Tag Archives: marketing

The outsider

The room is already settled by the time they speak. Those slides have been through two internal reviews. The language is clean, defensible, already halfway to sign-off. You can feel the work closing in on itself, decisions calcifying because they’ve been seen often enough to feel inevitable not necessarily because they’re right.

Then someone arrives who hasn’t been part of that loop. Sometimes it was the agency founder, drifting in late, coat still on, just finishing a call, carrying that slightly impatient calm of someone who’s seen the pattern before. Sometimes it was the strategy partner who’d been impossible to book, sitting down quietly, eyes half closed, the fug of coffee doing its work, before cutting through the thing in a sentence that made the rest of us wince. Occasionally it was the ECD, flicking through printouts, pausing just long enough to drop a few pages on the table. No speech. Just a clear, deliberate gravitational rejection of what we’d all convinced ourselves up to that point was good.

But perhaps just as often, it wasn’t experience doing the work. It was the person who shouldn’t really have been there. The graduate. The outsider. The one invited for texture and politeness rather than judgement. The one who hadn’t learned the language yet, and so couldn’t follow the careful logic the rest of the room had built. They’d ask something slightly misplaced. Pull in an example that didn’t quite belong. Miss the point, on paper. And in doing so, expose it.

These effects are rarely dramatic, there’s no grand pivot. No theatrical breakthrough. Just a tilt. A detail that no longer seems to hold water. A narrative that suddenly feels a bit too clever. Enough to loosen the grip the idea had on the people in the room.

Good teams make space for that kind of disruption. Without being theatrical or insisting on “fresh perspective”, but rather as a way of testing whether the work can survive contact with someone who hasn’t been trained to agree with it.

Most ideas don’t fail in the room. They fail later, when they meet someone, often client-side, who doesn’t share the context, the patience to go through all the supporting slides, or the goodwill.

The value of the outsider isn’t that they’re right. It’s that they haven’t yet learned how to be politely wrong in the same way as everyone else.

In the past six months, I’ve found myself brought into rooms both virtual and physical for exactly that reason. Not to lead the work, or to own it, but to sit slightly outside it. Close enough to understand the logic. Far enough away not to be bound by it. Sometimes that has meant drawing on experience. Sometimes it’s just been asking the question that feels a bit off, or pointing at the thing everyone has quietly stepped around.

The aim isn’t to derail the work. Just to tip it, slightly. Long enough to see what holds its balance, and what doesn’t.


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