Asymmetric 2026 Growth Strategy
Overview
At an internal all-hands session, Mark Hope outlined Asymmetric Applications Group's multi-year growth plan. The immediate priority is stabilizing revenue after losing several clients in quick succession, then scaling aggressively through 2027–2028. The plan has three interlocking pillars: a revenue growth model, a repositioning of the firm's identity, and internal operational improvements that must precede meaningful scale.
Revenue Target
| Metric | Current | 2026 Target |
|---|---|---|
| Monthly retainer revenue | ~$80K | ~$120K |
| Growth required | — | ~50% |
| Primary driver | — | 1 new retained client/month |
The compounding nature of recurring revenue means adding one client per month at a $5K–$8K retainer produces an exponential curve: by month 12, cumulative new retainer revenue reaches ~$60K/month in new ARR.
Three Revenue Buckets
- New retainer clients (~50% of growth) — one new client per month at $7K–$8K target retainer
- Existing client upsells (~15% of growth) — new services, retainer increases, performance participation
- Project work (~35% of growth) — websites, CRM implementations, wargaming engagements used as entry points to retainers
Target Client Profile
- Revenue size: $10M–$20M
- Geography: Great Lakes region (Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Indiana, Iowa, Illinois — driveable in a day)
- Problem focus: Stagnating growth (companies that were growing at 15% and are now at 7%)
- Industry: Deliberately diversified — avoid over-specialization in any single vertical
The addressable market of companies meeting these criteria in the region numbers in the tens of thousands.
Repositioning: From "Marketing Agency" to "Underdog Strategy Partner"
The Core Idea
Digital marketing agencies are commoditized. Asymmetric's differentiation is the asymmetric competitive situation itself: smaller companies competing against larger, better-resourced incumbents. The firm's value proposition is helping underdogs win in unfair markets.
"Business is a zero-sum game. There's one winner and four losers. Do you prefer to be the winner, or would you like to be one of the four losers?"
— Mark Hope
What This Means in Practice
- Lead with strategy, not tactics — open with competitive analysis and wargaming, not ad campaigns
- Position as a full marketing department — not a vendor; a complete outsourced marketing function for less than the cost of a single in-house agency relationship
- Drop the "marketing agency" label — the firm offers strategic partnership, not just execution
Value Ladder (Indicative)
| Tier | Monthly Retainer | Scope |
|---|---|---|
| Entry | ~$4K | Core channel execution |
| Mid | ~$7K–$8K | Multi-channel + strategy |
| Full | ~$15K | Complete marketing department |
Performance-Based Pricing & Guarantees
Two mechanisms under active consideration to reduce perceived risk for new clients:
- Service guarantee — define a 90-day benchmark at engagement start; if the benchmark is not met, Asymmetric works for free until it is
- Performance pricing — a percentage of incremental revenue (e.g., 5%) as an alternative or supplement to flat retainers; being piloted with at least one prospect (Cramp-Aid)
These mechanisms also create internal accountability: the team is incentivized to hit benchmarks to avoid triggering the guarantee.
Wargaming as a Product
Wargaming is both a service offering and a sales tool. A wargame is a structured 1–2 day exercise in which:
- Client team, competitor A team, and competitor B team each develop independent strategies
- Teams present plans and respond to each other's moves in real time
- The exercise surfaces competitive blind spots and forces clients to think about reactions, not just actions
Wargaming engagements can be sold as standalone projects and serve as a natural entry point to ongoing retainer relationships. See [1] for detail on the exercise format.
New Business Development Approach
- Account-based marketing to targeted Great Lakes companies in the $10M–$20M range
- Warm outreach to past clients and lapsed relationships via Mark's network
- Project-to-retainer pipeline — website builds, CRM implementations, and wargames as foot-in-the-door engagements
- Client selectivity — prioritize clients who listen and implement; deprioritize difficult relationships that consume disproportionate time
Internal Operations (Prerequisite to Scale)
Mark was explicit that operational improvements must happen before meaningful growth is possible. Key areas:
Role Clarity
- Mark Hope: Business development and strategy only — no execution tasks
- Account managers (Melissa, Karly): Own client relationships and delivery; work with Mark on strategy, with the team on execution
- Gilbert: Responsible for all performance marketing (Google, Amazon, Bing, Meta); Anup reports to him
- Chris: Automations and CRM implementations; potential AI tooling applications
- Ben: Underutilized — needs focused scope; capable of taking on client-facing work
The "Floor" Concept
Every team member should define a floor — the minimum level of task complexity worth their time. Tasks below the floor should be delegated to junior staff or interns. The goal is to stop senior people doing low-value work (e.g., email signatures, file searches) that crowds out strategic output.
Documentation & Tooling
- SOPs must be built out and maintained in ClickUp before January
- Asset organization (logos, files, templates) needs to be standardized so the team stops losing 30 minutes searching for things
- ClickUp usage needs to be consistent across the team
AI Tooling for Efficiency
Mark demonstrated a workflow for rapid client analysis using ChatGPT:
1. Export Google Ads campaign, keyword, ad group, and location data as Excel files
2. Upload to a ChatGPT project with client context
3. Supplement with screenshots from Google Search Console and Ahrefs
4. Use ChatGPT to synthesize insights and recommendations
5. Pipe the strategy output into Gamma to generate a client-ready presentation deck in ~30 minutes
This workflow replaces what would previously take a full analyst day. See [2] for the step-by-step process.
Multi-Year Roadmap
| Year | Theme | Goal |
|---|---|---|
| 2026 | Stabilization | $80K → $120K/month retainer; new products launched |
| 2027 | Scale | Double down on what worked in 2026 |
| 2028 | Momentum | Ride growth curve |
| 2029 | Plateau | Reach comfortable size; slow hiring |
Mark's stated preference is a firm that stays manageable — not a 150-person agency. The goal is a well-run, profitable business at a sustainable scale.
Action Items (from this session)
- [ ] Begin Asymmetric website revamp focused on new "underdog strategy partner" positioning — @Mark Hope
- [ ] Prepare and present full business plan at next meeting (week after next) — @Mark Hope
- [ ] Contact Cramp-Aid with performance-based deal proposal — @Mark Hope
- [ ] Meet with Evoke re: growth opportunities; follow up with Mark after — @Melissa Cusumano
- [ ] Address Hooper service URL issue raised by Amy — @Melissa Cusumano
- [ ] Reschedule Q4 planning meeting for week after next — @Isalia Ramirez
- [ ] Build out SOPs and ClickUp structure before January — @Isalia Ramirez
Related
- [3]
- [1]
- [2]
- [4]
- [5]