The challenge (and fun part!) of marketing is that in order to be effective, it must keep reinventing itself.
Old strategies lose their punch because platforms are oversaturated, and available data sets overexploited.
Marketing bombards us all day long, both online and in real life.
To get an idea, most people only remember up to a tenth of the ads they’ve seen in the past 24 hours according to an advertising trends report from marketing research firm Provoke Insights. The biggest hurdle is to get people to pay attention. To achieve that, your targeted marketing must break through the background noise with something fresh.
Let’s take a look at what we can learn from resonance marketing and how AI and privacy-first strategies are reshaping this approach.
Have you noticed your sales figures suddenly drop off, stagnating your business growth?
There are several reasons why this could occur. Some of the most common ones are:
As you can see, the latter two revolve around marketing issues, which is the focus of this guide.
In response to an unrelenting pressure to evolve, most marketing strategies actually end up following the newest popular trends, and in doing so, obsolesce much faster.
Some years ago, email outreach enjoyed high response rates. But as cold contacting leads became the norm, effectiveness rapidly declined. According to a recent survey from the Emailtooltester team, average open rates for cold emails are between 40% and 60%, while average response rates hover between 1% and 5%. The culprits for these low response rates? Inbox saturation and sophisticated spam filters powered by machine learning. Yikes.
Social media turned into the new medium of choice for casting a wide net in the 2010s. Wide net campaigning on Facebook and equivalent platforms resulted in two things: advertisements weren’t customized enough to effectively hook leads, and everyone was seeing ads aimed at everyone else. The total platform swamp encouraged users to skip past all paid content on their feeds, so even if an ad came along showcasing a product they could really benefit from, it wouldn’t grab their attention.
LinkedIn connect requests took the marketing world by storm a few years ago, until users became so annoyed by the resulting blend of organic and paid connections that the platform itself started imposing heavy restrictions on how many connection requests an account could make in a week.
Most recently, we find ourselves back on social media, but this time, with a rise in focus on crafting thought-leadership content and sending direct messages to a narrower pool of potential leads. For this to be effective, DMs required quite a high touch approach that didn’t always see ROI in the long run.
A prominent figure building in public and sharing thought-leadership content regularly on Linkedin is RB2B's Adam Robinson. His authenticity and hot takes on Linkedin have helped him skyrocket RB2B's growth to 5.7M ARR in under 18 months. But building a thought-leadership content engine that results in leads is not an overnight process and requires a significant commitment from senior-level executives in order to be effective.
Another trend that has been dominating 2025 has been the sudden interest in Reddit as a marketing channel. Why? Because LLMs have been utilizing content from Reddit threads in their answers to high-intent queries. Thus, being present on Reddit and in those conversations as a brand can yield high success when done thoughtfully. For example, for us at Baremetrics, we're constantly on the lookout for any conversations in SaaS communities around metrics. Providing our two cents on the topic helps establish us as an industry leader when it comes to SaaS metrics and tracking.
The short answer is, you can’t. Not forever, in any case. As available technology, and just as importantly, culture itself evolves, marketing either adapts to meet users where they are, or simply becomes irrelevant. So just like Taylor Swift, we'll keep going through different marketing "eras" to stay top of mind.
There is, however, one constant in these changing tides: resonance.
Resonance marketing emphasizes brand identity and shared values over the logistical aspects of a traditional sales pitch (such as price point, performance, ROI etc).
Here we’ll break down how to use the foundations of resonance marketing to create campaigns that hit home every time.
Whether you’re branching out into new target segments, or you have a limited audience pool you’ve already exhausted and are contacting again, there are 3 facets to develop in your campaigning:
Relevance
Relevance breaks down into two factors: who, and when.
First of all, your campaign needs to target the right audience, i.e. your Ideal Customer Profile, or ICP.
You’ll need to find out who these people are, run data analyses into your prospects, and interview converted ICPs for their patterns that you can use to run projections.
For a step by step guide, here is a detailed handbook on developing your ICPs. And here is a how-to for analyzing user behavior with customer segmentation using Baremetrics.
The second factor, timing, takes into consideration any major inflection points in a prospect’s work-life that could signal a good time to strike.
Conduct research into the public data of leads to find any of the following changes:
If you’ve reached out to a lead before but they didn’t convert, it’s worth taking another shot if they, or their business, recently underwent some major changes.
That said, first impressions do count, so you’ll want to switch up something significant in your campaign’s relevance, reach, or message, to trigger a different outcome.
Reach
Reach is no longer about just finding contact information—it's about creating multi-touch, omnichannel experiences that meet potential prospects where they naturally engage.
To develop these memorable campaigns, you can utilize strategies like:
The key is understanding not just where your prospects are, but when and how they prefer to engage with your content.
Message
The third aspect of resonance marketing is your campaign message itself.
In order to be effective, this process requires rigorous testing. As you implement incremental changes, be meticulous about documenting the exact impact of each tweak you make.
Here are some of the elements you should conduct A/B testing on:
The results of these tests, if segmented correctly, should speak for themselves. If by the 10th iteration you’re not seeing notable results, this is an indication that there is something fundamentally wrong with your campaign thesis. It’s time to take a big step back and look at the key assumptions you’re making.
If you need a fresh perspective, here are some alternative marketing strategies to check out.
Your message should be true to your brand identity above all else. The purpose of this testing process is to identify what matters most to your prospects, so you can emphasize those features during outreach.
High impact campaigns are founded on quality of research, leveraged expertly.
Mined data serves the following purposes:
Data sets, on the whole, are extremely overexploited. The more easily data can be accessed, even for a fee, the more people will already have leveraged it.
The better your detective work, the more valuable the data you retrieve will be. Make sure you’re doing this primarily for high value ICPs though, so you’re seeing good returns.
Where to look
There’s a plethora of tools out there to help you locate the data you need on your ICPs. Different platforms specialize in different types of data sets. Here is a useful guide on using sales data tools for SaaS businesses.
Fundraising data:
Technographic data (what tools a company is using):
Job change data:
Review page data:
For startups with limited budgets, consider starting with tools like Apollo.io or Clay, which consolidate multiple data sources into unified platforms. These tools offer excellent ROI for early-stage companies looking to build sophisticated outreach campaigns without breaking the bank.
How to interpret data
The best way to interpret the data you’ve uncovered is segment by segment. Here’s a guide on how to do that using Baremetrics’ large scope of metrics. Try it out for yourself using the free 14 day trial here.
Some of your best data sets on prospects are already in your lap – simply look into the features and behaviors of your current customer base. Many of these qualities will be replicated among your leads.
This data is so valuable for two reasons: you have the opportunity to interview your clients directly, and you’re the only one with access to that exact data set.
How to leverage data sets effectively
The fuller the picture you have on your targets, the more you can adapt your approach. This gives your messaging the best chance to truly resonate with its audience.
The most effective high touch campaigns stitch together all available information to create an approach that, to the prospect, feels like it was custom-made only for them.
Here’s an example of a customized email automation that plugs in all this data:
As you can see, this cold email pulls information about the prospect’s company size, ad spend, and top customers, to create a highly customized approach. Sprinkle in some common pain points and bold promises – that’s powerful!
Research is an invaluable investment into your business growth.
Resonance marketing requires your outreach to be relevant to prospects in timing and intent, have an effective reach, and wield a strong message.
And at the core of any powerful, 3-dimensional campaign, lives data.
The foundation of successful resonance marketing remains rooted in deep research that reveals not just who your prospects are, but when they're experiencing inflection points that signal readiness to buy. By tracking job changes, funding rounds, new hires, and technology adoptions (now with the help of AI), you can ensure your relevance hits at exactly the right moment.
Your reach must extend beyond single channels to meet prospects where they naturally engage—whether that's through intent data platforms, multi-channel content strategies, or community-led growth in the spaces where your ICPs seek peer advice.
The most successful organizations will be those that combine meticulous research with authentic connection, leveraging data and AI tools not as a crutch but as a compass that guides them toward genuine value alignment with their customers.