Key Findings for CMOs Reclaiming Strategic Authority
- 61% of CMOs say operational needs drive their plans more than customer or strategic insights, signaling a core misalignment that limits marketing’s influence.
- 80% of CEOs report low trust in their CMOs, contributing to short tenures and reduced credibility at the strategy table
- Marketing strategist Stacey Danheiser’s A3 Framework helps CMOs lead with insight, align to business goals, and build credibility through outcome-driven metrics.
61% of CMOs say their plans are shaped by internal operational needs, not customer insight or strategy.
This trend, reported by Gartner in 2025, reflects how marketing leaders are trapped in execution and sidelined from strategic decisions.
The consequences are real.
Eighty percent of CEOs say they don’t trust or are unimpressed by their CMOs, according to Harvard Business Review. The result? Diminished influence and the shortest tenure in the C-suite.
Stacey Danheiser, COO of Impressa AI and founder of Shake Marketing, says the issue is one of positioning. She’s helped Fortune 500 and mid-market B2B teams reposition marketing as a strategic function focused on customer value and business alignment.
In Episode 90 of the DesignRush Podcast, she shares how marketers can shift from being executors to strategic leaders — starting with customer insight and internal credibility.
Stacey's A3 Framework — Align, Account, Accelerate — helps CMOs rebuild trust, secure buy-in, and lead company strategy.
Listen to the full episode now on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or YouTube to learn how top CMOs reclaim strategic influence.
Episode Chapter Summary
- 07:15 - Why B2B Still Fails at Customer Focus
- 10:19 - Marketing + Sales Alignment Through AI
- 16:44 - Culture, Retention & Investing in People
- 31:14 - Why Marketers Must Own Their Growth
- 41:36 - The A3 Framework: Align, Account, Accelerate
1. How Marketing Lost Its Seat at the Table
Stacey argues that marketing's pivot to tech and output has weakened its internal influence.
“Marketing has lost sight of what the primary job is, which is to be the voice of the customer internally.
And because they're not connected to the customer anymore, they have lost their seat at the table."
When CMOs operate like fulfillment centers, they lose the ability to shape business strategy, and with it the budget, buy-in, and impact that define success.
2. The A3 Framework: Align, Account, Accelerate
To shift back into a position of power, Stacey introduces the A3 Framework, Alignment, Accountability, and Acceleration, designed to help marketing lead again.
“So there's three A's. The first is alignment. The second is accountability. And the third is acceleration.”
“So everybody wants to start with accelerate. ‘Let's just go, let's just start executing.’
No, the reason that your marketing plan doesn't work or that you don't necessarily have the buy-in is because you skipped those first two steps.”
This model challenges CMOs to stop chasing tactics and instead focus on structured influence: understand the business, own the customer, and drive alignment.
3. Alignment: Reclaiming the Voice of the Customer
Being “customer-centric” is often just a slogan. Stacey says customer focus must become a core business discipline. One that starts at the top.
“This is not a marketing activity. I think that's the mistake that a lot of companies make, everybody else is kind of internally oriented.
So, number one, it [must] come from the executive leadership team.”
She stresses that marketers must lead the customer conversation through intentional research, not just internal hearsay.
“Option two, you outsource this and you actually hire somebody that is interviewing on your behalf, customers are more open when they are talking to a neutral third party."
4. Accountability: Metrics That Build Credibility
Too often, marketers show the wrong data to the wrong audience and lose trust in the process.
“I just was looking at some dashboard the other day and I was like, my gosh, do not show this.
Do not show this to anybody, you're now inviting everybody else's opinions into the fold,” Stacey says.
Instead, she urges CMOs to build credibility by aligning metrics to the customer journey and business outcomes, not vanity KPIs.
5. Acceleration: Strategy Requires Real-Time Adjustments
In Stacey’s view, leading with acceleration only works when strategy is consistently reviewed, not locked into annual plans.
“I'm like, how would you rate yourself? 95% probably. Meanwhile, the CEO is rating them 65%, there's so much misalignment and you are blindsided.”
Her advice?
Conduct internal audits regularly and never rely on assumptions about perception. Leadership must be built on shared definitions, not silos.
Insight Is the New Influence
CMOs don’t regain power by executing more. They do it by aligning with business outcomes, owning customer understanding, and confidently speaking the language of leadership.
“I see this trend happening where it's like marketing is execution. Don't pull the marketing team in yet. We're not ready to execute.
And I'm like, no, let's drag them back to the strategic leadership table.”
Stacey's call to action is clear: marketers must take ownership of their internal reputation and strategic value. If you wait for the invitation, you’ve already lost your seat. The way back is through insight, credibility, and the courage to lead from the front.
🎧 Listen to the full episode of the DesignRush Podcast on Spotify, Apple Podcasts or YouTube.