How to prove marketing’s value to non-marketing colleagues

Us marketers see marketing as a cornerstone of business growth. And rightfully so. But non-marketing colleagues often seem to think of marketing as more an expense center than a driver of revenue.

Hey, it’s not their fault, they just have a different job and don’t know the things that you know, and the same goes the other way around.

As a B2B marketer, showcasing the tangible value of marketing to your colleagues across departments isn’t just a nice-to-have; it’s essential for fostering alignment, securing budgets, and driving organizational success. So this blog post is about how you can make sure to show

Speak their language

Marketers often rely on metrics like impressions, click-through rates, and engagement. While these are critical for tracking marketing performance, they might not resonate with colleagues in sales, finance, or operations.

Instead, translate marketing metrics into business outcomes. For example:

  • Highlight how a campaign influenced pipeline growth.
  • Show how lead generation efforts directly support sales targets.
  • Tie brand awareness initiatives to increased market share or customer retention.

When you present data in terms of revenue, cost savings, or growth potential, you’re more likely to earn buy-in from your non-marketing colleagues.

Align marketing goals with business objectives

Every department has its own priorities to work on. Yours is marketing, theirs might be finance, sales or customer service for example. But shared goals unify teams. So, ensure that marketing strategies are directly aligned with overarching business objectives.

For example:

  • If the company aims to enter a new market, showcase how marketing research informs product positioning.
  • If the priority is to retain existing customers, demonstrate how personalized campaigns drive loyalty.
  • If the company wants to get more clients or sell more products, show how your marketing efforts fill up the pipeline for your sales colleagues
 

By showing that marketing is a strategic partner, you position your team as indispensable to achieving broader company goals.

Visualize the customer journey

Marketers have an impact on the customer journey, but so do your sales and operations colleagues. But many non-marketing colleagues don’t have visibility into the entire customer journey. You can solve this by using visual tools like customer journey maps to illustrate how marketing plays a role at every touchpoint:

  • Awareness: SEO, social media, and content marketing generate interest.
  • Consideration: Email nurturing and webinars help prospects evaluate options.
  • Decision: Case studies and testimonials provide the final push.

 

When you show how marketing efforts guide customers from initial awareness to final conversion, you can demystify your work and make its value undeniable to the rest of the organization.

Leverage case studies and success stories

Numbers are powerful, they give you clear information about targets, results, revenue and ROI. But stories resonate. Storytelling works because it helps people make sense of the numbers and because it builds relationships. You can use stories to share specific examples of successful campaigns and their outcomes. 

For example:

  • A LinkedIn campaign that generated high-quality leads and reduced customer acquisition costs.
  • A rebranding effort that resulted in increased recognition and inbound opportunities.

 

Success stories help colleagues connect marketing activities with real-world results. So don’t be afraid to share these within your organization.

Foster collaboration across departments

Marketing doesn’t operate in a silo, nor should it. If you experience silos in your organization, then you need to get to work urgently to break these down. The way to go is to collaborate with sales, product, and customer service teams to show how marketing complements their efforts:

  • Work with sales to create tailored collateral for specific audiences.
  • Partner with product teams to gather insights for messaging and features.
  • Collaborate with customer service to address pain points through content.
 

Cross-departmental collaboration not only amplifies marketing’s impact: it also fosters appreciation for your team’s efforts. And this appreciation really helps motivate your team, especially in times when there is a lot of pressure to deliver ROI.

Regularly report on marketing ROI

One of the most direct ways to prove marketing’s value is through consistent ROI reporting. Unfortunately so many marketers see reporting as the boring and unnecessary part of the job, which ist is really not. 

Use marketing attribution models to track:

  • Revenue generated from specific campaigns.
  • Cost per lead and cost per acquisition.
  • Lifetime value of customers acquired through marketing efforts.
 

Regular updates show accountability to the rest of your organization, and help keep marketing top of mind as a revenue driver.

Invest in internal marketing

Sometimes, the best way to win hearts and minds is to market marketing itself. We’re just always so busy doing marketing to the outside world that we forget to tell colleagues about it. So don’t forget to do your internal marketing and make colleagues see the great work you are doing. Use internal newsletters, intranet updates, or team presentations to showcase wins and share updates.

  • Celebrate milestones like reaching lead-generation targets.
  • Highlight employee testimonials from campaigns that improved company culture or visibility.
  • Show how your social media accounts are growing and what impact it has.

 

By marketing your team’s successes internally, you remind colleagues of your contributions, making them value your job a lot more.

B2B marketers and CMOs need to be proactive in demonstrating how marketing is not just a support function but a vital driver of business growth. How it’s an investment in growth rather than just an expense. By aligning with business goals, speaking the language of other departments, and consistently showcasing results, you can shift perceptions and build stronger internal support.

Marketing’s true value lies not only in what it delivers but also in how effectively it’s communicated. So make it your mission to tell the story of marketing’s impact, and watch your colleagues become your biggest advocates.

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