The biggest impact I saw during a pivot came from tying marketing straight to revenue instead of chasing clicks or impressions. The business was moving from smaller deals to bigger contracts, so I rebuilt campaigns to track CAC and lifetime value. Within a few months, lead volume went down, but the pipeline value grew close to 2X without raising ad spend. What made it work was cutting efforts that didn't fit the new direction. SEO pages that ranked but didn't pull in qualified leads were rewritten or dropped. Paid search went through the same process. If a keyword was driving calls but the calls never turned into real deals, it was cut. Running leaner meant the pipeline was smaller but far cleaner, so every dollar had purpose. The hardest part was changing expectations inside the team. Sales wanted more volume. Marketing was used to celebrating CTR and lead counts. So getting everyone focused on quality took time. It meant showing that 10 strong leads were more valuable than 100 weak ones. Once that change happened, things became easier because marketing, sales, and operations were finally aligned around one goal. The lesson I took was that during a pivot, campaigns are never the biggest challenge. The real challenge is mindset. Cutting noise, dropping vanity metrics, and making sure every effort backs the new model is what actually moves numbers that matter. Name: Josiah Roche Title: Fractional CMO Company: JRR Marketing Website: https://josiahroche.co/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/josiahroche
In my last CMO role the company made a significant pivot into new verticals, focusing on transit and aerospace while moving away from our traditional manufacturing markets. The timing was critical. After COVID, federal investment was flowing into transit infrastructure and airlines were under pressure to return grounded aircraft to service. The business strategy was clear: capture new revenue in these sectors and reduce reliance on declining markets. The most important step was to express the pivot as a set of revenue objectives. We defined what we expected to achieve in each new market and how much each function, including marketing, would contribute. Those targets shaped the marketing strategy. They dictated the level of investment, the areas of focus, and the trade-offs we had to make. The key moment came when the marketing strategy was documented within the same business plan as the wider corporate objectives. That integration removed ambiguity. It gave us permission to stop activities that had worked in the past but no longer supported the company's direction, even when colleagues were still asking for them. The hardest part was managing those conversations across the business. Sales teams in particular were attached to familiar programs, and there was cultural resistance to stopping them. But by pointing to a shared document that linked marketing's priorities directly to the company's revenue plan, it was easier to stand firm. It required ongoing measurement and reinforcement, but the discipline of aligning strategy so closely to business objectives meant we were not just supporting the pivot, we were driving it. In the long term, the clarity and focus outweighed the disruption of letting go of the past.
During a major pivot at Marquet Media, I aligned our marketing strategy with broader business objectives by anchoring everything to my proprietary frameworks rather than treating marketing as a separate function. When I decided to transition from being a traditional PR firm to positioning the company as a strategic visibility consultancy, it wasn't just a brand refresh—it was a fundamental business model shift. I started by redefining our core value proposition. These frameworks became the bridge between marketing and business goals. For example, instead of campaigns focused solely on lead generation, our marketing highlighted the measurable ROI clients would get by using these frameworks—media visibility, brand equity growth, and audience trust. Every piece of content, from our website copy to our client case studies, was restructured to reflect where the business was heading, not where it had been. The most challenging aspect was navigating the emotional side of the pivot—both for me and for my team. I had to let go of legacy services and messaging that had built our reputation, but no longer fit our long-term vision. Externally, this meant re-educating clients and prospects about what we now offered and why it mattered. Internally, it required difficult conversations about roles, workflows, and the type of work we wanted to be known for. Keeping marketing intertwined with strategy, the pivot didn't just look like a rebrand—it felt authentic. Clients immediately understood the evolution, and our marketing became a natural extension of our business objectives, leading to higher-quality leads, stronger retention, and a clear market differentiation.
When I was brought in to support a major company's pivot, my priority was aligning the marketing team with the broader business goals, including revenue growth, increased event attendance, and creating visibility that would resonate with future investors or support IPO readiness. We shifted from short-term promotional pushes to value-driven executive thought leadership, optimizing online profiles, establishing a consistent content cadence, mapping an engagement plan, and aligning employee messaging company-wide. The most challenging part was helping leadership adopt that mindset shift. Some of the executives on the leadership team were initially frustrated with the lack of immediate buy-in, questioning the value of thought leadership compared to quick promotional wins. We addressed this by educating both the leadership team and employees, demonstrating how synchronized messaging is directly tied to event attendance, revenue opportunities, and future investor confidence. Through individual and group training, we created a company-wide effort where employees mimicked some of the same messaging as leadership. Once the leadership team began to see the ripple effect, with increased visibility, stronger industry credibility, and measurable engagement, the resistance turned into advocacy.
When we pivoted from being mostly B2B-focused (office fruit deliveries) to pushing hard into B2C during the pandemic, the biggest challenge wasn't the campaigns, it was changing the story we told about ourselves. For years, our messaging was all about "keeping your team healthy at work." Overnight, offices shut down, and that pitch was useless. The tough part was aligning marketing with the new business objective: becoming a trusted household brand. Our leadership wanted us to be seen less as a corporate wellness perk and more as a lifestyle choice. That meant retraining our team to shift from volume-driven messaging ("bulk, convenient, cost-efficient") to emotionally-driven messaging ("freshness, care, family, wellness at home"). One practical thing we did: we built customer profiles from scratch - families, remote workers, parents juggling kids at home. That reset helped us build campaigns that tied directly to the new revenue goals. For example, our "Fruit Box at Home" subscription campaign hit 3x projected sign-ups in the first two months because it wasn't just marketing fruit, it was marketing a sense of comfort and health during uncertain times. The hardest part was consistency. Sales, ops, and even customer service had to start using the new language. My tip: when a pivot happens, marketing has to act as the translator and turn leadership's goals into customer stories that feel natural and real.
The pandemic hit us hard. Our entire model was built on in-person care, and suddenly, we couldn't do that. We had to make a major pivot to telehealth, and our marketing strategy had to change completely. We all knew the business objectives were to survive, but the real objective was to keep helping people. My "aha" moment was realizing that our old messaging was useless. Telling people to "come to our center" wasn't relevant when they were stuck at home. The most challenging aspect wasn't the technology; it was getting my team to let go of our old plan and to embrace the unknown. The biggest challenge was the human side of it—the fear and the uncertainty. We successfully aligned our marketing by letting go of our old strategy and leaning into our mission. Our messaging went from "come get help" to "here's how you can find hope in isolation." We stopped trying to sell a service and just started providing resources. We aligned our entire company around a simple message: we are here to help, no matter what. We not only survived; we found a whole new way to help people. We were able to reach people who lived outside of Columbus, people we never could have helped before. The company came out of that pivot more resilient and with a new, more powerful voice. My advice is simple: the key to alignment isn't to change your mission; it's to hold on to your purpose and let go of your plan.
When I transitioned Bright Home Offer from relying heavily on cold calling to building our SMS marketing system, I had to completely realign our messaging to match our goal of scaling a fully remote operation that still felt personal. I mapped out every touchpoint--from initial SMS sequences to our virtual closing process--ensuring each interaction demonstrated how our remote model actually delivered faster, more reliable results than traditional methods. The most challenging aspect was proving to distressed sellers that a team they'd never meet in person could handle their most important transaction; I overcame this by creating detailed video walkthroughs of our process and sharing testimonials from the 6-8 monthly deals we close, showing that our Arizona-to-North Carolina operation consistently delivers on promises.
I don't think about it as a "major company pivot." A few years ago, I just made a decision to change how we do business. We went from being a company that did any and all roofing work—big or small—to specializing in high-quality, full residential roof replacements. My "marketing strategy" had to align with that, which was the hardest part. Before, my marketing was all over the place. I'd run ads for roof repairs, small leaks, and anything else. When I decided to focus on quality, I changed everything. My ads, my website, and my social media all became about one thing: showcasing our best, most beautiful full roof replacements. I stopped talking about small jobs. I started posting photos that highlighted the craftsmanship, the clean-up, and the overall quality of our finished work. I was telling the community that we weren't just a repair crew; we were craftsmen. The most challenging aspect was turning down work. In the first few months after the change, the phone was still ringing with requests for small repairs. It's tough as a business owner to say no to easy money, but I had to do it. Every repair job I took was a distraction from our new focus. It was a test of my commitment to the new direction. I had to have the discipline to turn down the short-term payoff for the long-term goal. The result of that decision was a much stronger business. We get more high-quality leads, and we're now known in the community for our craftsmanship, not just for being the cheapest guy. My advice is simple: you can't be everything to everyone. Your "marketing strategy" should be a direct reflection of what you're best at. The most challenging aspect isn't the change in your marketing; it's the discipline to stick to your plan and turn down work that doesn't fit your brand.
A company pivot is one of the hardest things to get right. We had to make a major shift in our business from being a general supplier for a little bit of everything to a deep specialist in a few key product lines. This meant changing our entire inventory system, our sourcing, and our sales pitch. The biggest challenge wasn't the technical side; it was getting our own team, especially the sales team, to buy into the new vision. They were so used to the old way of doing things, and they saw this pivot as a risk, not an opportunity. The way we successfully aligned our marketing with our broader business objective was to turn our own sales team into our first customer. The most challenging aspect was changing their mindset. I realized that if I couldn't convince my own people to believe in our new direction, there was no way they could convince a customer. From a marketing standpoint, I created an entire internal campaign just for them. I didn't just send out a memo about the pivot. We created content that showed the "why" behind the change. We showed them data on the higher profit margins of the specialized products, the long-term growth potential, and the customer satisfaction we were getting. I didn't tell them to sell the new strategy; I marketed it to them until they believed in it for themselves. From an operations standpoint, we gave them the tools to support the new vision. We redesigned our internal systems to make it easier to find and sell the specialized parts. We held workshops where our operations experts gave the sales team a hands-on look at the quality of our new products, so they could sell with total confidence. We didn't just tell them we were a specialist; we gave them the knowledge and the tools to act like one. The result was a total success. Our sales team went from being resistant to being our biggest advocates. They saw the value for themselves and their customers. Our marketing message became authentic because it was coming from a place of genuine belief. My advice is that when you're going through a major change, you have to sell the vision to your own team first. If they don't buy into the "why," no one else will.
When pivoting Revival Homebuyers to focus more on helping homeowners in difficult situations, I aligned our marketing strategy by sharing authentic transformation stories of properties we'd renovated in Springfield, connecting each one to our deeper mission of community revitalization that started with that first duplex I purchased in 2008. The most challenging aspect was breaking through the skepticism that comes with 'we buy houses' messaging--I overcame this by intentionally highlighting how my parents' approach to being landlords shaped our business values, showing before-and-after renovation photos, and always emphasizing that behind every transaction was our genuine desire to provide the same sense of security my parents felt when they paid off their mortgage that memorable spring day in the 90s.
When I founded Dynamic Home Buyers, our pivot was away from the faceless, transactional model toward a deeply personal one rooted in our Myrtle Beach community. I ensured our marketing reflected this by sharing real stories of local families we've helped, emphasizing compassionate, as-is solutions for people in difficult situations. The most challenging part was proving that as a local, my commitment was to people, not just profits, especially when homeowners are understandably skeptical of cash-offer companies; building that trust, one honest conversation at a time, was everything.
When our company pivoted from a B2C focus to targeting enterprise clients, aligning marketing with broader business objectives became essential. I began by mapping every marketing initiative to core KPIs—lead quality, conversion rates, and client retention. Campaigns were redesigned to emphasize ROI and scalability over product features, requiring a full shift in content, messaging, and ad targeting. The toughest challenge was retraining the marketing team to adapt from consumer-focused tactics to addressing enterprise decision-makers and longer sales cycles. To bridge the gap, we introduced weekly cross-department check-ins with sales and product teams, ensuring consistent messaging and agile adjustments. Within three months, this alignment produced a clear increase in high-value leads and stronger connections between marketing activity and strategic goals. It proved that communication and shared metrics are the key to keeping strategy and execution in sync during a major pivot.
When I launched Integrity House Buyers in 2021, our pivot came from recognizing that military families--especially those dealing with PCS moves--needed a completely different approach than traditional real estate. I aligned our marketing by drawing directly from my 14.5 years of Army experience, creating messaging that spoke to the urgency and uncertainty these families face when they get orders with just weeks to relocate. The most challenging aspect was proving we weren't just another investor trying to lowball military families; I had to consistently demonstrate through testimonials and transparent processes that my service background meant I genuinely understood their sacrifice and wouldn't add stress to an already difficult transition.
When we pivoted to focus exclusively on mobile homes, our marketing had to move from a broad 'we buy houses' message to zeroing in on the affordability gap we were solving. I started showing real examples--like families who couldn't qualify for traditional homes but found a safe, renovated mobile home through us--so our marketing supported the bigger mission of creating accessible housing. The most challenging part was letting go of generic strategies that had worked before and fully committing to a more specific audience, even if that meant slower traction at first.
When the pandemic began, one of our clients, a pest control company, experienced a significant decline in commercial service requests, which represented a substantial portion of their revenue. We quickly shifted our focus to residential services, recognizing that this required more than updated advertising. I led the development of a new marketing strategy centered on same-day residential service with a pest-free guarantee, emphasizing speed, trust, and peace of mind for homeowners adapting to remote work. Securing internal buy-in, particularly from the sales team accustomed to commercial contracts, proved to be challenging. They were skeptical about the revenue potential of residential clients and hesitant to change their approach. To address this, I launched a pilot campaign in one metropolitan area and presented key metrics, including lead volume, close rate, and retention. Demonstrating the residential market's potential provided the momentum needed for a company-wide rollout. Alignment was achieved through results, not presentations.
When aligning marketing strategy with broader business objectives, I've found that creating a clear measurement framework is essential. During our B2B SaaS client engagement, we implemented a quarterly cornerstone content approach that directly tied to their revenue goals by generating measurable sales opportunities. The most challenging aspect was dynamically reallocating resources based on performance data, as we needed to shift 10-20% of spending monthly while maintaining overall strategic direction. We established specific metrics tracking customer lifetime value to acquisition cost ratios, which provided the justification needed for these budget adjustments. By consistently measuring how marketing activities contributed to business outcomes, we were able to demonstrate that our content strategy directly generated 14.6% of quarterly sales opportunities. This data-driven approach ensured marketing remained accountable to broader business objectives while providing the flexibility to optimize tactics as we gathered performance insights.
Hello, I work in the marketing and sales department of a fortune global 2000 company which is owned by TTI, during this I went on to launch my own digital marketing business Redwood Digitals as I have years of experience in creating, launching, pushing and analysing multi-billion dollar enterprise marketing strategies. Along with this, I have a BA (Hons) in Marketing with business from award winning Aberdeen business school at Robert Gordon University. Situation: The company decided to heavily allocate resources into a branch that had previously been underperforming and forgotten about, historically, it couldn't compete with other markets, but with renewed focus it was given preferential treatment and became a priority for growth. Task: My role was to ensure the marketing strategy aligned with this new business direction - shifting efforts, budgets, and messaging to support a branch that had never been central to our positioning before. Action: I worked closely with leadership to understand the branch's unique value proposition and customer base, then built a tailored marketing strategy to highlight its strengths along with the main demands from the target audience in this market. This included refreshed messaging, localised campaigns, and a stronger digital presence to reintroduce the branch to the market, I also coordinated with sales to ensure consistency between marketing promises and customer experience. Result: This branch not only gained traction but turned over a 10x profit increase from the previous year - a clear sign that aligning marketing with the company's pivot delivered tangible business results. Most Challenging Aspect: The hardest part was overcoming the branch's legacy reputation as "less competitive." Internally, it required shifting perceptions so teams saw it as a viable growth area; externally, it meant rebuilding trust and interest in the market. Consistent, transparent communication was essential in making that shift along with consistent communication and educating each branch within the market one by one, showing dedication and commitment.
We successfully aligned our marketing strategy with broader business objectives during a major company pivot by starting with a clear understanding of the new goals and audience. Before making any tactical changes, we worked closely with leadership to define the company's updated vision, key markets, and success metrics so that every marketing move supported the larger direction. The most challenging aspect was reshaping existing campaigns and messaging without losing the momentum we had built. We had to phase out content, ads, and offers that no longer fit the pivot while keeping current customers engaged and confident in the brand. Balancing immediate revenue needs with the long-term shift required careful planning and constant communication across teams. In the end, aligning strategy with the new objectives ensured that marketing was not just promoting products but driving the overall business transformation. This approach kept the transition smooth for customers and positioned the company strongly in its new market.
When we pivoted Tudos.no from being primarily a reseller to developing our own premium private-label products, we had to fundamentally realign our marketing strategy with this new business direction. Rather than simply competing on product range, we shifted our campaigns to build brand authority, create compelling storytelling, and foster customer loyalty. The biggest challenge we faced was balancing short-term sales targets with long-term brand equity. Marketing investments in SEO, content creation, and community building don't deliver immediate returns, which required genuine patience from our leadership team. However, this strategic patience aligned perfectly with our broader business objectives of achieving higher profit margins and market differentiation. Looking back, this alignment between marketing strategy and business goals has proven invaluable to our success through the transition.
We were servicing a popular business in the media and publications industry when they decided to pivot to a different sub-niche for long-term growth. The main business to date has been publishing content for individuals seeking to improve their business acumen or make informed business decisions. The new target group was startup founders and small business owners who wanted to grow their businesses and get funding. The pivot meant a totally new audience while still providing value to the original one. This was the most challenging aspect, where we needed to plan our campaigns, content, and future strategies to convert new audiences into paid users while retaining the original paid users. Our older market strategy and ads were no longer useful, but we still needed the older audience. to stay subscribed to the publication. And what we did was: we started publishing content that lured the older audience into wannabe business owners and startup founders. This continued for about 6 weeks until finally maojority of the older paid users decided to stay subscribed to this big change.