The CMO Isn’t Dead: Mastering the Skills of the Modern Marketing Leader
Andrew C. Wheeler
Chief Executive Officer at Skyword | The Content Marketing Company
Across industries and business models, marketing is essential to surviving and thriving. So why the recent flurry of headlines pronouncing the death of the CMO?
As usual, the truth is more nuanced than the headlines suggest. In reality, the CMO role is evolving, as it should, and companies are restructuring, as they do. But marketing's core mission—being the expert in the customer and evolving how to build brand preference and loyalty—remains vital.
Where the headlines get it wrong
Professor Scott Galloway paints a picture of "Mad Men" CMOs who hang their hats on industry awards and cling to big advertising budgets. Thankfully, I know very few CMOs who fit this description. He goes on to argue that product and supply chain innovation should be the focus, with the CMO evolving into "the COO or SVP of supply chain."
While I agree with his argument for meaningful innovation, this shouldn't overshadow the essential work CMOs do to ensure their brands and products hold a significant position in the hearts and minds of customers. If anything, the declining effectiveness of traditional media and the sheer volume of channels, content experiences, and platforms available for marketing demands more dedicated oversight from savvy marketing leaders with a seat in the boardroom.
Others, like Phil Wahba, in this Fortune article , predict that automation will render CMOs obsolete. Ironically, I've found the opposite to be true. Technology is a powerful tool, but overreliance on automation can actually lead to poorly-executed personalization and an abundance of irrelevant data being used to inform decision-making. In fact, two-thirds of martech leaders say their tech stack takes time away from their key responsibilities, according to Gartner .
Skilled CMOs are at the forefront of the application of tech and data science, ensuring the right balance of tech and human expertise across their organizations and that data is being used to answer the right business questions.
The future belongs to a new breed of CMO, a strategic leader who blends foundational brand building with a deep understanding of data, customer experience, and even product development to excel at four business-critical jobs:
Job #1: Building a Connected Marketing Enterprise
The digital age has brought about a crucial change in how customers engage with brands. Fragmented marketing efforts, with teams working in channel-oriented silos, can result in a frustrating and ultimately ineffective brand experience for the customer.
A connected marketing engine and centralized view of customer data, led by the CMO, address this issue. By promoting collaboration and information sharing across all customer-facing teams — marketing, sales, product, and even customer service — the CMO ensures that a unified brand message resonates throughout the customer experience, tailored and personalized to fit where and how it's needed.
The modern CMO:
Job #2: Being the Customer Expert and Advocate
Empowered customers demand more relevance from the brands they interact with. Gone are the days of relying solely on broad demographics to segment customers and target messaging. Successful CMOs are effectively becoming customer ethnographers.
Today's CMO combines the power of data analytics with a real-world understanding of customer needs, wants, and pain points to craft brand experiences that resonate more deeply.
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The modern CMO:
Job #3: Balancing the Long Game with Immediate Impact
CEOs often prioritize immediate sales and growth, overlooking the importance of long-term brand building. However, a strong brand is crucial for sustained success, fostering trust and market differentiation.
The CMO who excels at strategically reconciling brand and performance marketing efforts, ensures the company achieves its immediate goals without sacrificing the long-term brand health that fuels sustained growth and future success.
The modern CMO:
Job # 4: Embracing Disruption and Leading Innovation
New content distribution channels are emerging at breakneck speed, and customer expectations evolve just as quickly. For marketers to stay ahead of the curve, they need a leader who isn't afraid to depart from the status quo and embrace innovation.
The CMO, positioned at the forefront of customer engagement, is ideally placed to identify trends, and translate them into innovative, actionable strategies.
The modern CMO:
The "death of the CMO" narrative distracts from the real issues: Are marketing leaders effective? Are they driving growth?
The future belongs to leaders who can bridge the gap between brand and performance, demonstrating the measurable impact marketing has on business growth.
Are you ready to redefine the role of the CMO for a new era?
As always, I'm here to help. Message me if you want to connect.
Founder at Learn to Scale: Business Consulting For Small Agencies That Want To Scale
6 个月People who are downgrading the value a CMO brings to an organization probably don't know what's going on in the industry. So much innovation has been happening in the marketing world that a forward-thinking CMO is what orgs are going to need to survive, let alone thrive.
Innovative Brand to Demand Storyteller and Marketing Executive with deep expertise in Brand Marketing, Social Media, Thought Leadership, Content Marketing and Communications.
7 个月Great insights Andrew C. Wheeler. Cheers to the rise of the Modern CMO. ??