Where Science and Art Meet

School of Thought
6 min readOct 13, 2020

Last night I decided to make Yorkshire pudding for the first time. Oh, you don’t know what that is? Well, let me tell you.

Basically, you fill a muffin pan with a high-heat oil and after 15 minutes, pour a mixture of egg and flour in. After you’ve baked that for another 25 minutes, the dough starts to rise from the bottom and create what looks like a mini toasted dough tsunami around each cup.

It’s kind of hard to visualize, but Jamie Oliver makes the whole ordeal look so fantastically simple (although, I think that’s part of his brand appeal).

Easy enough, right? No. Anyone who has ever been a novice baker for more time than they’d like to be knows that nothing is as easy as it seems — no matter how many confident chuckles you get from this Oliver guy.

It’s a little bit of art and a little bit of science (Photo by Burst)

Sometimes it feels like it takes a magic formula to successfully pull things off in the delicate science of baking.

In marketing (as in baking) there’s always some tried-and-tested recipe that people say works. It comes with the kind of directions that seem too easy to mess up. When it comes down to it, marketing is based on science, but it’s still pretty easy to screw up. Why is that?

The perfect recipe only really takes a little bit of science and a much heftier serving of art. When you’re baking a cake the first few times, you can follow basic directions to ensure the measurements come out right.

However, once you’ve done it a few times, you start to see opportunities to put your own personal touch on things to tailor the recipe to different preferences. What works for one cake, might not work for another.

Marketing holds much of the same. If you keep up all your old tricks — never reinventing the wheel — your competitors will be churning out a better product before too long. Plus, not every client wants the same recipe. It helps to have a knowledge of the basics before you can afford to get a little more creative.

Maybe you like fluffier cake. Maybe you like flakier crust. If you follow the same recipe everyone else does and think you’ll win every time, you’ll come out disappointed. Then, one day, you’ll meet the perfect cake and the person who made it will tell you they learned to perfect it through trial and error.

Baking for the first time will make you feel like you’re five years old again! (Photo by Burst)

In an article in Entrepreneur on this very subject, George Deeb talks about how there’s now a trend in marketing where “data is king.” It’s almost as if marketers stopped thinking for themselves and just became hypnotized by information. He says, “So, yes, data is really important for your business. But, which data points you manage towards, and how you study the data, can make or break your success.”

Like Chief Marketer has stated before, and something we know to be true in advertising: there has to be more that’s revealed behind a data point. You might be a brand with a whole bank of data, but if you don’t know how to parcel out the information (how to combine the ingredients effectively) your cake is going to suck.

Sorry. It’s true.

They say:

“For as much as we would like to turn our marketing efforts into a science, it is still very much an art, knowing the right probing questions to ask and still following your internal gut.”

When you take that cake to the dinner party, you want people to remember it — and beyond that you want people to remember that you made it. That usually requires a little something extra.

As Simon Sinek has mentioned in his writings on marketing best practices, as well as in his TED talk, “People don’t buy what you do, they buy why you do it.”

Jenna Gross, CMO of Moving Targets, a marketing agency focused on forging stronger relationships between businesses & their communities, puts things straight in her Forbes article when she says that we need to understand that creative leads and data guides.

It’s about making art out of science (Photo courtesy of Burst)

We tend to get hung up on the directions and forget about enterprise — or even context. If you’re about to make a pie crust and you really need it to come out flaky instead of crisp, it’s going to matter whether that butter just sat out on your counter for an hour in a kitchen that’s 90º F degrees or one that’s 40º F degrees. How long and how fast you whisk the batter can also make a difference.

To give you another bad metaphor: an escalator is just a stairwell if you take away the innovation for it to move. Gross also says:

“When venturing into a new market, data can predict how the product or service will be received and type of message that will resonate most. But without strong creative, the campaign will fall flat.

When you’re looking for a new audience for your service or product, brand awareness campaigns are critical. The ingredient that’s going to set you apart is not the same as what everyone else used. Public attention calls for much more creativity in a saturated market.

That’s like thinking you can just Betty Crocker your way to success forever without ever having to make something from scratch (I guess this probably still happens).

There isn’t always going to be directions on the side of the box and you aren’t going to have perfectly prepackaged and pre-measured ingredients included. You might actually have to figure out how to make those super gooey brownies all on your own.

Plus, brownies from a box are always going to taste less awesome than ones made fresh with genuine ingredients.

Not sure what this is, but it’s surely harder than it looks (Photo by Burst)

Sometimes things don’t turn out the way you want them to in baking, as is true in marketing (or life). It’s the practice that helps you stumble upon those little accidents that become your new favorite recipe, though.

Progress doesn’t happen without a few mistakes first and ideas don’t become famous if they aren’t shared. Creativity is a breeding ground for experiments that deviate from the norm. It’s in the evolution of things that change begins to formulate and improvements are slowly made.

In other words, play around with that recipe after you understand the science behind it. Either that, or hire somebody who knows what they’re doing to swoop in and save the day.

So, how did my Yorkshire pudding turn out after all of that? It was basically a half-formed puff sitting atop a sopping wet grease puddle. Don’t ask me what I did wrong, because I fear I still have a couple of tries until I find out.

Not everyone can be Julia Child. However, if you have a very good reason for doing things differently it’s going to make the experience that much more memorable and people are going to remember you for it, too.

School of Thought is a creative agency located in the San Francisco Bay Area. We specialize in marketing and branding that builds on sustainable practices and challenges the Status Quo. With laugh-out-loud humor and emotional storytelling that gets to the heart of a company, we’re redefining the way we look at advertising.

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Originally published on the School of Thought blog: https://www.schoolofthought.com/new-blog/2020/2/26/where-science-and-art-meet

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School of Thought

Creative agency located in the SF Bay Area. We specialize in marketing and branding that builds on sustainable practices and challenges the Status Quo.