psychology thinking

“Good Enough” – Why Brands Stop Growing

Nothing kills growth faster than comfort. “We’re doing fine” is the business-world equivalent of “it’s just a cold” before pneumonia sets in.

Kate Edwards
October 6, 2025
5 min read

A brand I worked with last year had a 59% returning customer rate. They were turning over A$700K+ in 30 days. Foot traffic was steady. Their Facebook following was engaged.

They were doing fine.

And that's exactly why they stopped growing.

The Plateau Mindset

Revenue is the ultimate validation drug. When the numbers stay stable, your brain stops asking hard questions. You stop testing. You default to what worked last year because it still kind of works now.

But "kind of works" is a slow leak. You don't notice the loss until you're drowning.

This brand's conversion funnel was haemorrhaging at every stage:

  • 8.27% session-to-cart (industry standard: 10–12%)
  • 39% cart-to-checkout (should be 50–60%)
  • 68% checkout completion (not terrible, but the damage was already done)

They had the traffic. They just couldn't close it.

But because the cash kept coming in, no one panicked. No one optimised. They kept posting pretty product shots and hoping Meta would save them.

The Dopamine Trap of Consistent Revenue

Here's what happens when your revenue stays flat:

Your brain interprets consistency as success. You get a dopamine hit from predictable numbers. It feels safe. Comfortable. Deserved.

So you stop scanning for threats. You stop innovating. You rationalise every decision through the lens of "it's working."

Except it's not. It's just not failing yet.

Meanwhile:

  • Your competitors are testing.
  • Your customers are comparing.
  • Your market is shifting.

And you're still running the same campaign from 2022.

Why Teams Cling to "What Used to Work"

I've seen this pattern repeat across industries:

A strategy works. Revenue climbs. The team celebrates. Then, slowly, the strategy stops working. But instead of questioning it, the team doubles down.

Why?

Because admitting the strategy is broken means admitting you were wrong. And being wrong feels like failure.

So you keep tweaking the headlines. Adjusting the budget. Blaming the algorithm.

Anything except rebuilding from the ground up.

Familiarity Bias: Our Brains Crave Known Patterns, Not Better Outcomes

Your brain is wired to avoid risk. Consistency = safety. New = threat.

This is why:

  • You keep hiring the same designer even though the work is stale.
  • You keep running the same ad structure even though performance is flat.
  • You keep defending the same brand positioning even though no one cares anymore.

It's not laziness. It's neuroscience.

But comfort kills curiosity. And curiosity is the only thing that keeps brands culturally relevant.

The Quiet Cost of Complacency

This brand didn't collapse. They coasted.

And coasting looks like success until you compare yourself to where you could have been.

How "Fine" Slowly Becomes "Forgotten"

When you stop evolving, your customers don't suddenly leave. They just stop prioritising you.

They still buy from you occasionally. But they're also buying from your competitors. Testing new brands. Scrolling past your posts.

You're not losing them dramatically. You're just becoming... background noise.

And by the time you notice, they're already gone.

The Opportunity Cost of Missing Innovation Windows

While this brand spent A$450K on Facebook ads with a broken funnel, their competitors were:

  • Launching retention flows
  • Testing TikTok
  • Rebuilding their site UX
  • Expanding into new product categories

They weren't standing still. They were sprinting.

And this brand? They were fine.

Complacency Disguised as Stability

Here's the lie: "We're being strategic. We're not chasing trends. We're staying the course."

Translation: "We're scared to change, so we're pretending consistency is a virtue."

Stability is only valuable if you're stable at the top. If you're stable at "fine," you're just slowly losing market share to brands willing to move.

How to Break the Pattern

Growth doesn't come from comfort. It comes from controlled discomfort.

From testing, iterating, and listening to what the data is screaming at you.

Audit What You've Stopped Questioning

Ask yourself:

  • What strategy are you defending because it's familiar, not because it's effective?
  • Where are you leaking revenue because you're too comfortable to audit?
  • What would your brand look like if you stopped settling for "fine"?

Write down every marketing decision you've made in the last 12 months. Then ask: "If I were starting from scratch today, would I make the same choice?"

If the answer is no, it's time to kill it.

Run "Brand Health" Metrics as Often as Financials

Revenue is a lagging indicator. It tells you what already happened.

Brand health metrics tell you what's about to happen.

Track:

  • Conversion rates at every funnel stage (not just overall)
  • Customer acquisition cost vs. lifetime value
  • Repeat purchase rate and time between purchases
  • Social engagement rate (not just follower count)
  • Search volume for your brand name

If any of these are declining, your revenue will follow. But by then, it's too late.

Build a Culture of Experimentation Before Desperation

The best brands test constantly. Not because they're broken, but because they're paranoid.

They run:

  • A/B tests on email subject lines
  • UX experiments on product pages
  • Content variations across platforms
  • New acquisition channels (even if small)

They don't wait for revenue to drop. They assume it will drop, and they're already building the next thing.

Growth Starts When You Become Slightly Uncomfortable Again

If your brand hasn't scared you in a while, you're probably stagnating.

Not terrified. Not reckless. Just... uncomfortable.

Uncomfortable enough to question your assumptions. Uncomfortable enough to test something new. Uncomfortable enough to admit that "fine" isn't good enough anymore.

If your brand hasn't made you uncomfortable lately, it's time to ask why.

Your data isn't the enemy. Your comfort zone is.

Want to audit where your brand is leaking revenue? Start with your funnel. Session to cart. Cart to checkout. Checkout to purchase. If any stage is below industry benchmarks, or a clear standout against the rest, you've found your problem.