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Step 4 of the We Do Your Marketing Way
Once you know what you are promoting (Aim), who you are targeting (Archetype), and where your campaign will live (Where), the next critical factor is timing.
Even the strongest campaign will fail if it appears:
When determines readiness. Readiness determines conversion.
Human decision-making is not constant. People move through cycles of:
Your campaign must align with when the audience is most open to influence. If you interrupt at the wrong moment, you create resistance. If you appear at the right moment, you create momentum.
Timing controls:
Understanding Time-Based Behaviour Shifts
Seasonality refers to predictable changes in demand based on time of year, economic cycles, and behavioural patterns.
Different industries experience different seasonal pressure points:
Examples of Seasonal Effects:
Seasonality affects:
A campaign launched at the wrong seasonal point can underperform by default — regardless of quality.
Every Platform Operates on a Different Behaviour Cycle
Each marketing channel places the user in a different mental and behavioural state.
For example:
This means:
Good timing ensures:
Good timing ensures:
Short Bursts vs Long-Form Influence
Campaign length must align with:
These rely on:
These rely on:
Choosing the wrong campaign length results in:
Understanding How Long People Take to Decide
Not all decisions are made at the same speed. The time it takes to convert depends on:
Typical Decision Speeds:
Your campaign must match:
If you rush a slow decision-maker, you cause hesitation.
If you slow down a fast decision-maker, you lose momentum.
Different DISC profiles respond to time differently:
D-types → Fast action, low patience, urgency driven
I-types → Emotion first, excitement driven
S-types → Slow trust building, reassurance required
C-types → Long validation cycles, proof dependent
Your campaign timing must match:
Decision speed
Risk tolerance
Need for reassurance
Emotional vs logical dominance
Timing is therefore not just operational — it is behavioural.
Move to Step 5 – Reaction to engineer emotion, chemistry, and response.
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