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Seventy three percent of CEOs think marketers “lack business credibility” and are not the business growth generators they should be, according to damning research by the Fournaise Marketing Group.
The world’s business leaders say their marketing departments are still unable to clearly demonstrate the bottom-line value of their campaigns.
Fournaise interviewed more than 600 large corporation and small-to-medium enterprise CEOs and decision-makers in the US, Europe and Asia, as part of its 2011 ‘Global marketing effectiveness’ programme.
It found several key issues still bugging the CEO-marketing relationship. The top six problems were:
Fournaise further demonstrated the disconnect between marketers and their bosses by asking marketers about their own assessments of their impacts. While 73 per cent of CEOs think marketers lack business credibility and are not effectiveness-focused enough to generate incremental customer demand, 69 per cent of the marketers interviewed felt their strategies and campaigns did make an impact on the company’s business, even though they couldn’t precisely quantify or prove it.
Jerome Fontaine, CEO of Fournaise, says it is up to marketers to change how they prevent their strategies in the boardroom. “Until marketers start speaking the profit-and-loss language of their CEOs and stakeholders, they will continue to lack credibility in the eyes of their CEOs and will continue to be seen more as a cost centre than an asset,” he said.