

5 Ways To Diagnose Your Marketing Problems (Before You React)
Ever walk into your analytics “room” and see a metaphorical puddle on the floor—traffic down, leads slowing, an offer underperforming—and feel the urge to grab a mop and do something… anything? That split second before you react is where better decisions are made. This week, let’s turn that moment into a repeatable system you can use any time the numbers aren’t lining up.
1) Spot: Name the specific problem with precision.
Vague problems lead to vague fixes. State what’s wrong clearly and anchor it to a metric.
For example: “Organic traffic is down 22% week over week,” or “Contact form completions fell from 18 to 7 this month.”
Then, take a look downstream. If leads fell, did total visits change? If visits didn’t change, did the conversion rate change? That laddering keeps you focused on the actual issue.
Story: A home services company thought “SEO tanked.” A quick check showed traffic was steady—but the appointment form began erroring on mobile after a theme update. Visibility wasn’t the issue; page experience was. Naming the right problem saved a week of rewriting content that wasn’t broken.
2) Sniff: Rule out the obvious with quick checks.
Before dashboards and deep dives, do an overview yourself. Open your key page on a phone and a laptop. Does it load slowly? Is the primary call-to-action pushed below the fold? Does the form hesitate during submission?
Then scan what changed recently: ad budgets, bid strategies, audience targeting, email cadence, theme or plugin updates. You’re looking for the last plausible change that could create the symptom you’re seeing.
Story: An e-commerce shop saw cart abandonments spike. Five minutes of “sniffing” revealed a shipping estimator added an extra step on mobile. Removing it restored conversions by the afternoon. No crisis meeting required.
3) Source: Trace the issue back to where it began.
Ask three questions in order.
- Which channel changed—search, paid, social, or email?
- Which pages are affected—site-wide or a few specific landing pages?
- Which audience segment felt it most—mobile vs. desktop, new vs. returning, a particular geography?
Each slice either confirms a hypothesis or eliminates one. These are useful constraint that point to the right area and the right fix.
Story: A clinic saw new-patient bookings drop. Nothing online had changed—but the owner had just rolled out a new phone system with an auto-attendant that routed overflow calls to voicemail during lunch. The channel was phone, the touchpoint was the call flow (not the website), and the segment hit hardest was midday, first-time callers. Most didn’t leave messages; they called the next clinic on Google. The team adjusted the call queue, added a live-answer overflow service for 11:30–1:30, and restored bookings within the week.
4) Size: Decide whether it’s a blip or a blaze.
Not every dip deserves a war room. Compare the number week-over-week to ask, “Did something just change?” Compare month-over-month to spot patterns and trends. Compare year-over-year to account for seasonality. Layer in campaign windows and promotions to see whether the change is explainable.
Story: A B2B firm panicked over a 30% drop in demo requests the first week of January. Year-over-year showed the same pattern every January. They logged it as seasonal, launched a mid-month webinar, and focused energy where it mattered.
5) Sequence: Fix in the right order—simple first, then surgical.
Once you know what’s wrong, the order you tackle it matters. Think of it like this: first stop the drip, then wipe the floor, then figure out why it happened.
Start with the obvious fix you can do right now. Move to quick wins that remove friction. Then handle the foundations that prevent repeats. Save experiments for last, once things are stable.
Obvious → Quick wins → Foundations → Experiments
Story: A studio’s inquiries dipped. They first returned missed calls the same day (obvious), then added a same-day callback promise (quick win), updated their intake routine so midday calls never go to voicemail (foundation), and only after that tested a new promo (experiment). Results picked up because the fixes happened in the right order.
Want help diagnosing your marketing problems?
If you’re at the “puddle on the floor” moment, we’ll walk this framework with you—diagnose, prioritize, fix, and iterate. Fill out the form below, and we’ll get back with you to create a marketing plan tailored to your site, channels, and goals.
Jason Bass is a marketing strategist, community builder, and founder who turns bold ideas into real momentum. At the helm of Jason Hunter Design, Pixel Partner Digital, and The Citizen, he brings clarity to chaos, structure to startups, and firepower to brands ready to scale. Known for his visionary thinking and down-to-earth leadership, Jason helps businesses grow — not just in revenue, but in purpose and impact.
