The Modern Marketer as a Builder

How I Stopped Waiting on Tickets and Started Building My Own Stack

Not that long ago, marketing worked like this:

You had an idea → you opened a ticket → you waited… and waited… and waited.

By the time something shipped, it was already outdated.

“I’ve lived that firsthand… whether it was pulling reports, cleaning CSVs, or dealing with clunky systems… a lot of ‘marketing’ time was actually just manual busywork. It wasn’t strategy. It was survival.”

But that model is breaking.

We’re now in a shift where marketers, especially in Demand Gen, Digital, and ABM, can actually build the things we used to wait for.

Not because we became engineers, but because the tools finally caught up.

From “Can You Build This?” to “I’ll Just Build It”

I wanted a faster, more flexible website experience. Something that could actually keep up with how fast we need to move.

So here’s what I did:

  • Kept WordPress because it’s still great for managing content
  • Layered on a Next.js frontend for speed and performance
  • Connected everything through APIs

At a high level, this just means:

  • Content lives in one place
  • The website experience is powered somewhere else
  • They talk to each other cleanly

No more “if we change this, everything breaks” situations. And the biggest win? Speed. Pages load faster. Updates happen quicker. And we’re not stuck in rigid release cycles.

The Real Unlock: AI as Your Builder Assistant

Here’s the part that would’ve sounded crazy a couple of years ago:

I didn’t need a full dev team to make this happen.

I used tools like:

  • Cursor as an AI coding assistant
  • GitHub to manage and track changes
  • A working knowledge of how the pieces connect

And I essentially stitched everything together.

Not by writing perfect code from scratch, but by:

  • Using AI to help translate what I wanted
  • Iterating quickly
  • Staying focused on the outcome, not the syntax

That’s the shift.

Why This Actually Matters

This isn’t about being technical for the sake of it.

It’s about staying relevant.

We’re entering a zero-click world

People aren’t always visiting your site anymore. AI tools are answering questions for them.

So the real question becomes:

Is your content fast, structured, and clear enough to be used by AI?

Because if it is, your brand shows up. If it’s not, you disappear.

Data is changing too

With cookies going away, we’re relying more on:

  • First-party data — what users actually do with you
  • Zero-party data — what they willingly tell you

Owning your stack means:

  • You’re not dependent on someone else’s system
  • You can actually personalize experiences in a meaningful way

What I Learned

If you’re leading Demand Gen, Digital, or ABM right now, here’s what really matters:

1. Speed beats perfection

You don’t need the perfect system. You need something that moves fast.

2. Control your core

If your website, data, and content are locked behind other teams or tools, you’re always going to be slower than you should be.

3. AI is a multiplier, not magic

It won’t replace your thinking, but it will dramatically speed up your ability to execute.

The Big Shift: Marketers Are Becoming Builders

I’m not a software engineer.

But I was able to:

  • Connect WordPress to a headless frontend
  • Use GitHub to manage changes
  • Use AI to bridge the gaps

And now we move 10x faster than before.

No tickets.
No waiting.
No bottlenecks.
Just building.

Final Thought: This Isn’t About Tech — It’s About Ownership

At the end of the day, this isn’t really a technology story.

It’s a mindset shift.

For years, marketing owned the message, and engineering owned everything else.

That line is disappearing.

The teams that win in 2026 won’t be the ones with the biggest budgets. They’ll be the ones who can:

  • Move quickly
  • Adapt constantly
  • Build what they need, when they need it

If you’re still waiting on tickets, you’re already behind.

But the good news? You don’t need to become an engineer. You just need to start building.

What Else is in the Stack?