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Chief marketing officer. Chief brand officer. Chief operating and marketing officer. Chief commercial and strategy officer.
None of these job titles are the same, yet various companies assign them to the same person: their top marketer. The wide range of descriptions highlights the profession’s nebulous nature, as marketers take on more responsibilities amid greater pressure to prove the financial benefit of their efforts.
“The marketing leadership role has become more complex than any other leadership role in the last 10 years,” said Richard Sanderson, a consultant at executive search and advisory firm Spencer Stuart.
Sanderson, who leads Spencer Stuart’s marketing, sales and communications officer practice in North America, noted that organizations today expect top marketers to be everything from a creative guru to an expert in marketing technology. “The focus of the role can vary a lot,” he added.
Sometimes one person may cycle through multiple designations until the company feels it got the remit right. Charisse Ford Hughes, for example, joined The Kellogg Company—now known as Kellanova—in 2020 as chief marketing officer. In 2022, her title changed to chief brand and advanced analytics officer. A year later, it changed yet again to chief growth officer.
Data from Spencer Stuart, collected in June 2023, shows just how fragmented the marketing landscape has become. Among the top marketers at Fortune 500 companies, 36% have the conventional chief marketing officer title, such as Lisa Materazzo, global chief marketing officer at Ford Motor Company.
Another 31% have the word “marketing” in their title but don’t go by chief marketing officer, such as Hiroki Asai, global head of marketing at Airbnb.
Then there’s a subset of marketers who have the CMO title plus another function, such as “communications” or “experience.” They account for 13% of the top marketers at Fortune 500 companies, including Stuart Aitken, chief merchant and marketing officer at Kroger.