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To get honest, ground-truth feedback, the CMO hosts quarterly roundtables with sales reps (AEs, BDRs) without their managers on the call. This forum allows him to ask directly what's working, what's not, and what content is effective, bypassing the typical filters of sales leadership.
Goldcast's CMO structures her week to serve her team: a strategic leadership sync, 1-on-1s framed as "how can I help remove blockers?", and no-agenda skip-level meetings to gather unfiltered feedback. This leadership model prioritizes enabling the team over top-down status updates.
A sales leader's job isn't to ask their team how to sell more; it's to find the answers themselves by joining sales calls. Leaders must directly hear customer objections and see reps' mistakes to understand what's really happening. The burden of finding the solution is on the leader.
Instead of brainstorming, Sales Assembly's CRO Matt Green actively listens to recurring peer-group calls with AEs, BDRs, and sales leaders. He turns their real-world problems, frameworks, and successes into a constant stream of highly relevant social media content.
Some CEOs encourage tension between sales and marketing. A more effective model is for the CRO and CMO to build enough trust to handle all disagreements—like lead quality or follow-up—behind closed doors. This prevents a culture of finger-pointing and presents a united front to leadership.
As leaders rise, direct reports are less likely to provide challenging feedback, creating an executive bubble. To get unfiltered information, leaders should schedule regular one-on-ones with employees several levels down the org chart with the express purpose of listening, not dictating.
The CMO co-founded a peer group where fellow CMOs discuss strategy. Uniquely, they invite their entire marketing teams to join the calls. This democratizes high-level learning and ensures strategic insights about topics like AI use cases are shared directly with practitioners.
Feedback often gets 'massaged' and politicized as it travels up the chain of command. Effective leaders must create direct, unfiltered channels to hear from customers and front-line employees, ensuring raw data isn't sanitized before it reaches them.
At Informatica, the CEO made the CMO solely responsible for the company's entire sales pipeline. This shifts marketing's focus from departmental metrics (like MQLs) to the ultimate business outcome, forcing deep alignment with the CRO and sales organization.
To achieve true alignment with sales, product, and finance, marketing leaders should avoid marketing jargon and subjective opinions. Instead, they should ground conversations in objective data about performance, customer experience gaps, or internal capabilities to create a shared, fact-based understanding of challenges.
Qualcomm's CMO actively learns by calling peers at companies like Lenovo, Google, and American Eagle to ask about their recent work. This highlights a powerful, underutilized strategy: building a network of fellow executives for direct, candid feedback and learning, leveraging the industry's general willingness to share insights.