According to a recent survey from Active International, CEOs can best achieve business success by harnessing the combined expertise and skills of the company’s C-suite. Yet, to move at a fast enough speed to keep up with the accelerating business environment, it is imperative that the entire team is on the same page, meaning that alignment within the C-suite is critical to a CEO’s success. The report says that, while 76% of CFOs and 77% of CMOs believe that alignment is highly or extremely important, only 45% of each group thinks that misalignment has a moderate or higher negative influence on their company’s financial results. Despite that perception, companies whose finance and marketing teams are in sync generally perform at a much higher level than those with disjointed efforts, says the report. The survey also reveals that even when prioritizing areas in which they do align, the counterparts do not see eye to eye, though both indicate that they are most aligned when it comes to the overall direction of their business. It’s in the details where this alignment falls down. CFOs believe that they are most closely aligned with their CMO on financial priorities, while CMOs think they are most aligned with their CFO counterpart on business development initiatives. In companies where marketing works closely with finance, more than 40% outperformed expectations, says a Marketing 2020 survey. Just 12% of CFOs surveyed rate their CMO as excellent at connecting marketing initiatives to the ROI, says the report, likely due to marketing’s less quantifiable components. It can be difficult to measure the effectiveness of a particular marketing program, even with growth of new types of metrics, notes the report. Outside of digital programs, most often it can take more than six months to fully ramp up and impact metrics in a meaningful way. While marketing must represent the value that data brings to strategic programs, the reality is that many marketing programs are not easily measured. For instance, measuring the perceived value of a brand is difficult to quantify in a limited timeframe (i.e., six months to a year). How an advertising campaign moved that needle forward may take well beyond a year. Yet, because of the need to report figures to boards and Wall Street on a regular basis, companies have become overly focused on ROI of every component, which can take attention away from creating long-term business results, concludes the report. CMOs and CFOs rank overall strategic direction of the business as the area where they are most aligned. Yet, even when agreeing on the big picture, the two groups have very different ideas about ways to achieve that business plan. Response to the question “On which issue are you most aligned with your counterpart?” shows the difference between the CMO and the CFO: Most Aligned: CMOs