Marketing's value, like brand fame, compounds over time and is probabilistic. Finance departments, however, wrongly apply simple, linear math (addition, subtraction) and demand immediate ROI, killing long-term initiatives that require time to pay off.

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Like venture capital or Hollywood, marketing's value comes from rare, breakout successes that far outweigh all other efforts. The marketer's job is to create opportunities for these unpredictable "10x" moments, rather than focusing solely on incremental, linear gains.

The key to justifying brand marketing isn't a perfect dashboard, but internal education. A marketing leader's primary job is to explain to the CFO and sales team that buying decisions are not linear and are influenced by multiple, often unmeasurable touchpoints over time.

True marketing builds a brand, which isn't always immediately quantifiable. An addiction to 'math' (CAC, ROAS) at the expense of 'art' (brand, creative) reveals a sales-focused mindset. This approach relies on conversion tactics because the brand isn't strong enough on its own.

Data shows that adding brand marketing to a performance-driven engine can increase median ROI by 90%. The persistent tension between brand and performance stems from short-termism and the allure of easily measured clicks, creating a false dichotomy between two essential functions.

The speaker coins "technoplasmosis" for when tech vendors persuade a company's finance department to adopt marketing metrics that favor selling tech stacks (e.g., click-through rates). This shifts focus to short-term, transactional activities and away from long-term brand building, which is more valuable.

To get buy-in from financial stakeholders, translate the 'soft' concept of brand love into hard metrics. Loved brands can command higher prices, maximize customer lifetime value, and reduce customer acquisition costs through organic advocacy, proving brand is a tangible asset.

Achieving a brand status that commands a premium price is not a short-term project. It demands years, often decades, of consistent messaging and marketing investment to build the necessary emotional connection with customers. Most companies lack the patience and long-term vision for this.

Repositioning Marketing Mix Modeling (MMM) from a purely financial ROI calculation to a measure of consumer response and brand health can secure broader organizational buy-in, especially from brand-focused teams.

Position marketing as the engine for future quarters' growth, while sales focuses on closing current-quarter deals. This reframes marketing's long-term investments (like brand building) as essential for sustainable revenue, justifying budgets that don't show immediate, direct ROI to a CFO.

Unlike law or accounting, marketing is a "fat-tailed" domain where a few big ideas generate most of the value, often for years. The shift to hourly billing is catastrophic because it rewards incremental effort, not the billion-dollar ideas that create lasting value but may have taken little time to conceive.