Do small businesses really need a CMO?
A Chief Marketing Officer can cost a small business more than its entire marketing budget. So the honest question is not whether you deserve one. It is what a CMO actually does, and whether you can get that value another way.
What a CMO actually does
Strip away the title and a good CMO does three things.
- Holds the brand. Makes sure everything looks and sounds like one company.
- Sets direction. Decides which few moves are worth making this quarter, and which to ignore.
- Has a point of view. Argues back. Says "not that, this" instead of handing you a blank canvas.
Notice what is not on the list: doing all the work by hand. A CMO's value is judgment and consistency, not volume.
The options, honestly
- A full-time CMO. Six figures a year. Overkill for a team of three.
- A fractional CMO. Part-time senior help — useful, but pricey by the hour and still external to your tools.
- Doing it yourself. Free, until you count the hours and the inconsistency.
Most small businesses land on the third option by default, not by choice.
A fourth option
The reason "doing it yourself" feels chaotic is that you are missing the two things a CMO provides: a brand that stays consistent, and something that recommends the next move instead of leaving you with a blank page.
A small business does not need a CMO's salary. It needs a CMO's judgment, applied to its own brand.
That is the gap MINI CMO is built to close. Your brand lives in one place and every app obeys it, so consistency is automatic. And the tools have a point of view — the Campaign Planner proposes a plan, the analytics name the one move worth making — so you are not staring at an empty canvas.
You may not need a CMO. You do need what a CMO gives you. See how it works, or start free and set your brand up in five minutes.