Marketing functions with board-level credibility secure more investment and are more deeply integrated into strategic decision making. The capability to communicate commercial impact at governance level is the prerequisite for everything else.
The Visibility Problem at the Top of the Marketing Function
Marketing leaders who struggle to secure board-level attention for their function’s contribution rarely attribute the problem to communication. They attribute it to measurement complexity, to the boardroom’s preference for short-term financial metrics, or to a fundamental undervaluation of brand as a strategic asset. These explanations are not entirely wrong, but they are incomplete. The more uncomfortable explanation — the one with greater practical utility — is that many CMOs have not developed the capability to translate marketing’s commercial contribution into terms that the board finds credible and actionable.
Boards allocate attention and capital according to their understanding of where value is being created and where risk is being managed. If marketing’s contribution to either is unclear, marketing will receive proportionally less of both. This is not a governance failure. It is a communication failure, and the responsibility for it sits with the marketing leader. The board cannot value what it cannot see. If marketing is invisible at board level, the CMO must ask what they are doing — or failing to do — that produces that invisibility.
The stakes of this question have increased considerably. In the contemporary business environment, the CMO is expected to be an active participant in strategic discussions about growth, competitive positioning, and customer experience — not a functional specialist who reports to the CEO and represents marketing’s interests in the resource allocation process. That shift in expectation requires a corresponding shift in how marketing leaders prepare for, contribute to, and follow up from board interactions.
What Board Directors Actually Need From Marketing Leadership
Board directors are not primarily interested in marketing. They are interested in the performance of the business — its revenue growth, its competitive position, its customer relationships, and its long-term brand equity as a component of enterprise value. Marketing is relevant to the board insofar as it contributes to these concerns. CMOs who present to the board on marketing’s own terms — campaign results, reach metrics, brand tracking scores — are giving directors information they do not know how to use. CMOs who present on the business’s terms are giving directors information they find genuinely useful.
A board does not need to understand marketing. It needs to understand whether the organisation’s investment in marketing is generating returns commensurate with its cost and risk. That is a different question, and it demands a different answer.
The most effective CMOs in board relationships share three capabilities. First, they can articulate the relationship between marketing investment and revenue outcomes with enough rigour to withstand scrutiny from directors with finance, legal, or operations backgrounds. Second, they can frame brand and customer-related risks — declining net promoter scores, erosion of market share, reputation vulnerability — in the language of enterprise risk that boards are specifically required to monitor. Third, they can propose, rather than react to, strategic choices about marketing investment, framing options and trade-offs rather than defending existing budgets.
The Commercial Fluency That Earns a Seat at the Table
Commercial fluency for CMOs in board contexts means more than understanding financial statements. It means being able to position marketing’s contribution within the context of the organisation’s total commercial model — understanding where marketing generates revenue, where it protects margin, and where it creates or destroys enterprise value. This requires a working knowledge of customer economics, competitive dynamics, and the financial metrics that matter to investors and analysts as well as internal leadership.
Building the Board Relationship Beyond the Formal Presentation
Board relationships for CMOs are not built in the formal presentation slot. They are built in the informal interactions — the pre-meeting briefings, the post-meeting conversations, the direct communications that occur between board meetings when significant developments warrant them. CMOs who invest in these informal touchpoints build a different quality of relationship than those who treat the board as an audience for quarterly updates.
The most strategically effective marketing leaders treat board directors as potential advocates and advisors, not as evaluators to be managed. This means understanding the individual interests and expertise that each director brings, finding points of genuine intellectual connection, and creating the conditions for conversations that go beyond reporting and into collaborative strategic thinking. Directors who genuinely understand the marketing strategy and have contributed to its development are far more likely to defend marketing investment in the discussions that inevitably occur when budgets are contested.
Building board relationships also requires consistency. A CMO who delivers a strong commercial narrative in one board meeting but reverts to campaign metrics in the next is not building trust — they are producing uncertainty. The board reads inconsistency as a signal about clarity of thinking. Consistent, commercially grounded communication, maintained across multiple interactions over time, is what shifts the board’s perception of marketing from a cost centre to a value creator.
The Strategic Stakes of Marketing’s Board Visibility
The board relationship imperative for marketing leaders is ultimately not about individual career advancement, though that is a real consequence of getting it right. It is about the organisational conditions that enable marketing effectiveness. Marketing functions that have board-level credibility secure more investment, retain more talent, and are more likely to be integrated into strategic decision making at the point where strategic decisions are actually made. Marketing functions that remain invisible at board level operate at a permanent structural disadvantage, regardless of the quality of their execution.
For Australian organisations competing in an environment of increasing complexity and compressing timelines, the ability of the marketing function to influence strategy at the highest level of governance is a competitive variable. The CMOs who develop the board relationship capability that this requires are not just advancing their own careers. They are building the organisational conditions for marketing to deliver its full strategic potential — and for the organisation to compete more effectively as a result.