Storytelling

The Heart Wants What the Heart Wants

The Heart Wants What the Heart Wants

Marketing to Mind States to Move Markets Into Motion

My friend Curtis tells the story of why he bought a Dodge Ram, as opposed to any number of other trucks in its class. And it was for all the right reasons, despite what he'll tell you...

He says it was for all the WRONG reasons. But, as Will Leach explains in Lesson 2 of Season 3 of Bullhorns and Bullseyes, it was for all the RIGHT reasons. And understanding the behavioral psychology behind this and ever other purchase might just unlock your marketing potential…

Season 3, Episode 1: THE TRAP

Season 3, Episode 1: THE TRAP

The New Season of Bullhorns & Bullseyes Is Here. Let's Talk About the Trap You're Already In.

We’ve been quiet for four months. Not because Curtis and I ran out of opinions. Because we decided that if Season 3 were going to exist, it had to be something you could actually use. Not a collection of loosely connected conversations. A sequence. Eight episodes. Each one building on the last. Starting with this one. »

By the end, you’ll have something that works whether you listen once or come back to it in a year.

Think of Season 3 as an 16-week semester of higher education, with each episode serving both as a discrete learning module and as a sequential building block leading up to the final exam. There is a purposeful order to things this year. And we’re relying once again on some of the best and brightest minds in marketing and business development to help us advance the learning.

Make Your Content Engine Purr

Make Your Content Engine Purr

A New Model for Content Marketing in 2026 and Beyond

Two years ago, simply showing up was enough.

If you published consistently, demonstrated expertise, and shared thoughtful perspectives over time, you separated yourself from most of the market. Content marketing worked because not everyone was doing it well — or doing it at all.

Today, everyone is showing up.

And most of them are using AI to do it.

That doesn’t mean content marketing is dead. It means generic presence is dead. The problem isn’t volume. It’s believe-ability.