{"id":11132,"date":"2026-06-22T07:30:27","date_gmt":"2026-06-22T13:30:27","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/attentionmedia.io\/?p=11132"},"modified":"2026-06-22T07:30:27","modified_gmt":"2026-06-22T13:30:27","slug":"automation-doesnt-eliminate-vague-objectives","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/attentionmedia.io\/?p=11132","title":{"rendered":"Automation doesn\u2019t eliminate vague objectives"},"content":{"rendered":"<div><img fetchpriority=\"high\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"800\" height=\"450\" src=\"https:\/\/martech.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/04\/robot-storyboard-800x450.png\" class=\"attachment-large size-large wp-post-image\" alt=\"Robots reviewing a storyboard.\" \/><\/div>\n<p>It\u2019s never been easier to hand marketing work over to automation. Ad platforms will manage bidding, targeting, and creative. CRMs will score leads, trigger workflows, and suggest the next action. You can pipe performance data into an AI assistant and get optimization recommendations back before your coffee is done.<\/p>\n<p>None of that is hype. These systems genuinely work toward the targets you give them, autonomously and continuously, and the suggestions keep getting more useful.<\/p>\n<p>But notice what hasn\u2019t changed in that sentence: the targets you give them.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p>Automation doesn\u2019t fix a vague objective. A vague goal handed to a person usually produces messy results and unclear direction.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/www.semrush.com\/lp\/semrush-one\/en\/?utm_campaign=ic_semrush_one&amp;utm_source=searchengineland.com&amp;utm_medium=overlay&amp;onboarding=off\" target=\"_blank\"><\/a><\/p>\n<div>\n<div>\n<div class=\"headline-responsive\">\n        Your customers search everywhere. Make sure your brand <span>shows up<\/span>.\n      <\/div>\n<p>\n        The SEO toolkit you know, plus the AI visibility data you need.\n      <\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div>\n      <span>Start Free Trial<\/span>\n    <\/div>\n<div>\n<div>Get started with<\/div>\n<p>      <img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/searchengineland.com\/wp-content\/seloads\/2025\/11\/semrush-one.webp\" alt=\"Semrush One Logo\" \/>\n    <\/p><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p><\/p>\n<h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\">When automation does exactly what you asked<\/h2>\n<p>Hand a vague goal to AI, and you\u2019ll probably get overly confident results and an overly confident direction. The system will find the most efficient path in the wrong direction.<\/p>\n<p>Ask for higher ROAS, and automated bidding will happily lean into branded search, warmer prospects, and retargeting. People who were going to buy anyway. The ROAS climbs.<\/p>\n<p>Ask for more signups, and your campaigns may fill the funnel with low-intent volume that never activates. Signups go up.<\/p>\n<p>Ask for lower CAC, and the system will quietly shrink your reach down to the easiest audience you have. CAC drops.<\/p>\n<p>In every case, the metric improves, but the business might not. The automation did exactly what you said. It just didn\u2019t do what the business needed.<\/p>\n<h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\">Stop giving automation a direction. Give it a field.<\/h2>\n<p>\u201cWe need higher ROAS,\u201d isn\u2019t an objective. It\u2019s a direction. An optimizer will follow a direction forever, right past the point where it stops helping the business.<\/p>\n<p>What automation actually needs is a playing field. Clear sidelines on both sides. What counts as a win, and just as explicitly, what counts as a loss, even if the metric looks good.<\/p>\n<p>Take a brand running paid campaigns at an 8x ROAS. Leadership wants growth, so the real objective isn\u2019t protecting the 8x. It\u2019s acquiring more new customers. Said properly, the target sounds like this: we will accept ROAS coming down from 8x to 5x if new customer volume grows with it. Below 5x, we stop and reassess. That\u2019s the floor.<\/p>\n<p>Now the AI has room to move. It can expand audiences, chase incremental customers, and spend into less efficient territory, because someone decided in advance how much efficiency the business is willing to trade and where the line is. Without that floor, you get one of two failure modes. Either the team strangles the campaigns protecting a ROAS number nobody actually needs, or the system spends its way down with no agreed stopping point.<\/p>\n<p>The skill isn\u2019t just picking the metric. It\u2019s defining both sidelines before the game starts.<\/p>\n<h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\">Decide what to turn off before you turn it on<\/h2>\n<p>The same thinking applies to the newer AI features inside the platforms themselves, and this is where I see teams skip the homework.<\/p>\n<p>Consider an advertiser in a regulated industry, insurance for example, turning on Google\u2019s AI Max. The default posture is to enable everything and let the system optimize. But for that advertiser, the loss conditions include things no dashboard will ever flag. The AI rewriting carefully reviewed ad copy into something compliance never approved. Brand terms getting pulled into broadened matching where they don\u2019t belong.<\/p>\n<p>So the right move is deciding what to disable before enabling anything. Text customization off. Brand excluded. Then let the AI work hard inside what\u2019s left.<\/p>\n<p>That\u2019s not distrust of the technology. It\u2019s the opposite. It\u2019s giving the system a field it can sprint on. Guardrails are what make autonomy safe enough to actually use.<\/p>\n<h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\">Automating a guess is still a guess<\/h2>\n<p>One more version of this, on the CRM side, because it\u2019s easy to assume the problem only lives in paid media.<\/p>\n<p>It\u2019s very easy to build elaborate automated workflows. Trigger this email, assign this task, nudge the customer toward this action. The question that rarely gets asked is whether there\u2019s any data showing that customers who take that action actually retain better. Plenty of workflows are engineering effort layered on top of an assumption. The automation runs. The assumption was never tested.<\/p>\n<p>If you wouldn\u2019t have a person do the task manually because you can\u2019t say what it improves, automating it doesn\u2019t make it smarter. It just makes the guess run on a schedule.<\/p>\n<h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\">Where the humans go<\/h2>\n<p>None of this is an argument for less automation. The tools are good and getting better, and refusing to use them is its own kind of risk at this point.<\/p>\n<p>It\u2019s an argument about where human judgment now earns its keep. Not approving every bid change or reviewing every suggested action. The human job is owning the definition of the field: the floors, the exclusions, the tradeoffs the business will accept, and the wins that don\u2019t count. Then watching for the moments when the system is winning the metric but losing the game.<\/p>\n<p>Automation will hit whatever target you give it. That\u2019s exactly why the target deserves more thought than it\u2019s getting.<\/p>\n<p>So here\u2019s a question worth sitting with: if every automated system you run hit its number this quarter, how many of those wins would move the business forward?<\/p>\n<p>The post <a href=\"https:\/\/martech.org\/automation-doesnt-eliminate-vague-objectives\/\">Automation doesn\u2019t eliminate vague objectives<\/a> appeared first on <a href=\"https:\/\/martech.org\/\">MarTech<\/a>.<\/p>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>It\u2019s never been easier to hand marketing work over to automation. Ad platforms will manage bidding, targeting, and creative. CRMs will score leads, trigger workflows, and suggest the next action. You can pipe performance data into an AI assistant and get optimization recommendations back before your coffee is done. None of that is hype. These &hellip; <\/p>\n<p class=\"link-more\"><a href=\"https:\/\/attentionmedia.io\/?p=11132\" class=\"more-link\">Read more<span class=\"screen-reader-text\"> &#8220;Automation doesn\u2019t eliminate vague objectives&#8221;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-11132","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-uncategorized"],"featured_media_urls":{"thumbnail":["https:\/\/martech.org\/searchengineland.com\/wp-content\/seloads\/2025\/11\/semrush-one.webp",0,0,false],"medium":["https:\/\/martech.org\/searchengineland.com\/wp-content\/seloads\/2025\/11\/semrush-one.webp",0,0,false],"medium_large":["https:\/\/martech.org\/searchengineland.com\/wp-content\/seloads\/2025\/11\/semrush-one.webp",0,0,false],"large":["https:\/\/martech.org\/searchengineland.com\/wp-content\/seloads\/2025\/11\/semrush-one.webp",0,0,false],"1536x1536":["https:\/\/martech.org\/searchengineland.com\/wp-content\/seloads\/2025\/11\/semrush-one.webp",0,0,false],"2048x2048":["https:\/\/martech.org\/searchengineland.com\/wp-content\/seloads\/2025\/11\/semrush-one.webp",0,0,false],"inspiro-featured-image":["https:\/\/martech.org\/searchengineland.com\/wp-content\/seloads\/2025\/11\/semrush-one.webp",0,0,false],"inspiro-loop":["https:\/\/martech.org\/searchengineland.com\/wp-content\/seloads\/2025\/11\/semrush-one.webp",0,0,false],"inspiro-loop@2x":["https:\/\/martech.org\/searchengineland.com\/wp-content\/seloads\/2025\/11\/semrush-one.webp",0,0,false],"portfolio_item-thumbnail":["https:\/\/martech.org\/searchengineland.com\/wp-content\/seloads\/2025\/11\/semrush-one.webp",0,0,false],"portfolio_item-thumbnail@2x":["https:\/\/martech.org\/searchengineland.com\/wp-content\/seloads\/2025\/11\/semrush-one.webp",0,0,false],"portfolio_item-masonry":["https:\/\/martech.org\/searchengineland.com\/wp-content\/seloads\/2025\/11\/semrush-one.webp",0,0,false],"portfolio_item-masonry@2x":["https:\/\/martech.org\/searchengineland.com\/wp-content\/seloads\/2025\/11\/semrush-one.webp",0,0,false],"portfolio_item-thumbnail_cinema":["https:\/\/martech.org\/searchengineland.com\/wp-content\/seloads\/2025\/11\/semrush-one.webp",0,0,false],"portfolio_item-thumbnail_portrait":["https:\/\/martech.org\/searchengineland.com\/wp-content\/seloads\/2025\/11\/semrush-one.webp",0,0,false],"portfolio_item-thumbnail_portrait@2x":["https:\/\/martech.org\/searchengineland.com\/wp-content\/seloads\/2025\/11\/semrush-one.webp",0,0,false],"portfolio_item-thumbnail_square":["https:\/\/martech.org\/searchengineland.com\/wp-content\/seloads\/2025\/11\/semrush-one.webp",0,0,false]},"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/attentionmedia.io\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/11132","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/attentionmedia.io\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/attentionmedia.io\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/attentionmedia.io\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/attentionmedia.io\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=11132"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/attentionmedia.io\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/11132\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/attentionmedia.io\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=11132"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/attentionmedia.io\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=11132"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/attentionmedia.io\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=11132"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}