You’re a growth-focused CEO. You’ve hired high-caliber salespeople, built a promising pipeline, and made substantial investments in your go-to-market strategy.
Yet each quarter brings the same question:
“Why are we falling short of our revenue targets?”
The default answer?
“We need more sales reps.”
At The CMO Syndicate, we’ve worked with hundreds of companies around the world. And we’re here to tell you: your problem isn’t sales. It’s your outdated growth model.
“We believe marketing should be closing up to 30% of your deals. That’s not just a point of view—it’s a model we’ve implemented and seen succeed time and again.”
— Jean Foster, Chief Marketing Officer - The CMO Syndicate
Modern B2B buyers make up to 70% of their decision before speaking to sales. They consult peers, review websites, and compare vendors long before ever talking to your reps.
Yet most companies still treat marketing as a lead-gen engine and sales as the closer. The result?
“If your sales team is spending time chasing leads that will never close, that’s not a sales issue—that’s a marketing and alignment issue.”
— Shayne De la Force, CMO & Co-Founder - The CMO Syndicate
We call it the Demand Engine Model—a framework that turns marketing into a pipeline powerhouse.
Old Model | New Model |
---|---|
Hire more sales reps | Use AI to qualify and warm leads |
Sales owns all closing | Marketing closes up to 30% of deals |
Siloed KPIs | Shared revenue goals |
Marketing = Leads | Marketing = Closed revenue |
“When companies assign 30% or more of pipeline ownership to marketing, they see 2X higher close rates and 25% faster deal velocity.”
— Shayne De la Force
Jean Foster shared a case from her time as CMO at BT (British Telecom):
“My team was responsible not for leads, but for 30% of closed revenue. We built the infrastructure, aligned with sales, and delivered results.”
At The CMO Syndicate, we’ve taken companies from:
This is not plug-and-play. It requires transformation—team structures, tools, metrics, mindsets.
“This means retraining teams, rethinking org charts, and rebuilding performance metrics. But once marketing starts thinking like sales, the results follow fast.”
— Jean Foster