A few years ago, I sat in a brand review meeting where the PR team presented their campaign, the digital team presented theirs, and the brand/events team presented theirs. Three separate decks. Three different taglines. Three versions of what the company supposedly stood for (or not).
Nobody had planned it that way. It just happened because no one had talked to each other. People reading this will understand how common this phenomenon is. That meeting stuck with me, because I’ve seen the same thing play out at companies of all sizes. A beautifully crafted LinkedIn post that sounds nothing like the website. A product launch email that uses completely different language than the sales deck. It’s not that any one piece is bad. It’s that together, they don’t add up to anything.
That’s the real problem integrated marketing is trying to solve. And it’s harder than it sounds. Creating one narrative for every platform which is led by different leaders with big ego is a nightmare (with probably Ted Bundy in it).
“Integrated” Doesn’t Mean “Identical”
I want to clear something up, because this is where a lot of teams go wrong. Like seriously.
Integrated marketing doesn’t mean you post the same caption everywhere. Nobody wants to read your LinkedIn press release reformatted as an Instagram story. What it actually means is that whether someone finds you through a Google search, a YouTube review, a tweet, or a conversation with your sales rep they should walk away with the same feeling about your brand. The same sense of what you stand for.
Think about how Patagonia does it. Their ads don’t scream “buy our jackets.” Their website has essays about environmental activism. Their CEO has given money away. Their store staff are hikers and climbers who actually believe in the product. Every single touchpoint, from a hangtag on a fleece to a full-page newspaper ad, says the same thing: we care more about the planet than we care about selling you stuff. You don’t have to read a mission statement to get it. You just feel it.
That’s what brand consistency actually looks like in the wild.
The Customer Journey Is Messier Than Any Funnel Diagram
Here’s what the textbooks don’t tell you: customers don’t move through your funnel in order. They don’t see your awareness ad, then click your retargeting banner, then convert on day 14 like your attribution model predicts.
They see your Instagram reel while waiting for coffee. They forget about you. Six weeks later, a colleague mentions your name. They Google you at 11pm and land on a blog post from 2019. They watch a competitor’s comparison video on YouTube. They get a cold email from your sales team that feels nothing like the blog post they just read.
At every single one of those moments, your brand is being judged. And if each touchpoint tells a slightly different story premium here, casual there, urgent in the email, philosophical on the website people notice. Maybe not consciously, but they do. Trust erodes in ways that are hard to trace back to any one thing.
This is why the “but our social team and our PR team are different departments” argument doesn’t hold up. Your customers don’t know or care about your org chart.
Every Channel Has a Different Job
That said, you can’t treat all platforms the same way and you shouldn’t try.
When a fintech startup I worked with was launching a new product, we mapped out exactly what each channel was supposed to do on the customer journey:
- Search ads captured people who already knew they had the problem we solved
- LinkedIn content-built credibility with decision-makers who were still in “just researching” mode
- PR gave us third-party validation, so we weren’t just talking about ourselves
- Email kept existing customers warm and gave them early access
- The website had to do the heavy lifting explain everything, build trust, answer objections
The messaging wasn’t identical across all of these. The tone on LinkedIn was more thoughtful and a little personal. The search ads were blunt and benefit led. The PR angle was about market trends, not product features. But the underlying story, why this product existed, who it was for, what made it different was the same everywhere.
The channels were different instruments. The song was the same.
The Part Most Teams Skip: Alignment Before Amplification
Here’s the uncomfortable truth about most marketing problems I’ve seen, they’re not marketing problems. They’re communication problems.
The reason your brand message is inconsistent across channels is usually because the people running those channels haven’t agreed on what the message is. The social team is optimizing for engagement. The PR team is chasing coverage. The content team is chasing SEO. Performance marketing is chasing conversions. Everyone is doing their job. Nobody is telling the same story.
The fix isn’t a style guide (though that helps). It’s a conversation ideally before a campaign launches, not after where everyone agrees on the central idea. Not a tagline, not a list of approved adjectives. The actual point of what you’re trying to communicate, and why anyone should care.
Once that’s clear, the rest becomes a translation exercise. How does this idea live on Twitter versus a white paper versus a sales pitch? The medium changes. The message doesn’t.
How to Know If It’s Working
One of the better signals I’ve found: ask someone who’s had five or six touchpoints with your brand, what they think you do and why you’re different. If they can’t answer clearly, or if different people give wildly different answers, you have a consistency problem.
Beyond that, there are some useful things to track whether PR coverage is driving branded search, whether content is improving lead quality, whether campaigns actually shift brand perception over time. These take patience and decent attribution setup, but they’re worth doing. Integrated marketing isn’t just a creative philosophy. It has to justify itself in the numbers too.
The Bottom Line
The brands that people trust and talk about without being prompted aren’t the ones that spent the most or had the cleverest ads. They’re the ones that showed up the same way, every time, everywhere. Not boring. Not robotic. Just clear.
Consistency, done well, isn’t a constraint on creativity. It’s what makes creativity actually land. Most teams know this in theory. The hard part is doing the organizational work to make it real.
(Views are personal)

















