#1
How the top 1% of marketers think
Let’s play a game:
You’re the CMO of Polymarket. You want to run subway ads in NYC. What do you do?
Think about it for a second.
...
Many marketers would:
Google “best subway ad campaigns” for inspiration
Ask the agency for specs
Make something clever (or reuse an existing ad)
Put it up
Done
That’s fine.
Polymarket did something smarter… 🧠
They went and looked at how people REACTED to previous subway ads. And they found this:
I wrote about Friend.com’s subway disaster a few months ago. People hated the “AI friend” idea so much they vandalized almost every ad.
Now here’s where most marketers stop. 🛑
They see that and think: “Ok let’s not be controversial. Let’s make ads people WON’T scribble on.”
That’s level 1 thinking.
Polymarket went level 9000.
They looked at the Friend.com vandalism and thought:
“What if we WANT people to write on our ads?”
So they made ads that literally invite defacement:
Look at this beauty: controversial bets in big font, TONS of white space, and grid lines like a school notebook.
Polymarket basically said: “Write here. We dare you.” 💡
Now every time someone scribbles on a Polymarket ad → they’re making free content. Because people take photos and debate online.
The vandalism IS the campaign.
The big takeaway:
❌ Lazy marketers study other campaigns to avoid their mistakes.
✅ Great marketers ask: “Can I turn that mistake into a feature?”
My take: Next time you’re planning any campaign, go study how audiences REACTED to similar campaigns. If there’s a negative reaction that keeps showing up, ask yourself: is there a way to make that reaction work FOR me? The best marketers I know do this instinctively.
That’s the difference between good marketers and f*cking exceptional ones.
#2
This company tried one of my favorite marketing ideas… and blew it
Typos and “mistakes” in your marketing are incredible attention magnets.
It proves a human was involved.
But this week a major brand crossed a line with it (and got cancelled) ❌
Here’s the full story + the huge mistake they made: