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Simplicity: Why You're Too Smart for Your Own Good

Simplicity: Why You're Too Smart for Your Own Good

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Summary

The argument is a counterintuitive one: the thing holding most experienced marketers back isn't a lack of knowledge or skill. It's something they'd never think to look for. The episode opens with a challenge, think of someone in your life who isn't as smart as you, yet is more successful, less stressed, and more free, and then builds the case for why that gap exists and what's actually responsible for it.

In this week's podcast, Casey explores a pattern that shows up constantly in fractional CMO practices: smart people taking on more, adding more, learning more, and wondering why they can't break through. The answer isn't more information. The episode makes the case that there's one quality doing more work than intelligence ever could, and most high-performers are actively avoiding it.

Key Topics Covered:

  • Why intelligence can become a ceiling instead of an asset
  • Client volume and the hidden cost of too many relationships
  • Dunbar's number and what it means for your practice
  • Replacing clients vs. adding clients to grow revenue
  • Simplicity in contracts, payment terms, and rates
  • Why niche context-switching keeps you thin and underdelivering
  • No partners, no complex subcontracting arrangements
  • How to stop taking on work that doesn't fit just because it's money
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