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How AI Elevates the Need for Brand Leadership

▼ Summary

– Only 49% of Fortune 500 top marketers hold the CMO title, down from 55% in one year, with average tenure dropping to 3.9 years.
– When marketing is reduced to performance spend management, brands drift onto the “plateau of indifference,” where they are known but mean nothing, eroding pricing power.
– General Mills’ short-term optimization of Lacoste destroyed its premium cachet, and rebuilding brand meaning took years of patient reinvestment, costing decades of lost profits.
– AI surfaces brands based on narrative footprint, not ad spend; brands without clear meaning become invisible in AI-mediated search, as organic click-through rates drop 15–64%.
– To succeed, CMOs need a longer measurement window (3+ years), a 60/40 split favoring brand-building over performance spend, and a seat at the strategy table.

There’s a painful contradiction at the heart of modern marketing leadership. The Chief Marketing Officer is tasked with one of the most complex, long-range jobs in the C-suite. Yet their performance is judged on short-term metrics, with shrinking budgets, and a mandate to boost quarterly sales before their tenure inevitably ends.

Perhaps the title should stand for Chief Miracle Officer. Or, as some companies have decided, why keep the role at all? Bad move,especially now that AI is reshaping how consumers discover brands. More on that shortly.

According to Forrester’s 2025 report, “The Representation and Tenure of Fortune 500 CMOs,” only 49% of Fortune 500 top marketers now hold the CMO title, down from 55% just a year ago. Over one in five Fortune 500 companies replaced their entire marketing leadership in the past twelve months. Average CMO tenure has fallen to 3.9 years,the shortest of any executive role.

Instead of fixing a broken model, many organizations chose to dissolve it entirely. UPS, Etsy, and Walgreens eliminated the standalone CMO position and never replaced it. Marketing responsibilities were absorbed by the chief commercial officer or COO. In the worst cases, martech implementation was handed to IT.

The unspoken message is clear: brand-building leadership is treated as overhead, not infrastructure. As Forrester VP and Principal Analyst Ian Bruce noted, the CMO’s role had become “stretched between brand and demand, product and pipeline, digital and physical.”

CEOs did what felt logical: they split the job or gave it to someone who could deliver analytical metrics and short-term ROI. What they overlooked is what happens to a brand when no one is left to ask if it still means anything.

When more people use AI to find products and services, your promotional spend stops driving sales. AI doesn’t care about your jingle, clever ad, or sales promotion. That stuff is invisible to it. AI looks for meaning.

Your customers search everywhere. Make sure your brand shows up with the SEO toolkit you know, plus the AI visibility data you need.

The Plateau of Indifference: What Fills the Vacuum

When marketing becomes performance spend management and dashboard oversight, brands drift onto what I call the Plateau of Indifference.

It’s a deceptively comfortable place. Revenue doesn’t collapse. Customers don’t disappear overnight. The brand is still known, still available, still spending. But it has stopped meaning anything to people. The justification for price versus value erodes.

Consumers can still name the brand, but with so many me-too solutions, they choose based on price,which becomes the only real differentiator.

Congratulations. You’ve cut your own margins and increased the need for promotional spend.

Market share shuffles between competitors running identical playbooks. Performance spend must increase just to hold flat results.

The Plateau of Indifference shows how much farther brand clarity gets you than just price. The more things change, the more they change.

The Cost of Short-Term Thinking

Decades ago, General Mills bought the Lacoste fashion brand and merged it with Izod. Things went reasonably well at first.

Then they optimized for short-term revenue. The brand appeared in discount stores. Distribution broadened into mass outlets. It lost its premium cachet, and margins dropped sharply.

Rebuilding those margins after Lacoste repurchased the brand in 1992 took years of patient reinvestment: pulling back from discount channels, raising prices, and reestablishing meaning. Sales eventually climbed 800% over the following decade. That turnaround cost at least two decades of lost profits.

The lesson isn’t just that the turnaround worked. It’s how long it took,and how much of that time ran directly against quarterly pressure to show faster results.

That’s the real cost of living on the Plateau of Indifference. Not a bad quarter. Years of compounding irrelevance that get progressively harder and more expensive to undo.

McDonald’s learned this lesson in 2019 when it eliminated its global CMO role. Within a year, the company reinstated the position and expanded its CMO’s portfolio.

When you remove the person responsible for instilling meaning into the brand, you eventually discover that the question still needs to be asked. Meaning matters to those whose money you want in exchange for your product. These days, AI gets the first vote.

The New Penalty: AI Doesn’t Care About Your Media Budget

The stakes have changed, and there’s no way around it.

AI doesn’t surface brands based on ad spend, impression share, or promotional pricing. It synthesizes the brand’s narrative footprint. It surfaces what problems the brand demonstrably solves, what values it consistently demonstrates, and how much customers appreciate it.

A brand that has spent years in performance-only mode, with no one stewarding its meaning, has a thin and transactional narrative. AI reads that thinness and routes around it. The brand grows more and more invisible.

The numbers behind this shift are not trivial. Studies show organic click-through rates dropping between 15% and 64% when AI-generated answers appear in search results.

Brands without clear meaning aren’t just losing ground. They’re losing the ability to be found at all in the channel replacing traditional search.

Here’s a simple audit any CMO,or whoever inherited the marketing function,can run today. Ask ChatGPT, Gemini, or Perplexity to recommend a solution in your category.

If your brand doesn’t appear, or appears vaguely, you’ve just received a more honest brand health assessment than most tracking studies will give you. No amount of media spend fixes that result. Only meaning does.

The CMO’s structural trap,short tenure, performance-only metrics, brand investment treated as discretionary overhead,has been quietly building this AI vulnerability for years.

The elimination of the role didn’t just cost brands a title. It cost them the only executive whose job was to prevent that invisibility.

3 Things a CMO Needs to Actually Do the Job

The miracle the C-suite keeps requesting isn’t brand equity in 90 days. The actual miracle,the harder, quieter one,is making the organization understand that brand meaning is infrastructure, not overhead. Without someone protecting it, the business is flying without instruments.

1. A longer measurement window

Binet and Field’s research establishes the empirical baseline: short-term effects are measurable within a year, but the compounding value of brand meaning,higher margins, lower acquisition costs, and greater resilience in downturns,plays out over three or more years.

CMOs are being asked to build something that may take longer than their likely tenure to fully materialize. That’s not a talent problem. It’s a system design problem.

2. Budget protection for brand-building, separate from performance spend

Binet and Field’s 60/40 principle,spend 60% on long-term brand building, 40% on short-term activation,isn’t a philosophical preference.

It’s an empirically derived formula for maximizing total marketing ROI. When that ratio inverts, as it has across most organizations, short-term sales numbers hold for a while. Then the baseline erodes.

Then you’re on the Plateau of Indifference, wondering why performance spend keeps taking more money to produce the same results.

3. A seat at the strategy table, not just the media table

Brand meaning starts with what a company does, not what it says. The CMOs who are driving growth,and increasingly making the leap to CEO,are the ones involved in product decisions, customer experience design, and organizational values. Not just creative approvals and media planning.

The Job Needs a New Name

There’s a final reframe worth making. The title chief marketing officer may itself be part of the problem. It signals a functional lane,campaigns, creative, media,at the exact moment the job demands something broader.

What the role actually requires is someone whose mandate is relevance. Relevance in the most operational sense: ensuring the brand means something clear and consistent to the people it’s trying to reach, to the algorithms increasingly deciding what those people see, and to the culture the brand operates in.

Let’s call the role chief relevance officer. The companies that figure that out first will have brands that AI can surface.

The ones still treating the CMO like a media interruption ROI spreadsheet jockey,or who distribute the function across a COO, IT, and a dashboard,won’t.

The companies that eliminated the CMO role lost the only executive whose job was to make the brand mean something. Not just to the people it’s trying to reach, but to the AI platforms that need that meaning to make you visible.

In the age of AI-mediated discovery, no other factor will be more consequential,or more expensive to leave unanswered.

(Source: MarTech)

Topics

cmo role crisis 95% brand meaning 92% short-term performance metrics 90% ai visibility 88% plateau of indifference 87% marketing leadership tenure 85% brand building vs. performance spend 84% cmo role elimination 83% ai-mediated discovery 82% budget allocation 80%