01/09/2026
Vectors in Marketing: The Physics of Persuasion
By EA Keller
In the realm of modern marketing, consumer behavior is rarely a result of a single isolated event; rather, it is the cumulative result of various forces acting upon an individual. By applying Newton’s First Law of Motion (Inertia), we can understand that a consumer will continue in their current state of brand indifference or habit unless acted upon by an external marketing force. To break this inertia, a brand must deploy a strategic "vector"—a force that possesses both a specific magnitude (budget and reach) and a precise direction (targeted messaging). Without a clear directional vector, marketing spend is merely noise that fails to shift the consumer from their baseline state.
Building on this, Newton’s Second Law provides a blueprint for scaling brand growth. In this marketing premise, "Force" represents your campaign impact, "Mass" represents the market’s size or the level of consumer skepticism, and "Acceleration" represents the rate of brand adoption. To achieve rapid acceleration in a dense, high-mass market, a company must significantly increase its creative force or find ways to reduce the "mass" by narrowing the target niche. By calculating the necessary energy required to move a specific demographic, marketers can optimize their resources to ensure the vector is powerful enough to produce measurable momentum rather than a negligible nudge.
Finally, Newton’s Third Law—that every action has an equal and opposite reaction—reminds us of the critical nature of brand sentiment and feedback loops. Every marketing "push" into the marketplace generates a "pull" or a reaction from the audience. A high-pressure sales tactic (a strong positive vector) may result in an equal and opposite force of consumer resentment or "ad blindness." Therefore, the most effective marketing vectors are those that align with existing consumer desires, minimizing friction and counter-forces. By treating marketing as a series of calculated physical interactions, brands can move beyond guesswork and begin to engineer predictable, high-velocity growth.
Summary
The Vectors in Marketing premise asserts that consumer movement is a physical science. By treating brand strategy as a system of Inertia, Force, and Reciprocity, marketers can move away from vanity metrics and focus on the directional energy required to shift market share. Success is achieved when the magnitude of the message perfectly overcomes the mass of market indifference, creating a clear, unobstructed path toward brand loyalty.