Home Data-Driven Thinking Pivot, Don’t Panic: How Smart CMOs Turn Market Volatility Into Growth

Pivot, Don’t Panic: How Smart CMOs Turn Market Volatility Into Growth

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Lisa Cole, CMO, 2X

In times of economic uncertainty, marketing budgets are often the first target for cost-cutting. Nearly half of marketers now report feeling significantly less optimistic about the US economy compared to the previous quarter, reflecting heightened anxiety across industries. Yet, indiscriminate cuts can undermine long-term strategic goals and may ultimately cost businesses far more than they save.

Strategic CMOs understand that disruption is not merely a challenge; it’s an opportunity. Economic volatility provides the perfect scenario for demonstrating marketing’s essential role in driving growth, resilience and adaptability. Rather than reacting hastily with broad budget reductions, the best marketers proactively pivot their strategies and spending to deliver sustained impact.

Here are actionable strategies CMOs can take to thrive amid economic volatility.

Reallocate, don’t reduce

The first instinct during financial pressures may be to cut marketing budgets uniformly. Instead, successful CMOs view economic turbulence as a chance to reallocate resources strategically. This involves redirecting spend from high-cost, lower-impact programs (e.g., large-scale events or generic branding campaigns) to targeted, high-ROI initiatives like account-based marketing (ABM) and syndicated content. 

For example, shifting budget toward intent-driven content syndication can directly engage high-intent buyers, significantly improving lead quality and accelerating pipeline growth.

PwC found that simply optimizing marketing spend across different channels can deliver 0.5% to 3% additional revenue without any increase in the overall marketing budget. Alternatively, organizations can make significant efficiency gains (20% to 25%) in their marketing spending without losing revenue.

By reallocating rather than simply reducing budgets, CMOs maintain momentum, support pipeline growth and demonstrate strategic foresight.

Plan proactively with scenario modeling

Economic volatility demands proactive rather than reactive responses. Forward-thinking CMOs use scenario modeling to anticipate shifts and articulate clear, actionable strategies. By modeling scenarios of pipeline declines (typically ranging from 10% to 50%), marketers can create detailed contingency plans that communicate to CFOs exactly how budget adjustments will impact future performance. This proactive approach clearly shows CFOs how blunt, across-the-board cuts today can seriously jeopardize pipeline health and revenue performance in the quarters ahead.

With ad industry growth forecasts recently downgraded from 4.5% to 3.6%, savvy marketers might pivot spend toward safer bets – proven digital channels and media rather than traditional, less measurable buys, like television. 

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Remember, some advertising channels inherently have longer conversion journeys, but this doesn’t mean they’re ineffective. Ensure you’re consistently tracking and presenting data to your CFO to demonstrate how these channels deliver meaningful results over extended timelines.

Scenario modeling should factor in both cyclical risks, such as recessions and market recoveries, and structural risks, like prolonged inflationary pressure and productivity shifts. Clear, well-illustrated scenario planning positions marketing as a proactive, trusted advisor within the organization.

Emphasize AI’s complementary role

As organizations seek cost efficiencies, AI often surfaces as a magic bullet for reducing marketing costs. AI can significantly enhance operational efficiency: A recent study from Duke’s Fuqua School of Business found that AI helped CMOs increase sales productivity (to 8.6% from 5.1% in spring 2024), enhance customer satisfaction (8.5% from 6.1%) and lower marketing overhead costs (by 10.8%, compared with 7.0%). However, you must clarify to your C-suite that AI augments – but never replaces – the strategic, creative and relational strength that human marketers uniquely provide.

It’s also important to note that consumers remain wary of AI. Fifty-two percent of Americans are more concerned than excited about AI’s expanding role in daily life. Additionally, explicitly labeling products as “AI-driven” can reduce their appeal among certain consumers, underscoring the need for ongoing human oversight to preserve authenticity and creative integrity.

The ideal strategy integrates AI to automate routine tasks and enhance analytics, while human marketers remain essential for strategic direction, creative insight and customer relationship management. Blended models, such as marketing-as-a-service (MaaS), illustrate how human strategy combined with AI-driven execution delivers optimal efficiency without sacrificing strategic creativity or oversight.

Strategic pivots position marketing as indispensable

Ultimately, your marketing strategy should be built with volatility in mind. Don’t wait. Now is the crucial moment to audit your existing operating model and implement proactive planning strategies. 

By demonstrating strategic agility during economic shocks, CMOs can protect their marketing budgets and elevate marketing’s position as an essential driver of organizational resilience and growth.

Data-Driven Thinking” is written by members of the media community and contains fresh ideas on the digital revolution in media.

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