Digital marketing gives you a lot to work with.
There are tools, dashboards, reports, and more data than most people know what to do with. On the surface, it feels like everything you need is already there.
What I did not fully appreciate at the start is that having access to all of this does not make things easier. In many ways, it makes decision making harder.
More Data Does Not Mean Clear Answers
It is easy to assume that more data leads to better decisions.
In reality, data often raises more questions than answers. You see trends, patterns, and changes, but they are not always straightforward.
Two campaigns can show similar results but behave very differently over time. One might be stable, another might be volatile. One might scale well, another might not.
That is where things start to get less obvious.
There Is No Perfect Decision
One of the things I have noticed over time is that there is rarely a perfect answer in digital marketing.
Most decisions sit somewhere in the middle. You are choosing between trade offs rather than clear right or wrong options.
Do you optimise for efficiency or volume
Do you scale or maintain stability
Do you test something new or stick with what is working
These decisions are not always clear, even with data in front of you.
Experience Changes How You Decide
With time, the way you make decisions starts to change.
You stop reacting to every small change in performance. You start looking for patterns instead of isolated results. You begin to understand when to act and when to wait.
This does not come from learning more tools. It comes from spending time working through different situations and seeing how things play out.
The Role Of Judgement
What stands out the most is how important judgement becomes.
Two people can look at the same account, the same data, and the same performance and still make completely different decisions.
That difference is not technical. It is how they interpret the situation and what they prioritise.
Conclusion
Looking back, digital marketing feels less like a technical challenge and more like a decision making one.
Tools and data are part of the process, but they do not remove the need to think.
For me, one of the biggest shifts has been understanding that good outcomes often come from better decisions, not just better tools or more data.