InsightsNL Marketing Frameworkwhy do people ignore your marketing

Part 2 of the Next Level Story Framework

If you’re a small business owner and your marketing feels like it’s getting ignored—people scroll past, visit your site, then disappear—it’s rarely because your service isn’t valuable.

It’s usually because your message only describes what you do, not the problem your customer is desperate to solve.

That’s why we teach the Next Level Story Framework: a simple system that guides small businesses to win loyal customers by clarifying their message, building trust faster, and repeating the right story across their website, content, and offers.

This is Part 2 of our 8-part series (the “8-piece combo”), and it focuses on Piece #2:

Identify your heroes’ problems (external, internal, and philosophical)

Most businesses stop at the external problem. The best brands go deeper.

The 3 levels of a customer problem

  1. External problem: What’s happening in their world (the visible issue).

  2. Internal problem: How that problem makes them feel (the emotional cost).

  3. Philosophical problem: Why it’s wrong or unfair that they have to deal with it (the bigger meaning).

When your message hits all three, customers feel understood—and understood turns into trust.

Example: A neighborhood physical therapy clinic (same company, deeper clarity)

In Episode 1, we named a few heroes for a physical therapy clinic:

  • The Weekend Warrior

  • The Desk-Job Achiever

  • The Comeback Senior

Now let’s define their problems at all three levels.

1) The Weekend Warrior

  • External: Knee pain after a game; can’t run, jump, or pivot without discomfort.

  • Internal: Frustrated and anxious—“What if I’m getting old or permanently injured?”

  • Philosophical: It’s not fair that staying active comes with fear and limitation.

2) The Desk-Job Achiever

  • External: Neck/back pain from sitting; headaches; stiffness by mid-day.

  • Internal: Drained and discouraged—“I can’t focus, and I’m not showing up as my best self.”

  • Philosophical: Work shouldn’t slowly steal your health and quality of life.

3) The Comeback Senior

  • External: Recovering after a fall; balance issues; stairs feel risky.

  • Internal: Afraid and embarrassed—“I don’t want to feel dependent or fragile.”

  • Philosophical: Everyone deserves dignity and independence, not fear in their own body.

Notice what changed?

We’re not just saying “we treat pain.” We’re saying:
“We help you get your life back.”

That’s the difference between content people see and content people feel.

Key takeaways (and your next move)

  • Don’t stop at the external issue—go deeper.

  • Internal problems create urgency; philosophical problems create loyalty.

  • When your customer feels understood, they trust you faster.

And here’s your motivation: your business can genuinely change lives—but only if people understand how you help them win. The goal isn’t to sound professional. It’s to be clear and specific about what your heroes are going through.

Define the real problem. Speak to the real feelings. Stand for something bigger.
That’s how small businesses stop getting ignored—and start winning loyal customers.