In his book The Psychology of Money, Morgan Housel shares a concept that feels like a cheat code for life, but in reality, it’s just math: The Long Tail.
Housel points out that in almost any system, from venture capital to art, a tiny fraction of events accounts for the majority of the outcomes.
He uses Walt Disney as a prime example. By the mid-1930s, Disney had produced hundreds of hours of film. Most of it was fine, but a lot of it lost money. Then came Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. It changed everything. It wasn't just a hit; it was an "outlier" that paid for every failure that came before it and funded everything that came after.
Chris Rock does the same thing. Before he steps onto a Netflix stage, he spends months in small clubs, bombing. He tells hundreds of jokes to find the ten that actually kill.
The point is, creative is iterative, and you need to invest the time and effort in producing a high volume of output to find what works.
For marketers, the message is clear: You aren't looking for a "good" ad, you are looking for outliers.
But here is the problem: You can’t predict which creative will be the outlier. You can only find it by increasing your "at-bats." At Bern Digital, we’ve moved away from the old-school model of "one perfect hero image" because the platforms themselves have changed the rules of the game.
In the past, you won by being a "out-targeting" your competition by configuring interest groups, lookalikes, and exclusions. Today, Google and Meta have largely automated those levers into a "black box." To get outsized returns now, you have to understand the three ways the machine actually works:
1. Creative-Led Audience Discovery (The "Andromeda" Effect)
The algorithms no longer rely on your manual settings to find customers. Instead, they use Computer Vision and Natural Language Processing to "read" your ad.
2. The "Ad Strength" Efficiency Moat
Google and Meta are in the business of keeping users on their platforms. They punish "boring" or repetitive accounts with higher costs (CPMs), out of fear that they will get bored or frustrated and move on.
3. Solving the "Creative Decay" Problem
In 2026, creative fatigue happens at lightning speed. Because the AI is so efficient at finding your buyers, it "burns through" your best ad faster than ever.
If success is driven by the long tail, then "volume" isn't a vanity metric, it’s a risk-management strategy.
Investing in a high volume of creative allows us to:
We don’t believe in "throwing spaghetti at the wall." We believe in Surgical Execution. We produce creative at scale and speed because the market (and the algorithms) demand it.
We use the data from the "bombed" ads to inform the next round of creative, constantly narrowing the gap until we find your outliers.
In the words of Morgan Housel: "A lot of things can go wrong, but as long as a few things go right, you’ll be fine."
In digital advertising, you don't need every ad to be a home run. You just need to keep swinging until you hit the one that changes the trajectory of your business.
Ready to find your outliers?