework gives direction and language, while leadership behavior supplies the proof.
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9
Willingness to Pay - aka WTP (How Willingness To Pay Shapes Real-World Pricing)
This is one of my favorite topics because a lot of FMCG and service businesses are totally oblivious on how this playes out. Price is not what you say; it is what the customer believes. There is a need to understand Willingness to Pay - WTP.Willingness to pay, or WTP, is the maximum a buyer is ready to spend for a specific product in a specific moment. It is not the posted price, and it is not the company’s cost; it is a ceiling that moves with context.The core idea is simple: price is a story. When the story is strong, through design, proof, and service, the price tag then makes sense. If you sell anything, this conversation will help you reframe how you set price tag, present value, and earn margin with integrity. Understanding WTP helps you stop losing revenue in two ways: by not underpricing premium buyers and by not scaring away price-sensitive buyers. Segmentation is the bridge. Different segments carry different ceilings, shaped by income, taste, and use case. Brand marketing and effective positioning through marketing communicationi are often the cheapest levers for lifting WTP. Creative and effective visuals, cleaner copy, and signals of care reduce perceived risk and increases trust.As seen in airlines and hotels, dynamic pricing shows WTP in motion and at scale. As the date approaches, WTP tends to increase hence the price hikes on hotel bookings and flight tickets. Ask yourself after every purchase you make: did you pay what it is worth, or what it was made to feel worth? That question will make you a smarter buyer and a sharper seller. When you align your price tag with their ceiling and your promise with their priorities, you unlock margin without losing trust and that is pricing power.So if we want to know how sensitive our customers are to price changes, we need to know something about the demand generation curve. We also have factors that determine whether the demand curve for a product is steep or flat?For example, it depends on whether the product has close alternatives or not.
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8
The Attention Economy
In this episode, we get to zoom into the attention economy with a candid look at why people skip, delete, and ignore traditional ads, and what smart marketers do in the first three seconds to earn real engagement.We also get to unpack how the shift from monologue to conversation changes everything. Especiallly the importance of designing creatives that blends into timelines without disappearing, and why emotions like curiosity, humor, tension, or awe are your strongest lever. The tactics for sound-off viewing, writing irresistible first lines, building native/cultural formats, and turning comments into content can also compound attention over time.Let us challenge the myths of awareness and understand that attention is earned, not bought.What do you think is the remedy to keep Ads and content organic these days?
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7
Metrics vs KPIs... Why you need to know the difference!!
Turning metrics into management tools requires context. Every KPI needs a clear target, a time window, and a benchmark, ideally including competitor or category comparisons. Without a benchmark, teams can hit targets that are too easy or celebrate wins that lag the market. Add well paced out checkpoints to ensure mid-course corrections: weekly for fast-moving campaigns, monthly for brand objectives. Have a process owner who can pull levers quickly: creative refresh, audience refinement, placement shifts, or channel mix. Document the assumed link between the KPI and the business goal so you can test it with data and adjust when the reality differs from the plan.Keep score competitively. Track how your KPIs compare to peers, completion rates, engagement quality, cost per completed view; so targets evolve with the market. Begin with the item that drives the greatest business impact, instrument it well, and let your metrics explain the why behind the what. When strategy leads and KPIs translate that strategy into accountable numbers, your metrics become a map, not a maze.Finally, Guard against KPI inflation. When leaders label every metric as a KPI, teams chase conflicting goals and dilute focus. Instead, rank metrics by their proximity to revenue or strategic value. Some questions i’ll recommend we ask: Does this measurement reflect a choice we made in the strategy? Can we move it directly with actions? Will improving it create material impact? If the answer is weak, demote it to a diagnostic layer. Keep executive dashboards clean, with KPIs front and center and diagnostics one click away. This discipline speeds decision-making and makes performance reviews about learning, not defending noisy numbers.
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6
Derisking FMCG with Marketing
Bold claim: Marketing is business insurance. From Nigeria’s ad bans to quick-commerce wins, learn how brands stay compliant, relevant, and cash-positive. Curious where your strategy is exposed? Listen and tell us your biggest blind spot.We unpack how marketing acts as business insurance for FMCG, turning regulation volatility, consumer whiplash, and fast trends into manageable risks. From Nigeria’s tight ad rules to quick commerce wins, we show practical ways to stay compliant, relevant, and profitable.Finally, we get tactical on channels: why digital shelves and quick commerce reward speed and assortment craft, and how Nigerian FMCG players who jumped early now lead on repeat and contribution margin. The throughline is simple—marketing is risk management in plain clothes. Done well, it turns chaos into clarity and timing into an advantage. If you’re building or defending share in a tough market, this playbook helps you ride the wave instead of getting pulled under.
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5
Digitisation, Digitalisation & Digital Transformation
Understanding where your organization stands in this digital evolution is critical for strategic planning and resource allocation. Many companies claim to be digitally transformed when they've merely digitized or digitalized certain aspects of their operations. This misunderstanding can lead to complacency and missed opportunities. When someone claims their company is "digitally transformed," it's worth asking: Are they just scanning documents (digitization)? Are they making processes smarter (digitalization)? Or are they actually changing how and why they do business (digital transformation)? The distinction matters enormously for competitiveness and long-term survival in today's digital economy.
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4
Gut thinking in Marketing
Gut thinking has achieved an almost mythical status in marketing circles. We've all heard the stories, brilliant campaign ideas that seemingly materialized from thin air, marketing executives who "just knew" a strategy would work without a shred of research to back it up. But what's really happening when marketers rely on their gut?This episode breaks down into the science and psychology behind marketing intuition. What many call "gut feeling" is actually sophisticated pattern recognition, your brain processing years of experience, thousands of campaigns, and countless consumer reactions faster than your conscious mind can articulate. Like the footballer who instinctively knows where to position themselves, seasoned marketers develop a sixth sense for what will resonate with audiences.Your relationship with gut thinking should evolve throughout your career journey. For those just starting, data provides the essential foundation; relying solely on intuition without experience is simply gambling.
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3
The Ease of Working with you
What's the secret ingredient that can make or break your marketing career? It's not your strategic brilliance or creative genius—it's how easy you are to work with.Marketing already comes with enough natural pressures: brutal deadlines, tight budgets, and the constant expectation to deliver extraordinary results with ordinary resources. The most valuable marketing leaders understand that their true worth extends beyond technical capabilities. They recognize that bringing clarity instead of confusion, speed instead of bottlenecks, and solutions instead of additional problems creates an environment where everyone can thrive.This episode breaks down the often-overlooked qualities that separate respected marketing leaders from those who struggle to advance despite their talents. We explore why clear communication is king, how responsiveness builds trust, and why maintaining calm energy amid chaos helps teams perform at their best. The most successful marketing professionals aren't just delivering campaigns—they're making the entire process smoother and more enjoyable for everyone involved.Take a moment to reflect: Do people genuinely find it easy to work with you? Do you bring clarity, speed, and solutions to your team? Or do you inadvertently complicate processes and create stress? Your answers might reveal more about your leadership ceiling than any performance review. Because in marketing, as in life, those with excellent people skills are ultimately the ones who go furthest. Subscribe now for more insights that will transform how you approach marketing leadership and advance your career.
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2
The danger of having marketing leadership stuck with operations
Marketing teams are losing their way. Across businesses both large and small, a dangerous pattern has emerged where marketing leadership becomes entangled in operational quicksand, buried under approvals paperwork, chasing supply chain updates, and managing inventory problems instead of building brands and creating customer demand.When your marketing team focuses more on tracking how many cartons made it to the warehouse than telling consumers why they should care about your product, your brand is actively losing ground to competitors who understand the true power of marketing.The solution requires both organizational clarity and personal discipline. Operations must own operational challenges while marketing supports without being consumed by them. Marketing leaders need freedom to focus on demand generation, consumer insights, and brand building. They must be empowered to think strategically rather than merely react to the latest crisis. The most powerful KPI for any marketing professional isn't operational efficiency - it's demand generation. When brands fail at creating demand, they become overly dependent on distribution as their only competitive advantage.
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1
Where is the next CMO coming from?
I want to officially welcome you to my world - the marketable world. WE’RE CREATING A SPACE WHERE MARKETERS GROW TOGETHERThis episode is so dear to me because it was a personal question before I made an open question. We see CMOs all over, and I wondered where their stories started from. What exactly is their story, and how did they get to the top level of marketing? Then I found out that while the foundation is important, it mattered what and where the CMO started their journey. I will leave you to enjoy this as the first episode.. There is more to come.
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
At Marketable, we understand that the best way to learn marketing isn't through textbooks. It's by engaging with people. Throughs, strategies, and career shifts, we share the voices that drive the industry forward. real experienceFrom boardrooms to startups, we share unfiltered journeys, celebrate wins, and learn from missteps through podcasts, features, and events.WE’RE CREATING A SPACE WHERE MARKETERS GROW TOGETHERA Podcast spotlighting the marketers behind powerful campaigns. Discover the journeys, struggles, and wins of those shaping the industry. A Marketable World.
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Marketable
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