This blog is part of Chief Outsiders’ Marketing Leadership for CEOs series, an ongoing examination of the critical dimensions of Marketing (the capital “M” is intentional, as you’ll see) that every CEO needs to understand.
Most Founders and CEOs don’t struggle to understand what Marketing does. They struggle to understand what Marketing is. Ask a leadership team to describe marketing, and the answers tend to focus on activity: advertising campaigns, website updates, social media presence, or lead generation programs. Marketing is often seen as the function responsible for “getting the word out” or “supporting sales.”
That perspective is understandable. Much of what is visible about Marketing is execution. But it is also incomplete—and, at scale, increasingly dangerous. Because Marketing is not simply a function that produces activity, it is one of the three core capabilities required to run a business. Every organization, regardless of industry, relies on three fundamental disciplines:
Finance tells you whether you are creating value, Operations determines how efficiently you deliver that value, and Marketing determines whether customers want what you are offering in the first place. When Marketing is understood as a system for aligning the organization with the market, it becomes the primary driver of growth. When it is misunderstood as a collection of activities, it often devolves into what we at Chief Outsiders call “random acts of marketing.” For Founders and CEOs, the implication is clear: You are not just responsible for overseeing marketing, you are responsible for leading it.
To understand why Marketing is so often misunderstood, it helps to start with a simple reframing. Most organizations treat Marketing as a functional department. But at the leadership level, Marketing is better understood as a core enterprise capability, on par with finance and operations. Consider how CEOs typically engage with finance and operations:
They do not disengage from operational performance.
They understand the core metrics, the structure of the function, and the levers that drive outcomes.
Marketing should be approached the same way. At its best, Marketing answers three essential questions:
We will cover this framework— which we call The Growth Gears®— in greater detail later. It is the foundation of our approach to building a market-oriented organization; when these elements are aligned, Marketing functions as a coherent system to drive growth. When they are not, the organization drifts toward activity without direction.
Most organizations do not set out to create fragmented marketing; it happens gradually. A campaign is launched to support a sales initiative, a website is redesigned to reflect a new product offering, a social media program is introduced because competitors are active, and a new tool is implemented to improve lead generation.
Each of these decisions may be individually reasonable. But over time, without a unifying framework, they accumulate into a pattern of disconnected activity. This is what we describe as random acts of marketing, and we see the examples way too frequently in our work with clients. Random acts of Marketing are:
The underlying issue is not effort or intent. It is the absence of a system that connects insight, strategy, and execution. In many cases, organizations have powerful execution capabilities. Digital tools, data platforms, and AI have made it easier than ever to launch and optimize Marketing programs. But those same tools also make it easier to act before thinking: execution accelerates, strategy lags, and insight becomes fragmented.
The result is a Marketing function that is busy—but not always effective.
The rise of digital Marketing has fundamentally reshaped how Marketing work gets done.
Over the past two decades, organizations have invested heavily in tools and capabilities that enable targeted advertising, real-time performance tracking, automated customer journeys, and easily scalable content production. More recently, artificial intelligence has dramatically increased the speed and scope of execution. These developments have created enormous opportunities. But they have also introduced a structural imbalance, as many of today’s tools are designed to improve execution efficiency, not strategic clarity. As a result:
In this environment, organizations can appear highly active while lacking alignment around the most fundamental questions:
Without clear answers, Marketing becomes reactive rather than intentional.
This is where the role of the Founder or CEO becomes critical. In many organizations, Marketing is delegated too far down the hierarchy. Leaders assume that as long as capable people are in place, the function will take care of itself.
But marketing, like finance and operations, requires active leadership engagement. The CEO does not need to manage campaigns or approve creative assets. But they do need to ensure that the Marketing system is grounded in clear principles. That responsibility includes:
1. Ensuring Clarity of Insight
2. Driving Strategic Focus
3. Enforcing Execution Discipline
When CEOs actively engage at this level, Marketing shifts from a collection of activities to a coordinated system.
The difference between fragmented Marketing and effective Marketing is not effort—it is alignment.
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In aligned organizations: |
In misaligned organizations: |
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Alignment does not happen by accident. It is the result of deliberate leadership. And it begins with a clear understanding of what Marketing is—and what it is not.
If Marketing is viewed as a support function, it will behave like one. If it is viewed as a system for driving growth, it will be managed differently. This reframing has several practical implications:
Perhaps most importantly, it changes the role of the CEO. Instead of asking “What is Marketing doing?” leaders begin asking “How well is our organization aligned with the market?” That is a fundamentally different—and far more powerful—question.
Marketing has never been more visible—and never more misunderstood. Founders and CEOs today have access to tools and capabilities that can drive extraordinary growth. But those tools do not eliminate the need for leadership. In many ways, they increase it.
Without clear insight and disciplined strategy, execution becomes fragmented. Activity increases, but impact becomes harder to achieve. The solution is not more Marketing activity - it is better Marketing leadership.
The CEO, whether founder or professional executive, is ultimately responsible for ensuring that the organization remains market oriented. That responsibility cannot be fully delegated. When Marketing is led as a system—grounded in insight, guided by strategy, and executed with discipline—it becomes one of the most powerful drivers of growth. When it is not, it becomes noise.
How is Marketing currently viewed in your organization—activity, support function, or growth system?
Where do you see the greatest disconnect: insight, strategy, or execution?
What would change if you approached Marketing with the same discipline as finance or operations?
If those questions surface more uncertainty than clarity, that's usually the first sign Marketing has drifted into activity without alignment. Schedule a consultation to work through where the disconnect is.