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A marketer's value isn't in executing tasks like "writing a job post," but in understanding and optimizing for the desired outcome, like "getting qualified people to apply." This mindset shift from task-filler to outcome-driver is the essence of effective marketing.
Many leaders treat marketing as a secondary function to be addressed after operations. Instead, it should be viewed as the core operational driver—the 'oxygen' that creates all business opportunities, making it more critical than even financial literacy.
Marketers mistakenly define their value by function ("Capital M" marketing like ads). Their greater, untapped value is their way of thinking ("small m" marketing): a deep understanding of human perception and customer perspective, which has applications far beyond the marketing department.
To move from a tactical to a strategic role, marketers must stop reporting on channel-specific metrics like CTRs. Instead, they must articulate how their activities directly ladder up to overall business growth and align with the goals of other departments.
The most effective marketers understand the entire business—revenue, profit, and customer economics. This acumen allows them to build strategies that directly drive growth, reframing marketing's role from a cost center to a critical and accountable business driver.
Marketing struggles for board-level respect because it focuses on tactical outputs like ads ('what we do') rather than its strategic mindset of customer-centric value creation ('how we think'). Shifting the narrative from tactical execution to strategic thinking elevates marketing's perceived importance within an organization.
While metrics are important, great marketing is built on genuine human insight. The most resonant campaigns connect with deep human traits. This is why many top CEOs have backgrounds in the humanities, not just STEM; they excel at understanding people, not just algorithms.
Marketing plans often fail because they are created in a vacuum. A robust marketing strategy must be built upon the company's core business strategy, including its vision, values, and business model, to ensure it supports overall objectives like growth targets.
Look for a marketing partner who will educate you and your team, not just execute tasks in a black box. The most valuable agencies explain the 'why' behind their strategies, leveling up your entire organization's marketing knowledge and fostering a more collaborative, effective relationship.
Instead of operating within the confines of a marketing department, marketers should adopt the mindset of the CEO. This means focusing on how to change the customer's mind to achieve the company's ultimate goals, rather than getting bogged down in departmental tactics. This approach leads to more influential and strategic work.
The most impactful marketers adopt a founder's mindset by constantly asking if their decisions align with the CEO or CFO's perspective on profitable growth. This leads to creating "boring" — repeatable and consistent — systems, rather than chasing new, shiny projects every quarter.