Why Your Campaigns and Pitches Aren’t Landing With Your Audience (and How to Fix It)

Published On: October 9, 2025|By |

Procter & Gamble launched a beauty campaign in 2025 starring virtual influencers—computer-generated avatars with perfect skin. Beauty shoppers weren’t interested in makeup advice from CGI characters, engagement tanked, and real influencers felt snubbed by the tone-deaf move.

External communications is more than press releases and social posts. It’s the bridge between your brand and the outside world, building credibility, sparking conversations, and inspiring loyalty. But when a campaign misses the mark, a brand or organization risks confusing, alienating, possibly even losing the very people they’re trying to reach.

If your messages aren’t resonating, but you have strong product or service, look beyond the what to the how. How you are framing and telling your story. From media relations to content marketing and beyond, there is no shortage of ways to reach your audience in an effective way. Below, we’ll unpack the most common communication mistakes brands and organizations make. Then we’ll show you how to land your message with your audience.

Why Do Brands Fail to Connect With Their Audience?

In a recent survey of over 4,000 U.S. consumers, 83% said they feel undervalued by brands they’re loyal to. That disconnect usually stems from one of six issues: targeting the wrong people, focusing on features instead of benefits, using the wrong channels, overcomplicating the message, forgetting emotion, or being inconsistent.
Let’s break each down.

1. You’re Talking to the Wrong Audience

The Mistake: Defining your audience as “everyone” (too broad) or over-narrowing so you exclude people who would benefit.
The Fix: Go deeper than demographics. Ask yourself: Who are we actually serving? What keeps them up at night? What problem are they trying to solve right now?
Example: A SaaS company might think their audience is “all small businesses,” but their sweet spot could be marketing managers at mid-sized agencies who need to onboard freelancers fast.

2. You’re Talking About Yourself Instead of To Them

The Mistake: Highlighting your features, milestones, or jargon without showing why it matters to the customer.
The Fix: Translate features into benefits. Here’s what that sounds like in practice:

  • “Our software integrates with over 500 apps.” ❌
  • “You’ll save hours every week because our software works with the tools you already use.” ✅

This subtle shift puts the focus where it belongs: on the audience.

3. You’re Using the Wrong Communication Channels

The Mistake: Sharing the right message in the wrong place. White papers don’t resonate with a TikTok audience, and short Instagram reels may never reach executives who rely on email newsletters or trade publications.
The Fix: Do a quick audit of where your audience actually spends time. Where do they discover new ideas? What formats do they consume most? Then tailor your content accordingly.
Example: Case in point: 73% of decision-makers and C-level execs say thought leadership is a more trustworthy way to assess companies than marketing materials or product sheets.

4. Your Message Is Too Complicated

The Mistake: Packing your communication with jargon, acronyms, or technical detail that creates friction.
The Fix: Aim for clarity over cleverness. Simplify to the core idea. Remember when Steve Jobs described the iPod as “1,000 songs in your pocket” instead of a “5GB hard drive”? That’s the difference we’re talking about.
Test: A good test: if you can’t explain it to a 10-year-old, it’s probably too complicated. Clear, plain language not only grabs attention, it builds trust by showing your audience you value their experience.

5. You’re Forgetting Emotional Connection

The Mistake: Leaning too heavily on logic, proof points, or stats without pairing them with stories that spark emotion.
The Fix: You need both logic and story working together.
Example: Nonprofits don’t just say, “we served 10,000 meals.” They tell the story of one family whose life changed because of a meal. Stories make numbers stick. You can do the same thing with customer testimonials, analogies, and case studies.

6. You’re Inconsistent Across Channels

The Mistake: Saying one thing on your website, another in press outreach, and something else on social media. Inconsistency creates confusion, and confusion erodes trust.
The Fix: Build a messaging framework. Define your brand’s key pillars, tone, and value propositions. Then apply them everywhere.
Remember: repetition builds recognition, and recognition builds trust.

How Do You Fix External Communications That Aren’t Landing?

So if your messages are falling flat, what now? Here’s the thing: connecting with your audience isn’t about shouting louder. It’s about speaking more clearly, more empathetically, and more consistently. The brands that break through aren’t necessarily the biggest or flashiest. They’re the ones that:

  • Understand their audience deeply
  • Deliver messages where people actually are
  • Communicate in language that feels human and relevant

If your external communications aren’t landing, step back and ask: Are we talking to the right people? Are we showing up in the right places? Are we speaking their language, not ours?

With a few intentional shifts, you can turn a message that’s being ignored into one that resonates and builds lasting connection.

Quick Checklist: Is Your Message Landing?

Before you hit send, ask yourself:

  • Have we clearly defined who this message is for?

  • Does it speak to their needs and pain points, not just our features?

  • Are we delivering it in the channel where they’re most likely to engage?

  • Is the message simple and easy to understand at a glance?

  • Does it connect emotionally as well as logically?

  • Is it consistent with how we show up everywhere else?

A veteran marketing and public relations specialist, Carey Kirkpatrick founded CKP in 2014. 

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