There's a moment that happens before every client picks up the phone.
They search for you. They check your website. They scroll through your social media. They ask a friend, or increasingly an AI tool, for a recommendation. Then they forget about you for three weeks, come back, and finally decide.
It rarely happens in a straight line. And most businesses have no idea it's happening at all.
Google Calls It the Messy Middle
Google's research into buyer behaviour for high-value services found something that should fundamentally change how every small business thinks about marketing.
Before a buyer makes contact with any service provider, they need:
High-ticket buyers require all of the following before making contact:
- 7 hours of exposure to your brand
- 11 touchpoints across different content
- Presence across 4 different channels
Not one impressive website. Not one great Instagram post. Consistent, repeated exposure across multiple places, over time.
For high-ticket services like property development, construction, legal, financial advice, and professional consulting, this journey is longer and more deliberate. Buyers are making significant decisions. They're doing their research properly.
The businesses that show up consistently across multiple channels are the ones that earn the trust. The ones that show up occasionally, or not at all, simply aren't in the conversation when it counts.
The Hard Truth About Inconsistent Marketing
Most small businesses fall into one of two patterns.
The first is the burst-and-disappear. A flurry of social posts, a new website, a few emails, then silence for months while the work takes over. The problem is that buyers don't wait for you to resurface. They move on.
The second is the single-channel trap. Everything invested in one place (usually the website, sometimes Instagram) with nothing else supporting it. One channel gives people one opportunity to find you. Four channels give them eleven.
Neither pattern builds the kind of trust that generates consistent enquiries. And both are completely understandable when you're a small business running everything yourself.
Where AI Changes the Equation
Here's what's important to understand about AI in marketing: not the hype, the practical reality.
Two years ago, maintaining consistent presence across multiple channels required either a dedicated marketing team or a significant agency budget. For most small businesses, that made winning the messy middle almost impossible.
That's genuinely no longer true.
AI tools now mean that content that used to take a day takes an hour. Research that took half a day takes minutes. A marketing strategy that required a team can be mapped and executed by one person with the right tools and support.
The gap between businesses using AI well in their marketing and those ignoring it is widening, faster than most people realise. But the opportunity it creates for small businesses to compete at a level they couldn't have managed before is equally significant.
What This Looks Like in Practice
Consistent presence across your key channels doesn't mean being everywhere all at once. It means showing up regularly in the places your ideal clients actually look.
For most service-based businesses in Brisbane, that means:
A website that clearly communicates what you do and who you do it for. A Google Business Profile that appears when people search for what you offer. Social media content that demonstrates your expertise and builds familiarity over time. A regular email that keeps you front of mind with past clients and warm leads. Optimised content that surfaces when people ask Google, or AI tools, for recommendations.
None of these require a big budget. They do require consistency. And they work together in a way that no single channel can replicate on its own.
The Connection
The messy middle is not a problem you can solve with one campaign. It's a problem you solve with a sustained, consistent digital presence, built strategically and maintained month after month.
AI makes that level of consistency achievable for businesses that couldn't have managed it two years ago. But you still need the strategy, the structure, and someone to make sure it actually happens.
That's exactly where I focus my work.
If you'd like to understand what consistent, strategic marketing could look like for your business, whether you're starting from scratch or trying to make sense of what you've already got. I'd love to have that conversation.