AI
The 90% Problem

The 90% Problem: Why Your Best Marketers Are Doing Their Worst Work
There's a question no one in marketing leadership wants to answer honestly: what does your team actually do all day?
Not what they were hired to do. Not what's on their job description. What they actually spend their hours on.
If your organization is like most, the answer is data. Pulling it, cleaning it, formatting it, cross-referencing it, questioning it, re-pulling it, and then building a slide deck about it. By the time a campaign insight reaches someone who can act on it, the window has often closed.
This is the 90% problem. Nine out of every ten hours a marketing team works are spent in service of data — not in service of customers.
How we got here
Marketing didn't used to be a data job. Twenty years ago, a CMO's biggest technology decision was which agency to hire. Today, the average enterprise marketing team operates 12 to 15 tools — each generating its own data, in its own format, on its own schedule.
The promise was integration. Connect everything, see everything, optimize everything. The reality is a patchwork: a CRM that doesn't talk to your ad platform, an analytics tool that measures different things than your attribution model, and an email provider whose "engagement" metric means something entirely different than your social team's.
So what does a smart marketing team do? They hire analysts. They build dashboards. They create "data layers" and "reporting frameworks" and "single sources of truth" — which last about six months before the next tool is added and the whole thing breaks.
The hidden cost
The 90% problem isn't just about wasted time. It's about what that time displaces.
Every hour your brand strategist spends in a spreadsheet is an hour they're not studying your customer. Every afternoon your growth lead spends reconciling attribution is an afternoon they're not designing the next experiment. Every Monday your CMO spends preparing a board report is a Monday they're not thinking about where the market is going.
The cost isn't measured in hours. It's measured in the ideas that never happen.
Why dashboards didn't fix it
The dashboard era was supposed to solve this. Tableau, Looker, Power BI — they all promised to "democratize data." And they did, in a narrow sense. Now anyone can see a chart.
But seeing a chart and knowing what to do about it are entirely different things. A dashboard tells you that email open rates dropped 12% last month. It doesn't tell you why. It doesn't tell you whether that matters. It doesn't tell you what to do next. It certainly doesn't tell you whether the drop is related to the audience shift your paid team noticed on Meta last Tuesday.
Dashboards visualize data. They don't understand it.
What changes the math
The marketing teams that break out of the 90% problem don't do it by hiring more analysts or buying more tools. They do it by fundamentally changing the relationship between their team and their data.
Instead of people serving data, data starts serving people.
That means a marketing director can ask a question in plain language — "what drove the conversion spike in our Ontario segment last quarter?" — and get an answer in seconds, not days. It means that answer comes with context: here's the data, here's where it came from, here's what's changed since last time you asked.
It means the intelligence compounds. Every question asked makes the next answer better. Every correction the team makes teaches the system something new about how this specific business thinks about its specific market.
This isn't a dashboard. It's not a report. It's an intelligence layer that learns.
The 10% future
Imagine a marketing team that spends 90% of its time on strategy, creative, and customer understanding — and 10% on data. Not because they ignore data, but because the data arrives already understood, already contextualized, already connected.
That team doesn't just perform better. They think differently. They ask bigger questions. They move faster. They take risks that data-drowning teams can't afford to consider.
The 90% problem is solvable. The question is whether you'll solve it before your competitors do.
Join the AI Revolution
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Super Intelligence for your Marketing team?
2026 M-Intelligence LLC
Join the AI Revolution
Ready to unlock
Super Intelligence for your Marketing team?
2026 M-Intelligence LLC
Join the AI Revolution
Ready to unlock
Super Intelligence for your Marketing team?
2026 M-Intelligence LLC