Julia Payne, business leader and Fractional CMO, explores how marketers can work better with sales to become drivers of revenue.
Apple’s 2006 Get a Mac campaign became an instant commercial success. The humorous clashes between PCs and Macs – personified by human actors – redefined tech advertising as we know it. Relatability replaced the polished, jargon-heavy outreach the world had grown used to, driving three years of 42%-market-share-grabbing success.
This marked a new era of marketing: one where authenticity definitively outperformed formal professionalism, across all sectors.
Now needs more
Being relatable constituted a major differentiator back then. Nowadays, however, it’s a bare-minimum requirement. In our always-on, social-media-fuelled economy, consumers don’t just expect brands to speak to them but to engage with them directly, demanding instant, continuous, personalised interactions from firms that embody their values. The Get a Mac strategy is no longer sufficient.
Progress came with walls
Whilst the late 20th century was characterised by marketers essentially pitching to their audiences with the aim of driving sales, the 21st was all about replacing blatant close-deal chasing with building consumer-first connection. But there was an unintended consequence.
As marketing became more creative and engagement-focused, its metrics began to drift away from the commercial heartbeat of the business. The early 2000s were dominated by campaign outputs, impressions, and marketing-qualified leads (MQLs), disconnected from the sales qualified leads (SQLs) that sales teams pursued.
Collective, companywide outcomes split at the seams, with broader commercial measures replaced with siloed departmental KPIs that blinded teams to each other’s progress. Clunky handoffs were still happening, but balls were dropped as collaboration became competition, co-ordinated communications became conflicting messages delivered to consumers and clients, and interdepartmental finger-pointing replaced accountability as the standard procedure for addressing failures. Businesses simply cannot thrive like this.
A second revolution
If today’s firms wish to move minds and money, marketing, sales, customer success, finance, and planning teams will have to co-ordinate, centring collaborative efforts around shared goals.
This is why Revenue Operations (RevOps) is growing in both prevalence and importance. Sitting at the centre of growth, RevOps unites teams under one single, shared commercial mission, ensuring every single action taken by every single department translates into efficient, predictable profit.
By aligning people, processes, and platforms across the go-to-market, ensuring that the same data, definitions, and performance measures drive it all, RevOps creates a single growth engine, where effort compounds, insights flow, and accountability is collective. Leaders must, however, recognise that technology and processes alone cannot fix fragmented thinking, driving a culture of collaboration supported by shared wins and regular interdepartmental interactions to support people-driven change.
Marketers as revenue operators
Within this new framework, marketers begin to approach what might be traditionally recognised as revenue operators in role. Their job isn’t just to attract attention but to understand how that attention converts into pipeline, expansion, and retention.
Modern marketers must collaborate closely across functions, capturing and converting attention in accordance with – not in parallel to – sales strategy, to prevent discordance. Meanwhile, they must ensure that the stories they tell tie back to the balance sheet. Resonating and engaging with customers is all well and good, but unless those relationships can be tangibly measured in terms that benefit the entire company, their impact and meaning are lost. How many of us chuckled knowingly at the relatable flaws of the PC in the Apple campaign, with zero intention of ever purchasing a Mac, for example?
Connection and conversion
RevOps-driven marketers bridge the gap between connection and conversion, not only making brands memorable but ensuring the attention and custom lasts. Creative thinking must be combined with operator strategy – with marketers designing, managing, and optimising in line with commercial performance.
The AI catalyst
Artificial intelligence is fast becoming a great accelerator of this shift, quietly automating repetitive, routine tasks. It can generate skeleton content, analyse datasets, and assist with targeting and reporting – all in just seconds. Far from making marketers redundant, this bolsters their strategic capacity. With basic execution handled, human marketers can sharpen their focus on creative direction, systems thinking, and growth design.
Rather than asking, “What campaign should we run next?”, marketers can consult the AI data, rapidly determining direction and focusing on the levers they can pull to improve pipeline velocity, conversion rates, and retention. In defining the inputs that drive measurable outcomes, they’re becoming architects of the revenue system.
Machine-powered analytics and forecasting are closing the longstanding gap between marketers’ actions and their commercial impact, as data can now track it in real time. Vanity metrics give way to economic KPIs, AI being the final piece in the puzzle when it comes to removing the ambiguity between activity and revenue performance. Marketing is less about doing and more about deciding in this sense: less executing tasks and more engineering outcomes. Those who can interpret, question, and strategically direct AI output will excel in this context, setting the course for company growth.
Money, not mentions
As marketing moves closer to the financial core, accountability is likewise changing. Future marketers will be held to the same standards as finance and sales – measured by impact, not influence. Budgets will no longer be defended with creativity but commercial logic including customer acquisition cost, lifetime value, payback periods, and pipeline velocity.
Perhaps uncomfortable at first, this shift from marketing-influenced revenue to marketing-delivered is liberating. When marketers can demonstrate clear, measurable links between strategy and profit, they move from justification to leadership. Accountability doesn’t kill creativity; it secures its seat at the top table, where economic progress is the lingua franca.
Skills for the new era
With data fluency, systems thinking, and commercial literacy now foundational to effective marketing, future marketers are less artsy brand advocates and more revenue operators, using their creativity to support wider strategic mettle. At leadership level, this calls for Chief Marketing Officers to transform from mere campaign managers to chief growth operators in parallel. The ability to diagnose bottlenecks will become just as vital as creating briefs – with marketing leaders capable of balancing imagination with business acumen, not only surviving this new economy but actively shaping it.
Marketing at the heart of growth
Understanding sales cycles, pipeline mechanics, and customer lifetime value matters just as much as brand narrative and positioning nowadays. Yet, the metamorphosis from brand builder to revenue operator doesn’t have to be painful. Strategy amplifies creativity’s relevance, the art of connection forming the solid foundations upon which to build measurable growth.
The next era of marketing is all about joined-up, business-focused operations. To succeed, intuition must embrace intelligence as art and analytics merge. It seems ‘being on the money’ really is the industry’s new reality.
