We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 6
9128124, 4:53 AM Put Marketing at the Core of Your Growth Strategy
Marketing
Put Marketing at the Core of
Your Growth Strategy
by Mare Brodherson, Jennifer Ellinas, Ed See and Robert Tas
March 6, 2024
Indochina Culture/Getty Images
‘Summary. Companies that make the decision to put marketing at the core of their
growth strategy outperform the competition, according to McKinsey research.
Specifically, both 82C and B2B companies who view branding and advertising as a
top two growth strategy are... more
Growth is a perpetual business priority. So it’s imperative that
CEOs understand how their marketing function and chief
marketing officers (CMOs) can contribute to that goal. Few do —
and that misalignment can be costly.
How do we know this? Because, with proprietary research and
input from the Association of National Advertisers, we surveyed
more than 100 marketing leaders and 21 CEOs from a range of
-ntps:brorg/2024/08/outmarketing-al-tne-core-f-your.growth-stategy 189128124, 4:53 AM
Put Marketing a the Core of Your Growth Sategy
industries and from companies of different sizes. We also looked
specifically at marketing dynamics in Fortune $00 companies.
The results of this research are clear: Companies that make the
decision to put marketing at the core of their growth strategy
outperform the competition. Specifically, those who view
branding and advertising as a top two growth strategy are twice as
likely to see revenue growth of 5% or more than those that don’t
(67% to 33%). This is true for both B2C and B2B companies.
In addition, high-growth companies — defined as those in the top
quartile — invest, on average, three times more on marketing. As
one senior executive of a consumer goods company told us,
“Finance identifies where the money goes; marketing identifies
where the money comes from.”
For CEOs and companies who aren’t using marketing to drive
growth, it’s time to hit the reset button. Here’s how.
1. Define what you need.
Do you have an innovation-led growth strategy? Are your
customer relationships strong? Do you have the right capabilities,
people, and tech to build a world-class brand?
If you don’t know what marketing can do, you can't know what it
should be doing. That principle sounds obvious, but the practice
is far from ubiquitous.
When we asked CEOs and CMOs in the same company what
marketing’s primary role was — brand building, customer
-ntps:brorg/2024/08/outmarketing-al-tne-core-f-your.growth-stategy 269128124, 4:53 AM
Put Marketing at the Core of Your Gromth Strategy
experience, digital growth, loyalty, or sales support — half the
time, they gave different answers. In addition, almost half of
CMOs ranked branding and advertising as a top-two growth tool;
fewer than 30% of CEOs agreed. Two-thirds of the time, these
leaders didn’t agree or weren’t sure that they had the same
definition of what marketing return on investment is. Fewer than
30% of CEOs thought their CMOs were highly effective at driving
growth.
All this is more than a failure of communication — it’s a
fundamental disconnect. CEOs have a responsibility to provide
their marketing leaders with a compass they can use to read the
strategic map. Together they must create a marketing
measurement framework that connects company-wide outcomes
to marketing growth strategies.
2. Nominate a chief customer advocate.
Unlocking growth is a team sport. Ata minimum, the marketing,
digital, product, and finance functions have to work together.
Different players will execute different parts of the growth
agenda, but you need a growth unifier whose task is to represent
the voice of the consumer. In effect, that person is the
quarterback.
In many companies, custody of the customer is fragmented. For
example, two-thirds of CMOs in our survey said that there was
more than one customer C-level role in their company. That can
be a problem because when everyone owns the customer, then no
one does.
Defining the role of chief customer advocate is critical. The CMO
could play this part, or it could be someone else. Whatever the
title, what matters is that there is a seat at the table filled by a
leader who represents the consumer. The chief customer
-ntps:brorg/2024/08/outmarketing-al-tne-core-f-your.growth-stategy a69128124, 4:53 AM
Put Marketing a the Core of Your Growth Sategy
advocate must have real authority and be an integral part of every
strategic conversation. According to research by Adweek, there is
a strong correlation between high-performing CMOs and strong
support from CEOs.
‘Too often, though, this support is weak. Our research found that
four out of 10 Fortune 500 companies don’t have anyone in
marketing and customer-related roles on their executive
committees. Those that do are more likely to outperform; we
found that companies with CMOs highly involved in strategic
planning grow 1.3 times faster. As one marketing executive at a
global beverage company put it, “Strategy should be
multidisciplinary, but when marketing does not have a seat at
that table, the whole system has failed.
3. Become a growth coach.
With a star quarterback in place, CEOs need to embrace their role
as the coach. Their job is to draw up the strategy, not to toss the
ball down the field.
CEOs should have a handle on the challenges and opportunities of
modern marketing. Is the marketing strategy aligned with the
overall growth strategy? Too often, the answer is either “no,” or
“not enough.” Again, our survey results were revealing. Fifty
percent of the CEOs said they were very comfortable with modern
marketing and only a third of CMOs agreed that they were.
Marketing today is more than branding and advertising. It is a
multi-dimensional and technical discipline. Consider: the
number of marketing technology solutions has been doubling
every year, with more than 11,000 in 2023 alone. CEOs without a
marketing background — and that describes most of them —
must invest in learning, including spending time with their
-ntps:brorg/2024/08/outmarketing-al-tne-core-f-your.growth-stategy 469128124, 4:53 AM
Pt Marketing a the Coe of Your Growth Saegy
CMOs, to deepen their knowledge of the tools of modern
marketing. Doing so will help them become a better coach.
It’s also important to ensure that CMOs have the right mindset;
accountability is not just for business unit leaders. Develop CMOs
so that they act like they own profit-and-loss responsibilities.
Hold them accountable for delivering tangible results that
support the growth agenda.
For that to happen, the quarterback needs to have the ball; having
too many customer voices can be as ineffective as none at all.
Across industries, we found that Fortune 500 companies with one
customer role in the executive committee grow significantly
faster than those with multiple ones — from 20% faster in
materials and chemicals to more than double in travel and
logistics.
The evidence is clear: Growth leaders generate 80% more
shareholder value than their peers over a 10-year period — and
marketing can be a growth accelerator. But too many CEOs, too
often, are not taking the actions that can put it in overdrive. That
isa failing you cannot afford: leaving money on the table is not a
good strategy.
Mare Brodherson isa senior partner in
McKinsey & Company’s New York office.
-ntps:brorg/2024/08/outmarketing-al-tne-core-f-your.growth-stategy 869128124, 4:53 AM Put Marketing at the Gore of Your Growth Strategy
Jennifer Ellinas is an associate partner in
McKinsey & Company's Toronto office.
Ed See is a partner in McKinsey & Company's
Stamford, Connecticut office.
Robert Tas is a partner in McKinsey &
Company's Stamford, Connecticut office.
x i. in A
Read more on Marketing or related topics Growth strategy, Competitive
strategy, Corporate strategy, Sales and marketing, Strategy and
Marketing industry
-ntps:brorg/2024/08/outmarketing-al-tne-core-f-your.growth-stategy
88