Failures or ‘duds’ are inevitable in the creative process. But they don’t have to be true losses. Instead, they can serve as significant learning experiences. By analyzing and understanding our mistakes, we gain insights that can inform our next moves and shape better outcomes.

Dissect what works

Instead of constantly inventing from scratch, it’s valuable to take a closer look at successful projects. Break down the elements of your creative and examine them on their own. Examine the hook, the middle part, the ending. Try changing the copy, or the color coding. Experiment with the formatting. You can even try to mix and match elements from different creatives. Every part of your creative has its own strengths and weaknesses that can be optimized. When you pull things apart, you can create a modular format that makes experimentation easy and efficient. Build on what works and keep optimizing while leaving behind the ineffective pieces. 

Get your hands dirty

A structured approach to creativity has its own merits, but there’s something to be said for pushing all that aside and trying something completely different. Give your creative team a new sandbox in which to play and let them explore “random” ideas. A change of scenery or approach is an effective way to push your own creative limitations and drive innovation. As long as you’re executing the ideas thoughtfully and within the confines of your budget and brand, don’t be afraid to get dirty. 

Refine and iterate

Once you’ve found the successful components of an otherwise dud of a campaign, now it’s time to have some fun with them. Make minor changes. Make major changes. It might be something as simple as a copy change that’s the difference between failure and success. Experiment with new color combinations or find a new hook. Take the intro of one unsuccessful piece of creative and see how it works with the ending of something more effective. This process of iteration and refinement, even if it results in more duds, ensures continual learning and growth.

After running an unsuccessful campaign, it’s an easy trap to fall in to think that you need some sweeping complex solution. To wipe the slate clean and start from scratch. But the reality is that simple changes can often have a big impact. Making a few tweaks here and there can be the difference between success and failure. And even if the next round isn’t a success, that is another opportunity to keep learning and iterating. In the race to innovate and optimize, keeping things simple is often the way to go. 

Book a complimentary consultation with one of our experts
to learn how MAVAN can help your business grow.


Want more growth insights?

Thank you! form is submitted

[hubspot type=”form” portal=”20951211″ id=”9c538ed2-fb12-45f1-a573-ad7953c058cc”]


Related Content

  • Infographic titled "The Testing Trap" explaining why most B2B SaaS A/B testing fails. Two cards at the top contrast The Problem (occasional experiments with no success criteria and no way to close the loop on nine-month sales cycles, causing signal to collapse into noise) with The Solution (build infrastructure for learning, not a one-off test, using four components every time). A highlighted callout below recommends starting with paid creative and landing pages to get signal within two weeks, noting that product testing is valuable but slow and resource-intensive. Beneath that, four interlocking puzzle pieces present The 4 Components of a Real Paid Creative Testing System: Foundation (define ICP clusters before writing a single ad), Fuel (separate your testing budget from your performance budget), Variables (define your hooks explicitly before launch), and Discipline (set a conclusion timeline before the test begins, not after).

    How Do You Build a Real A/B Testing Framework for B2B SaaS?

    A functioning B2B SaaS experimentation program is built around paid creative testing and landing page optimization. Even with long sales cycles, you can know if an experiment is heading in the right direction within two weeks — as long as you track from first touch all the way through to closed contract.

    Read More
  • A MAVAN-branded infographic on a dark navy background titled "Why Is My B2B Attribution Broken?" Two side-by-side cards identify the two primary failure modes: "The Last-Touch Trap" — your CRM credits the final touchpoint before conversion with the entire sale, defunding the channels that built the relationship; and "The Frankenstein Stack" — a measurement system built piece by piece under resource pressure whose parts don't communicate, with different funnels running different attribution models and lead sources entered inconsistently. Below a bold "How Do I Fix It?" headline, two matching cards present the remedies: "Fixing The Last-Touch Trap" recommends multi-touch attribution, distributing credit across the full sequence of touchpoints from first ad to signed contract; "Fixing The Frankenstein Stack" recommends a full-stack touchpoint audit followed by a single standardized attribution model applied consistently across every channel before any new tracking is layered on top. The MAVAN logo appears in orange at the top center.

    Why Is Your B2B SaaS Attribution Broken — and How Do You Fix It?

    Most B2B SaaS attribution stacks fail in one of two predictable patterns: relying solely on last-touch data, or being bolted together piece by piece until the parts no longer communicate. The fix starts with mapping every top- to mid-funnel touchpoint in sequence and tying that complete journey back to the moment a contract closes. TLDR…

    Read More
  • Featured image for MAVAN's B2B SaaS growth playbook article, showing MAVAN VP of Growth Sam McLellan alongside a numbered list of five growth system pillars: fix your data before you scale spend, build full-funnel attribution, track CAC at the ICP level, pair GTM motions with ICPs, and run a systematic experimentation program.

    How Do You Build a B2B SaaS Growth System That Scales Beyond Founder-Led?

    The fastest-scaling B2B SaaS companies are adopting measurement and experimentation disciplines from mobile gaming — including granular multi-touch attribution, ICP-segmented CAC tracking, and systematic creative testing. Companies that close that gap now are building compounding advantages that won’t be easy to replicate later. TLDR — The 10 Most Important B2B SaaS Growth Lessons Your board…

    Read More