For UK B2B company leaders

The Hunter-Gatherer Gap

The only marketing split that doesn’t work is 100% gather, 0% hunt. Most UK B2B budgets are running it anyway.

Most of your marketing spend is doing what worked last year. That isn’t wrong — it’s incomplete. The line item that’s missing is the one that finds the customers your current channels never reach. Eight short cards, in plain English, on what the gap is and how to close it.

01

Most bees follow the dance. About 20% don’t. That’s why the colony survives.

When a honey-bee scout finds a good patch of flowers, it returns to the hive and dances the direction. Most foragers follow the dance. About a fifth of the colony ignore it and fly off in random directions. In a good year, those bees look wasteful. In a bad year — when the known flowers fail — those are the only bees that find the next field. Marketing budgets work the same way. The pounds that look least efficient today are the ones that find next year’s customers.

~20% Scout share in a healthy colony
Seeley, Honeybee Democracy — the share of scouts that keeps a colony alive across seasons.
See the evidence

The bee colony is the textbook example of the trade-off between working known sources (the waggle dance) and searching for new ones (the rogue foragers). Ad guru Rory Sutherland often references the work by Viswanathan (Nature 1999) on Lévy-flight search and Seeley on honey-bee scout / recruit ratios — both find that healthy colonies keep a steady minority of scouts at all times, not just when the known flowers fail. The same ratio shows up across foraging species and across search-under-uncertainty models. A colony where every forager follows the dance starves when the patch is empty. The colony that finds itself short of food in a bad season is always the one that cut the scouts when food was plentiful.

Sources
  • Rory Sutherland on Sutherland & the explore / exploit trade-off
  • Viswanathan et al. — Optimizing the success of random searches (Nature, 1999)
  • Thomas D. Seeley — Honeybee Democracy
02

Most UK B2B marketing budgets are pure gathering. The split is the problem.

Gathering is the work you already do — Google Ads, LinkedIn, SEO, retargeting, the digital playbook that’s been reliable since 2010. It works, you can defend it on a dashboard, and most of your budget belongs there. The only split that doesn’t work is the one most UK B2B companies are running: 100% gather, 0% hunt. Hunting — reaching out to named decision-makers your dashboard doesn’t already know — is the line item missing from most marketing plans.

If you’ve played MMORPGs, you’ll recognise the grinding-vs-exploring trade-off — same idea, same trap. Grinding the known map is reliable. The next big find is somewhere you haven’t walked yet.

See the evidence

The pattern shows up consistently in UK B2B channel-mix data. Digital channels — search, paid social, retargeting, SEO — take most of the marketing budget because they are measurable, defensible, and reliable. They are the gatherer’s mix. But the whole budget sits on channels owned and run by middlemen (Google, Meta, LinkedIn) whose incentives are increasingly to keep the user inside their platform rather than send them to the advertiser’s website. The result: a budget that’s 100% in lanes the marketer doesn’t own and can’t control, with nothing in lanes that work differently. Adding a hunter’s allocation — even a modest one — protects against a single-channel failure and finds customers the digital playbook can’t see.

Sources
  • Bain & Co — B2B channel-mix research
  • March, J. G. — Exploration and Exploitation in Organizational Learning (1991)
  • Sutherland on monoculture marketing
03

Working the known channels harder produces less, not more — once the channel has changed shape.

The digital playbook is delivering less per pound than it was. The previous Corpdata briefing set out the diagnosis — AI Overviews now answer most B2B information queries before the reader clicks; HubSpot reports a 70% drop in organic traffic across its hosted sites; UK B2B paid acquisition cost is up 24-29% year on year. Pushing harder on a thinner channel costs more for less. And the 95% of buyers who aren’t shopping this week never see your search ads — they only see the businesses that come to them.

91% B2B info queries served by AI Overview
−70% HubSpot hosted organic-traffic decline
+24-29% UK B2B paid-ad cost per customer, year on year
The squeeze on the gatherer’s mix: more demand for the same digital space, fewer clicks coming out the other side.
See the evidence

The maths on the gatherer’s mix has flipped over the past two years. BrightEdge data shows that 91% of B2B information searches now trigger an AI Overview — the answer appears at the top of the page and the reader leaves before reaching any website. HubSpot, the largest B2B content-marketing publisher in the world, has reported around a 70% drop in organic traffic to its hosted sites between 2024 and 2025. UK B2B paid acquisition costs have been climbing 24-29% year on year, as more competitors bid for less attention on Google and LinkedIn. The result: every pound spent on the gatherer’s mix buys less than it did two years ago, and the trend isn’t reversing — this is the direction it’s going.

Sources
  • BrightEdge — AI Overview prevalence in B2B search
  • HubSpot — reported organic-traffic decline 2024-2025
  • LinkedIn B2B Institute / Ehrenberg-Bass — The 95-5 Rule
04

A letter, a call, a named-recipient email — they signal something a banner ad cannot.

The recipient can see the work. A named letter that arrives on their desk took real effort to send. So did a phone call. So did a personalised email. The effort itself is the signal — it tells the buyer your business chose them on purpose. A banner ad signals the opposite: that you bought a slot on a list of people who fit a profile.

If gold-rush imagery lands better than bee colonies, call it prospecting versus mining. Mining is taking value from a known seam — reliable while it lasts. Prospecting is going to look for new ground. You need both. Most UK B2B marketing is all mine and no prospect.

4.4% Direct mail response
0.12% Email response
0.04% Display ad response
DMA UK Response Rate Report — like-for-like B2B response rates. The signalling premium is the gap between direct-access channels (mail, email) and broadcast (display).
See the evidence

A named letter, a personal email or a phone call all take effort the recipient can see: a real address, a real name, a real timing decision. That effort says “we chose you.” A banner ad says the opposite: that the advertiser bought a slot on a list of people who fit a profile. The Direct Marketing Association’s UK response benchmarks show the gap on like-for-like methods: direct mail at 4.4%, email at 0.12%, display advertising at 0.04%. Direct mail in particular keeps around a 90% open rate — envelopes get opened in a way banner impressions never get viewed. The numbers get sharper still when you can choose exactly which named decision-maker you reach.

Sources
  • DMA — Response Rate Report
  • Sutherland on signalling and costly-effort signals in B2B
  • Spence — signalling theory, Nobel Prize 2001
05

Most marketers already know this. What’s missing isn’t the opinion — it’s the words.

If you’ve read this far, the argument isn’t new. You can feel the digital playbook is producing less. You can see the AI Overviews on your own search results. You know the channels are getting more crowded. The gap isn’t knowing — it’s doing. And what most companies need isn’t a different opinion. It’s the words to say it out loud in the budget meeting. Direct access is the words: a verified named list, by post or email or phone, sitting alongside the digital that already runs.

See the evidence

Pfeffer & Sutton (2000) called this the knowing-doing gap: companies regularly know what they should do and fail to do it, not because the diagnosis is unclear but because acting means changing a budget, changing a reporting line, or starting a conversation no-one wants to start. The IPA / FT Board-Brand Rift study found that 83% of UK business leaders believe marketing contributes to the bottom line — but more than half rate their own knowledge of brand-building as average or poor. The board votes on gut feel because nothing else is in front of them. This briefing’s job is to give you the words — not the data. You’ve already absorbed the data in your own way.

Sources
  • Pfeffer & Sutton — The Knowing-Doing Gap (Harvard Business School Press, 2000)
  • IPA & FT — The Board-Brand Rift
06

The marketing pound that goes furthest is the one most owners aren’t spending.

The pounds you spend on Google Ads work, but they work the way everyone else’s pounds work — in the same auction, against the same competitors, on the same channel. The pounds you spend reaching named decision-makers directly — by letter, email, or phone — work harder right now because almost no-one else is spending them. Same total budget, different mix, more bang for your buck. The mix matters more than the total in 2026.

07

You don’t need a big budget. You need a controllable one.

Direct access doesn’t run on an auction. Every pound goes to a verified named contact you’ve chosen. No platform tax. No black-box algorithm taking a cut. You pick the sectors, the company sizes, the job titles. You dial it up when cash flow allows and dial it down when it doesn’t. One pound, one contact — the maths is simple, and the levers are yours.

08

Direct access to the customers you actually want — on terms you control.

The hunter’s allocation needs a way to reach customers that doesn’t go through Google or LinkedIn. Direct access is that way: a verified named list of the UK decision-makers you want as customers, reachable by post, email or phone. No auction, no platform tax. Every contact is one you chose. Corpdata supplies the list; you set the mix; the digital channels you already run keep running underneath. The hunter’s allocation isn’t a replacement — it’s the line item that completes the mix.

See the evidence

Corpdata supplies continually verified UK B2B contacts with an average record age of just 94 days, backed by the 2-for-1 Goneaway Guarantee. Every record carries the named decision-maker, postal address, direct dial where we hold it, and email where we have it. The data is licensed for UK B2B direct marketing. Corpdata is on the ICO public register (Z5404661), and full audit trails sit behind every selection.

Sources
  • Corpdata — 94-day average record age; 2-for-1 Goneaway Guarantee
  • ICO registration Z5404661 — public register

Tell us what would make this worthwhile.

Tell us the outcome you want — new customers, revenue against a target, a sector you want to open up — and a bit about your business. We come back with a direct-access plan: who to reach, how, and what it costs. Homework done before we talk.

Tell us what you’re aiming for

Continuing the 2026 Corpdata briefing series. The previous instalments: Why Your Clicks Are Disappearing (the diagnosis) and The Downturn Discount (the commercial reframe).