Monthly Archives: October 2025

This month, we are welcoming Riley Fry, our newest intern rocker, to the team. We love asking our new employees a few questions to get to know them better! Riley is a student at The University of Arkansas studying communications and journalism. Riley is particularly excited about storytelling, media strategy, and empowering others through effective communication while she sits with us on the Porch.

What is the biggest misconception about marketing today?

One of the biggest misconceptions about marketing today is that it’s only about advertising or posting on social media. Marketing is about understanding people, using research and data to meet their needs, and building lasting relationships. It’s not just about selling a product — it’s about creating real connections and value for customers

What advice would Riley Fry give to her younger self?

No matter what, everything always works out the way it’s meant to. It’s easy to get caught up in the future or dwell on the past, but today is the only thing you can truly control. One day, you’ll look back and wish you had taken a breath and appreciated the moment you’re in right now. 

What is one of the biggest lessons you’ve learned so far at school?

Nobody has figured it out. It’s easy to feel intimidated or compare yourself to others, but comparison only steals your joy. True confidence comes from within — and while it may sound cliché, sometimes you just have to fake it until you make it. 

What does good brand strategy look like?

I think of a brand strategy as the heart of a company. It defines who you are, what you stand for, and how you connect with your audience. More than just a logo or design, a strong brand strategy combines your mission, values, and understanding of your customers to create a clear and consistent identity. It highlights what makes you unique and tells your story in a way that builds trust and lasting loyalty. 

If you could be anywhere in the world right now where would it be?

I’d love to be back in Maui, Hawaii. The summer I spent there with my family was unforgettable — it’s the most gorgeous and peaceful place on earth. The locals are so kind and genuine, and my favorite thing to do there is just sit on the beach and enjoy the calm. 

If you could go to dinner with one person living or dead who would it be?

I’d choose Dakota Johnson. I admire her as an actress and love her sense of style. She has an incredible taste in fashion, home decor, and architecture. She’s also worked with so many talented people, and grew up in a famous family, I’m sure she has some amazing stories to share. 

If you could describe Riley Fry in three words what would they be?

I’d describe myself as detailed, creative, and optimistic. 

Tell us about a major milestone in your life?

 A major milestone for me was coming to school at the University of Arkansas. Growing up in Houston, Texas, I had never experienced living in such a beautiful state or meeting so many new people. Moving here pushed me out of my comfort zone and helped me grow both personally and professionally. 

From your perspective, how does Front Porch Marketing differentiate itself from other marketing companies?

Front Porch creates a warm, close-knit environment that extends to both the clients and team. Their focus goes beyond delivering exceptional work — they’re dedicated to building lasting relationships with clients who quickly start to feel like family. 

What is a fun fact about you?

I have two pugs named Biscuit and Olive! 


Influencer marketing is peaking in the current era of social media rage that we live in. Brands that want to stay relevant and effectively reach their target audience should take full advantage of it. Three key reasons to use influencers are their ability to improve trust, adaptability, and high reach at a low cost.

Improved Trust With Influencer Marketing

One of the most valuable aspects of influencer marketing is its ability to strengthen followers’ trust in a brand. Consumers are far more likely to purchase a product after seeing a genuine review from someone they already follow than from a traditional advertisement. Today’s audiences crave authenticity, and influencer marketing delivers just that. Micro-influencers, in particular, have strong relationships with their followers and hold significant influence when recommending products or services.

Adaptability and Tailored Experiences

Influencer marketing is also highly adaptable and allows brands to create tailored experiences for specific target audiences. With so many social media platforms and content formats available, brands can adjust their strategies to fit current trends and niche communities. This flexibility helps maintain audience interest while ensuring that content feels fresh, relevant, and aligned with the brand’s message.

Use Influencer Marketing for High Reach at a Low Cost

Finally, influencer marketing is one of the most cost-effective ways to reach large audiences. Partnering with micro-influencers or even celebrity influencers can be a more affordable and efficient alternative to traditional advertising. Unlike many physical or digital ads that disappear quickly, influencer posts often remain online indefinitely, continuing to generate engagement over time. These posts also have the potential to go viral, reaching far more people than expected. Even smaller influencers tend to have higher engagement rates than many paid ads; proving that influencer marketing can deliver impressive reach and return on investment.

Brands Tool to Stay Relevant

In an age where social media shapes the way consumers connect with brands, influencer marketing stands out as one of the most powerful tools available. It not only builds trust between brands and audiences but also allows for endless adaptability across platforms, trends, and target markets. Plus, with its impressive reach at a low cost, influencer marketing provides an efficient and resourceful way to grow brand awareness and drive results. By using influencers who align with their values and audiences, brands can stay relevant, credible, and competitive in today’s fast-pace digital space.


In marketing and creative endeavors, no great creative work is the result of a single perspective. The most effective strategies and boldest ideas are born when designers, copywriters, strategists, media planners, and account managers work side by side sharing expertise and building on each other’s insights.

Collaboration on a team isn’t just a nice-to-have; it’s the backbone of an efficient process toward a successful outcome. We’re stronger together. Here’s why it matters and some ideas for how to put it into practice.

Different Disciplines, Different Lenses

Each marketing discipline brings a unique way of looking at a problem:

Designers think visually, shaping how a brand feels.

Copywriters shape the voice, ensuring words connect emotionally and persuasively.

Strategists dig into audience behavior and market dynamics.

Media planners understand where and when the message will be most effective.

Practical Tips:

  • Host a kickoff session for each project with every discipline present, so all voices are heard and all questions are asked early.
  • Encourage short “discipline spotlights” in meetings to help the team learn how others think, and what others need to do their job.

Keeping Everyone Informed for Creative Work Efficiency

Working in silos often leads to misalignment, revisions, and wasted time. By keeping everyone informed, the team can anticipate needs, adapt ideas on the fly, and avoid costly detours. Including others in input meetings with the client, and in presentations with the client can also offer more well-rounded, on-target solutions.

Practical Tips:

  • Use a shared project board (like Asana, Workfront or even Microsoft Teams) where all updates live.
  • Send out weekly recaps or hold quick status meetings outlining progress, road blocks and upcoming deadlines.
  • Assign a point person (like a project manager) to ensure information flows between disciplines.

Collaboration Sparks Creative Work

Ideas rarely come out fully formed. They grow stronger through conversation and refinement. A strategist’s data might spark a creative twist, or a designer’s mockup could inspire a headline. Notes from a client meeting can provide unique perspective and insight for those creating the work who were not at the meeting.

Practical Tips:

  • Run quick brainstorm sessions with mixed disciplines, not just creatives.
  • Use tools like Miro for virtual idea-storming across departments.
  • Encourage team members to ask “what if?” questions, even outside their area of expertise.

Creative Work with Better Outcomes for Clients and Audiences

Collaboration on creative and marketing work leads to campaigns that feel cohesive, purposeful, and tailored to audience needs.

Practical Tips:

  • Share drafts with the whole team, not just the client-facing role, before presentation.
  • Do a quick “audience check” roundtable where each discipline explains how their piece serves the end user.
  • Build in one joint review session before final delivery to ensure cohesion.

The Human Side: Trust and Respect

When every voice is valued, people feel invested in the work. Respect and trust grow, making it easier to tackle challenges and celebrate wins together.

Practical Tips:

  • Open meetings with a “shout-out” moment where team members recognize others’ contributions.
  • Create a culture where feedback is framed as collaboration, not criticism.

Collaboration Isn’t Just About Working Together, It’s About Working Smarter

By keeping every discipline informed, inviting every perspective to the table, and nurturing open communication, you build more than solid marketing and creative work. You create partnerships, efficiency, and results that couldn’t exist any other way.


Looking back at Q3, we feel very fortunate to have talked to more small to midsize businesses and nonprofits than in Q1 and Q2 combined — there have been a lot of marketing questions asked. However, some of it isn’t good news for them.

Some prospects are seeing a decline in revenue vs the first part of the year. Others are not seeing the return on their digital ad spend they saw in the first part of the year.

And, then there are some of our favorite conversations. We love meeting new entrepreneurs ready to rock their next business venture. This audience has a different set of questions.

For those that fall into the categories above, here are some insights of our conversations, that might help you, if you are experiencing similar opportunities. Even for those business owners and leaders who aren’t in the middle of one of these scenarios, there may be a nugget to learn or ponder here.

Marketing Questions for 2025

Why are my Google fill in the blank ads not performing?

Overwhelmingly, prospective clients are coming to us because of this and asking relevant marketing questions. Note to all: Business leaders and consumers alike are now starting their searches with AI platforms like ChatGPT. Generative AI is taking over the discovery phase.

Whereas consumers used to start with a keyword search on Google, 68% of shoppers across the world have used AI tools like ChatGPT to shop, according to a report published by creative agency VML. So, now the lines are blurred between search as a brand marketing function and a performance marketing one.

Also, if your Google Local Service Ads (LSA) are not working, why did you notice this and not your current agency? There are a myriad of reasons why they are not performing. And your agency should fix this problem. Not you. Ask them this marketing question.

Are your clients seeing a decline in revenue this year vs. last year?

This marketing questions is an important one. This is where you get the open, direct conversations that happen on the Front Porch. The U.S. economy has been in the s*&^ for quite a bit. Longer than most will admit. (Time to take off those orange-colored, not rose-colored glasses, which is a tip of the hat to Taylor and the release of The Life of a Showgirl.)

About a third of our clients have seen a decline. Of that third, the decline has been less than others in their industry. Why? Our clients market onward. These business owners and leaders haven’t cut the marketing budgets. And it’s showing!

Reality check, people. The spending on all the things: consumer goods, professional services, hospitality, travel, etc., after the pandemic was fabulous. But, as hopefully most of you have realized, it is time we normalize. And now, driven by macroeconomic uncertainty, tariffs and other factors, businesses and consumers are holding on to their cash.

How do I distinguish my business in an oversaturated category?

Recently, a prospect launching a business consultancy emailed this marketing question to us — after our initial meeting and several discovery calls.

My response, thank you for asking, was this: We take you through a branding process to ensure that your brand is both differentiating and emotionally relevant to your best target customer or client in this case.

As a famous person recently said, “I’m in the business of human emotion.”

All of us as business owners, leaders and champions of our brands are in the business of human emotion. Human connection, along with clarity and conviction of your brand will make you rise above. Even in an oversaturated category.

At the end of the day, automation and AI are happening whether you want them to or not. However, if your brand isn’t defined, your business is way behind the curve. And if it is and you are not delivering on it at every touchpoint, we can help you get there.

Want Your Own Answers to These Three Marketing Questions?

Whether your marketing questions are about ads, revenue or branding, or something else entirely, you deserve to have someone help you find the answers. Knowing is the first step down a new, more successful journey on your company’s marketing path.