

3 Ways to Spot What’s Getting in the Way of Business Growth
Most businesses struggle because something in their marketing process is not quite working, and it’s easier to stay busy than to stop and look at it closely. Maybe people are visiting the website but not reaching out. Maybe the content is going out, but it is not really connecting. Maybe the business is doing good work, but the message is not making that clear, fast enough.
This is usually where growth gets uncomfortable. Not because the business is failing, but because the next step is less about adding something new and more about being honest about what’s already there. We have to be willing to look at the parts that feel a little uncomfortable.
- Look at where people might be getting confused.
A lot of marketing problems are really clarity problems.
If someone lands on your website and cannot quickly tell what you do, who you help, or what they are supposed to do next, that confusion creates distance. When people feel even a little of that distance online, they usually don’t stick around to figure it out.
This is why vague messaging causes more damage than most businesses realize. A headline can sound polished and still say very little. A service page can look nice and still leave too many questions unanswered.
Before assuming you need more traffic or more content, it helps to ask a simpler question: are people understanding the business quickly enough?
- Pay attention to where trust drops off.
Not every marketing issue is about visibility. Sometimes people are finding you just fine, but they aren’t feeling confident enough to take the next step. That gap typically comes down to trust.
If the website feels dated, the process feels vague, or the proof is hard to find, people hesitate.
They may like what they see, but they are still looking for reassurance. They want to know that the business is credible, that the experience will be smooth, and that reaching out will not turn into more work for them.
If something in your marketing is not converting, it is worth asking whether the issue is not attention, but confidence.
- Fix what is creating friction before adding more.
When growth slows down, the natural instinct is to do more. Post more. Launch more. Add more pages. Try another platform. Sometimes, that is the right move, but sometimes, it also just creates more noise around the real issue.
If the path from interest to action feels clunky, more m’arketing’ will not solve that on its own. If the call to action is buried or the form asks too much, people drop off before momentum has a chance to build.
That’s why it makes more sense to improve the experience before expanding the strategy.
Creating A Better Way Forward
The uncomfortable parts of marketing are usually the parts worth paying attention to. Not because they’re fun to deal with, but because they reveal what’s actually getting in your way.
At JHD, that is the work underneath the work. Not just making things look better, but helping businesses get clearer, build trust faster, and create an easier path for the right people to say yes.
If you’re ready to address the uncomfortable parts and turn them into something stronger, fill out the form below. We’d be glad to help.
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.
