Welcome to Marketing Leadership Doom & Gloom

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Welcome to Marketing Leadership Doom & Gloom

The Gist

  • CMOs under fire. Gartner says nearly 60% of CEOs have fired CMOs for failing to adapt — and most don’t see them as growth contributors.
  • Strategic dysfunction is rampant. 84% of marketing leaders report high levels of strategic dysfunction in their organizations, hindering performance and collaboration.
  • Marketers are adapting — with grit and honesty. Marketing leaders say the pressure is real, the change is hard, but they’re evolving through partnership, long-term bets and customer-first strategies. 

AURORA, Colo. — Welcome to Aurora, Colorado. Or, the City of Marketing Doom and Gloom.

Gartner kicked off its Gartner Marketing Symposium/Xpo conference Monday morning, June 2, with a keynote here at the Gaylord Rockies Resort & Convention Center.

It wasn’t a feel-good, we are the brand champions, the unconditional customer advocates and everyone C-Suite member loves us kinda keynote. 

More like: we stink, we lack in the self-aware department, and we’re on our way out kinda vibe.

Gartner analysts Alex De Fursac Gash and Kristina LaRocca-Cerrone with Gartner for Marketing Leaders definitely had a narrative — CMOs must adapt or die — and had the data from the CMO’s peer executives to prove it.

Table of Contents

Hey, CMOs: You’re Not Ready, Gartner Says

Notably: Almost 60% of CEOs said they fired their chief marketing officers because they didn’t adapt.

You’re not ready, they told the packed crowd of marketing leaders — five times in the opening few minutes of the keynote:

CMOs Fail at Commercial Targets

CEOs and CFOs say that their CMO has fallen short of at least one commercial target. Most CEOs and CFOs don’t believe their CMO has made a “major positive contribution to growth,” De Fursac Gash said.  “In other words,” he added, “from the CEO’s perspective, you’re not ready.”

Marketing Has Inflated View of Initiatives

Over half of non-marketing leaders say marketing has an inflated view of initiatives and is an inhibitor to the success of those initiatives. 

“So from this C-Suite perspective, you’re not ready,” LaRocca-Cerrone said. 

Your Customers Don’t Feel You Get Them

“Consumers continue to feel that most companies simply don’t understand their needs, their preferences, today,” De Fursac Gash said. “And so from the customer’s point of view, you’re not ready.”

Marketers Are Burnt Out Because of High Expectations

Marketers are feeling the pressure of extraordinary expectations, particularly in today’s disrupted environment, according to LaRocca-Cerrone. “Marketers who report high levels of change are nearly twice as likely to experience burnout,” she said. “So marketing teams aren’t ready either.

CMOs Are ‘Stumbling’

“CMOs themselves are stumbling with two-thirds reporting that they fail to exceed the expectations of their roles,” De Fursac Gash said. “Bottom line, most marketing teams today are not ready for the epic journey.”

We get it. The pressure it real. According to CMSWire’s 2025 State of the CMO report, 69% of marketing leaders now face pressure to deliver quantifiable ROI, up from 59% just two years ago. And 95% say their team is under more pressure than ever to prove marketing impact.

Related Article: Marketing’s Tallest Mountain? CEO and CFO Approval

Marketing’s Risky Status Quo: Adapt or Get Replaced

Enough doom and gloom from the marketing leadership corner for you? No? OK. Let’s continue.

How about a little job insecurity as some frosting on this Doom Cake? 

The business environment is anything but normal, and sticking to the same old marketing strategies and planning approaches significantly lowers your chances of success. In fact, failing to adapt to today’s elevated expectations could cost you your job — it’s one of the most common reasons CEOs part ways with their CMOs. 

And this is troubling: Marketers are finding it hard to adapt and get it done collaboratively: 84% of marketing leaders report “high strategic dysfunction” in their organization, according to Gartner research.

And if marketing leaders do adapt and prepare what they feel is the best execution plan ever, the average CMO only has up to an 11% chance of exceeding CEO and CFO expectations. 

But you gotta do something. Right?

“Doing nothing today will only leave you further behind when disruption eventually extends,” De Fursac Gash said. 

It wasn’t all doom and gloom. 

Gartner researchers shared some optimism and advice for CMOs to raise their importance in the enterprise and contribute more to brand health, including:

You’re on an Epic Journey — and You Can Lead It

Your function, your team, your reputation, even your legacy — it’s all on the line. But you can also become extraordinary in this moment of great disruption. Despite the bleak diagnosis, the keynote framed marketing’s situation as an epic journey — one full of real, achievable opportunities if leaders prepare well, adapt and adopt the right mindset.

Learning Opportunities

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