by David Meyer
It’s January – the month of optimism. New plans, new goals, new commitments, and the annual belief that this will be the year everything comes together in the best possible way.
So naturally, I’m starting it by spending three hours concepting on and writing this article. And as a marketing professional and business owner, the honest question that crosses my mind is: what’s the return on this?
Here’s the truth: we measure everything we publish on our website and track the data because the data matters. But even with all the dashboards in the world, not everything produces a tidy, measurable win – at least, not right away.
Process > payoff.
You’ve heard the classic advice: “Create valuable content, build thought leadership and the leads will come.” But the reality is that the majority of content barely makes a ripple. Not because it’s poorly written, but because the world is loud. Yet that small fraction that does land? It lands hard enough to justify all the rest.
So why keep writing when the payoff is uncertain? Partly because someone might read it at exactly the right moment. But partly because the act of writing sharpens thinking. In real time, as words take shape, clarity emerges. Content isn’t only valuable for the audience; sometimes it’s valuable because it forces the creator to think more deeply.
Months from now, a prospect may tell us, “We’ve been following your stuff.” Will it be because of this piece? Or something we posted six months before? The data might give us signals, but attribution is rarely a straight line. It’s more like tracing footprints in new snow: the obvious ones guide us, the faded ones tease us, and the biggest leaps forward often leave no print at all.
The fine art of showing up.
But there is one metric you can measure: consistency. Showing up, again and again, compounds. People might not remember your best article, but they’ll remember that your voice never disappeared. That reliability builds credibility in ways no dashboard can fully explain.
So the real question this January isn’t, “Will this specific piece make money?” It’s, “What happens if we stop showing up?” Because your competitors won’t. Your customers won’t. And silence has a way of costing more than effort.
Somewhere in writing this, I realized I gained something too: focus, alignment, a reminder of why the work matters. That alone made the time worthwhile. And if you’ve made it all the way here, maybe it offered something valuable to you, too.
Happy New Year. Let’s keep showing up.
Content Authenticity Statement: 90% of this content was written by a human. AI was used for idea shaping and final editing support.
David Meyer is the Chief Marketing Officer at Spoke Marketing. Spoke Marketing (www.spokemarketing.com) provides fully-integrated marketing and sales programs that define and activate the customer buyer journey.