Nexus Expert Research

Why the Best CMOs Refuse to Choose Between Growth and Brand

The most effective Chief Marketing Officers never need to debate between brand development and performance marketing, since it is a single approach. Best CMOs perceive long-term brand value and short-term revenue growth as forces, not conflicting priorities. The actual competitive advantage is in having a clue about when and how to use each lever.

The Fallacy of Choice that is Most Holding of Marketers

The majority of marketing departments are divided along their lines. One faction is demanding short-term, quantifiable outcomes. The other contends of awareness and equity, which is compensated over the years. The result? Budget wars, conflicting objectives, and a plan that fails in both directions.

One of the most costly myths in contemporary marketing is the notion that brand building vs revenue growth is a dichotomy of choice. Elite CMOs had deserted this way of thinking a long time ago.

Do they not question whether we should invest in brand or growth? They pose questions: How do we make brand fuel growth, and how does growth prove brand?

What Brand Building Does in Fact to Revenue

Building the brand is not limited to logos and taglines. It establishes mental availability – to what extent your brand is recalled when a customer is in the position to buy.

In the case of the strong brand:

  • The performance marketing campaigns are more conversion-driven.
  • Costs of customer acquisition are reduced as there is already trust.
  • Sensitivity to price reduces, safeguarding margins.
  • Discounts and promotions become less relied upon.
  • An established brand works harder to earn every performance dollar.

What Brand Lacks Without Growth Marketing

Powerful performance marketing generates instant revenue and offers quantifiable and tangible ROI. Nevertheless, it has a limit. These campaigns of short-term performances cause what the practitioners refer to as a performance plateau: an increment in the value of CAC, decreasing returns, and no foundation for future customers is established. You are always selling yourself the attention you do not own without a brand.

The 95-5 Rule All CMOs Should Be Aware Of

This is one of the fundamental premises to draw the line between strategic CMOs and tactical ones. Only 5 percent of your target market is in-market at any specific time, i.e., willing to purchase at this particular time.

Growth marketing (sales activation) is focused on that 5%. It transforms interested purchasers into income. That’s essential. But brand building gets ready the remaining 95 percent – the future buyers that will come to the market in months or years to come. Once they do, your brand must already be in their mind.

A CMO marketing strategy that does not pay attention to the 95% is setting its future pipeline on fire. The most effective CMOs invest in both at the same time, as brand is infrastructure and not luxury.

The Way Brand Equity is a Revenue Multiplier

Brand value is not soft in the long term. It is financial. The long-term brand performance has a consistent pattern in that the strong brands have a great performance in terms of total shareholder return, as compared to weak brands in multi-year returns. Brand equity decreases churn rates, cross-selling performance, and shortens sales cycles, which are quantifiable in revenue terms.

The linkage between the marketing ROI and brand equity is one-to-one; brand-led companies do not need to spend as much to win over every single customer, as the market is already hot.

I would put it in the following way: the question of demand generation vs brand awareness is not an either/or one. When there is a high brand awareness, demand generation is more efficient. Unsolicited awareness is wasted. The two will have to cooperate.

The 60-40 Framework: The Way Leading CMOs Divide Their Budget

The 60-40 rule is the most commonly mentioned performance marketing balance in the senior marketing circles. Typical allocations made by top CMOs include:

Budget AllocationPurposeTime Horizon
60% — Brand BuildingAwareness, trust, long-term equity, emotional connection6–24 months
40% — Performance MarketingConversion, sales activation, measurable ROI0–90 days

This is not an exact formula. The right split depends on business maturity, on the pressure of the competition, and on the position of the business in the market. An early lean towards more brand investment might be taken by a startup in a crowded market. A scaling business that has established unit economics can drive more toward activation. It is just that both are intentionally funded, not defaultedly.

The Real B2B CMO Challenges in 2026

B2B CMO difficulties in 2026 will be focused on demonstrating the value of long-term investment in a quarterly results-obsessed world. The necessity to achieve quick ROI can easily push the marketing teams into approaches that push brands to performance-based approaches at the expense of brand health in the long term.

The most widespread traps:

ChallengeRoot CauseStrategic Fix
Rising CAC with no improvementOver-reliance on paid activationInvest in organic brand and content
Low campaign conversion ratesWeak brand recognition in target marketRun brand-building in parallel
Inconsistent pipeline qualityNo brand preference establishedBuild thought leadership and trust assets
Marketing seen as a cost centerMetrics only track short-term responseReport brand health metrics alongside revenue

A marketing leadership strategy should consider a short game and long game and report both to the board.

The Way the Best CMOs Combine Both Without Sacrifices

Balance is not an end in itself. It is an amalgamation – developing a system in which brand and performance feed off one another.

Unified Metrics: Measuring What Counts

The top CMOs have two parallel dashboards:

The brand health indicators: Unaided recognition, consideration, Net Promoter Score, share of voice.

Conversion metrics: ROAS, CPA, pipeline velocity, revenue per campaign.

Both dashboards cannot be used to tell the full story. Collectively, they indicate whether the business is gaining sustainable momentum or simply purchasing temporary spikes.

Multi-purpose Content: Two Results in One Campaign

Content and campaigns that will accomplish both tasks simultaneously are the most effective ways of marketing ROI and brand equity. A good customer success narrative can be executed as a performance advertisement that focuses on middle-funnel consumers and creates brand trust in organic mediums at the same time. This is no concession – it is accuracy.

This is the basis of the marketing strategy at Nexus Expert Research that is designed to meet the needs of clients who require growth and longevity, but not at the expense of the other.

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The Implications of This to Decision-Makers, Startups, and SMBs

To the VCs, founders, and SMB leaders, the lesson is not theoretical. When you have a small marketing budget, the automatic reaction is to invest all your money in performance marketing since you feel that you can measure it. However, this strategy tends to cause a growth ceiling in 12 to 18 months.

A more intelligent CMO’s priorities for the 2026 lean team:

  • Invest at least a part of the budget in additive brand-building content (SEO, video, thought leadership).
  • Conduct performance campaigns to grab already existing demand, not to generate one.
  • Warm audiences at a fraction of the cost of cold ones spend to build brand before scaling ad spend.
  • Add both sets of metrics at a small scale to see the whole picture.

The worst marketing choice that a company in the growth stage can make is the decision to focus on performance as opposed to brand altogether. The second hazardous is investing in a brand without any activation plan to convert the brand it builds. The greatest CMOs – and the greatest marketing strategies – will never make either of these errors.

Being Ready To Create a Marketing Strategy That Expands Your Business – Without Losing Your Brand?

Nexus Expert Research is a service that assists decision-makers, founders, and growth-stage teams in creating integrated marketing plans that can produce quantifiable payoffs in the present and brand equity in the future that grows exponentially. Book your strategy session and find out what the optimal balance is for your business.

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