The most expensive line item in marketing is ego.
You scrutinize every line item. But the largest expense in marketing remains invisible, a phantom on your balance sheet. It’s a fundamental challenge few ever recognize. Random thought from 35 years in this game. The best clients I’ve ever worked with weren’t the ones sitting on massive budgets. Nope. They were the ones capable of sitting in a room and admitting they didn’t know what they didn’t know. Ego is the most expensive line item in any marketing budget. It just never shows up on the invoice. I see it constantly. You probably do too. It manifests as friction. It’s the refusal to kill a project because a senior leader feels personal ownership over it, even when the market clearly doesn’t care. Or forcing a strategy that worked ten years ago onto a system that operates by completely different physics today. When you operate with false certainty to protect your status, you introduce massive drag into the system. You stop the flow of valid information. You are effectively paying a premium to maintain an illusion. → Humility is actually an efficiency mechanism → Admitting ignorance clears the path for data I used to think my value was just the strategy itself. The “big idea.” But after decades of doing this, I’ve realized that half the work is just removing the psychological blockages that prevent execution. If you can’t say “I don’t know” during a strategy session, you aren’t leading. You’re just expensive noise. What’s the biggest “ego cost” you’ve seen in a project? Like & Comment if you’d rather work with curious people than “experts.” 🧠 Contact Us Name * First Last * Last Email * Subject * My Current Site: I’d Like Info About * Models HeadshotsTeam PhotosProduct PhotograpyVideo ProductionWeb designBrandingEmarketingApp DevelopmentSocial Media MarketingSearch Engine Marketing Message * Captcha…



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