Most founders come to a marketing conversation with a tactic already in mind.
Better website. More leads. A LinkedIn strategy. Maybe an AI tool that’ll finally make content easy. The tactic changes. The assumption underneath it doesn’t: the marketing needs to change.
After 20 years doing this work with small businesses, here’s what I’ve actually seen. The marketing is rarely the first thing that needs to change. The founder’s clarity is.
Not because anything is wrong with the founder. Most of the founders who ask for marketing help are working hard and carrying a lot. The problem isn’t effort. It’s that they’ve lost the ability to see their own business clearly.
Why that happens
Five years in. Ten years in. You’ve absorbed a hundred opinions about what your business should be, and somewhere along the way you drifted from what it actually is.
You’re making decisions based on the business you remember, or the one you wish you had. Every new strategy you install inherits that confusion.
I watched a founder last year build out a full content strategy, hire a new agency, and rewrite their website. Same results they’d been getting for 3 years. The strategy was fine. The clarity underneath it wasn’t there.
The Founder Portrait: 4 questions most founders avoid
Before you touch strategy, before you change anything about your marketing, do this. One hour. A blank page. Four questions.
What’s actually working right now, and how do I know?
Not what you’re doing. What’s working. There’s a difference, and most founders can’t answer it with specifics.
“Working” has a real definition: it produces revenue, a measurable input to revenue, or it reduces what you’re spending to acquire revenue. Everything else is activity. If you can’t name what’s working and point to the evidence, that’s a starting point.
What am I doing out of habit, guilt, or optimism that I should stop?
Every business carries weight it doesn’t need. A service line that never quite worked. A customer segment that costs more than it pays. A channel somebody told you to be on 3 years ago.
The honest answer is almost always 3 to 5 specific things. Naming them is the hard part. Stopping them is what creates room for real growth.
Where is my business actually making money, and where am I pretending it does?
This one requires looking at revenue by segment, by service, by customer, with gross margin attached. Most founders have a story about their business that’s drifted from the numbers. The numbers don’t drift.
I’ve seen this pattern enough times that I look for it now. The founder thinks they run a 3-service-line firm. The numbers say they run a single-service-line firm with 2 expensive hobbies attached.
Who am I as a founder, and what do I want this business to give me?
This is the question most marketing work completely skips. Growth is one possible goal. Some founders want a business that supports a specific life. Some want an exit. And those are different businesses with entirely different marketing systems.
If you don’t know which one you’re building, no strategy can serve you. It’ll always optimize toward the wrong target.
What the Founder Portrait actually does
These 4 questions together produce what I call the Founder Portrait. It’s not a document you share or hand off. It’s the ground you stand on when you do the strategic work that comes next.
Without it, every downstream decision is made from an unstable position. The messaging, the ideal client definition, the channels, the campaigns: all of it inherits whatever you were confused about when you built it.
You can only build a system on what you actually know. The Founder Portrait is how you find out.
One thing to do this week
Sit down for one hour with a blank page and answer the 4 questions. No team. No advisors. No AI. Just you and the page.
Don’t try to turn the answers into a plan yet. The work this week is to see the business clearly. Everything else comes after that.
The Founder Portrait is the starting point. The rest of the system is what comes next. I’ve put the complete framework in a new ebook: “7 Steps to Small Business Marketing Success.” It covers everything from defining your ideal client to building a referral engine that actually runs. Grab it at dtm.world/7steps.
