No. 312: The Evolving CMO

On Accenture’s acquisition of Droga5 and the evolution of the full-stack, digitally-native agency. A lot can be said for the evolution of the early-stage CMO. It’s now common to spot data-driven, b-school graduates employed at early-stage retailers. Just five years ago – chief marketing roles were typically reserved for sales-minded creatives. This shift may be influenced by the position’s updated responsibilities; in earlier years, these responsibilities would resemble more of a CEO or CFO’s stake within the company.

These priorities include: cost accounting, personnel accounting, attribution sciences, and applications of Six Sigma principles: define, measure, analyze, design and verify. Equipped with paid marketing budgets and a creative director on staff, the traditional CMO is more data-driven than ever. In a early-stage meeting with a DTC retail CMO, I asked what his priority was over the next 6-12 months:

Paid, for now. It’s measurable.

This pivot towards the data-driven marketing approach is not without consequence; blind spots can develop. Modern CMOs are more likely to focus on shorter-term, tactile decisions at the cost of the brand-building strategies that may lead to better long-term outcomes. If there isn’t an ROA or an ROI assigned to the opportunity, it is rarely justified in the DTC era. As the adage goes, what can’t be measure cannot be improved. Droga5 founder David Droga suggests that this approach to marketing is incomplete at best. Here’s a recent quote by Droga:

CEOs, CMOs, and CIOs all need to be on the same page, because they all affect each other now. This isn’t a nice-to-have. I think it’s going to be crucial for any brand going forward. This is future-proofing.

On Droga5 and Accenture

Accenture. Spun-off from Arthur Anderson in 2001, Accenture serves as the leading management consulting firm that provides services to include: operations management, strategic insights, and consulting. A Global Fortune 500, the company serves clients in over 120 countries with over 250,000 employees. Accenture reported net revenues of nearly $40 billion in 2018.

Droga5. Based in New York and founded in 2006, Droga5 is an award-winning, global advertising agency with a roster of high-impact, advertising successes. William Morris Endeavor invested in Droga5 in 2013. This allowed Droga5 to combine their advertising resources with WME’s entertainment connections, allowing Droga5 to develop a cache of major advertising partners. Accenture’s acquisition suggests that the combination was a successful one, and WME reportedly profited on the Accenture acquisition. The impact of this deal is a significant moment. Fast Company explained:

In easily the highest profile deal the ad industry has seen in recent memory, Accenture Interactive announced this morning that it has fully acquired creative advertising agency Droga5, which counts Under Armour, HBO, the New York Times, Amazon, Covergirl, and more major brands as clients. The deal will see all of Droga5’s 500 employees across offices in New York and London become a major creative cog in Accenture Interactive’s massive $8.5 billion digital customer experience and marketing services machine.

The report goes on:

Droga5’s founder and creative chairman, acknowledges that folding his company into Accenture Interactive reflects a larger reality: Brand communications have gone far beyond just advertising, into every time and place a consumer interacts with and experiences a brand–from retail to e-commerce to, yes, even ads.

The Droga5 Signal

This new category of full-service agency will surely influence other mergers and acquisitions. But most importantly, this will require new brand CMO to reimagine their roles and address the brain lateralization that has led to an increased dependency on Facebook and Google over the last five years. In June 2018, 2PM published “The Patreon Signal.” In it, I wrote: “Patreon’s acquisition of Kit and Memberful has signaled an uptick in M&A and partnership activity throughout the creator space.” This is a similar moment for the agency space.

Accenture has invested in sponsored media to advertise Accenture Interactive for some time and was best-positioned for this type of partnership. More agencies in the shape of Droga5 will be sought after as top management consulting firms like Deloitte, McKinsey, and KPMG look to compete with Accenture’s groundbreaking acquisition. Just this week, eCommerce and branding agency BVAccel acquired Katana, a paid media agency that may help BVA address more of the needs of its clients.

Agencies that combine the best practices of traditional advertising, data science, and creative expression will make its way to the DTC space. Accenture’s acquisition of Droga5 signals that for chief marketers, relying on the instant gratification of data-driven marketing will be an insufficient strategy – especially for those early stage companies that seek to develop lasting brands. AdAge’s Penry Price on these developments:

Rising agency players like Giant Spoon, gyro, Heat, Oberland, and Phenomenon are leaving their marks on the industry by combining speed, data, creativity, digital products (apps) and marketing optimization. Rest assured that Accenture Interactive and Droga5 will do their level best to provide a similar combination of services as soon as possible, and they will likely succeed.

Late-stage digitally native retailers will seek out the style of full-spectrum services offered by the Accenture-Droga5 partnership or the many creative consulting hybrids that this acquisition will further influence. This is not only attributable to the services that Accenture will give, rather due to how their offering influences the agency’s overall approach to problem solving. But for the brands that feel their strategies should stay close-to-vest, the CMO role must evolve to meet four goals that the new consumer economy will need.

  • CMOs will be responsible for digitizing all traditional (offline) marketing communications. These marketing leaders must apply a layer of measurement to in-store marketing, physical retail operations, print marketing, and other forms of traditional marketing.
  • Marketers must be tasked with leading workforce education and evaluation. Rather than partnering with agencies to discuss in-house weaknesses, CMOs will lead training efforts that insure that their teams are aware of the latest data, industry developments, and technologies that are most useful to the company’s revenue targets and brand defensibility.
  • CMOs must be able to find and invest in the brand, agency, and media partnerships necessary to move concepts and strategies from proof of concept to reality. These partnerships must be prioritized to keep up a forward-thinking posture and an emphasis on the insights necessary to pursue longer-term goals.
  • And CMOs must combine skill in data-driven marketing with the willingness to adjust to a rapidly changing digital environment that may offer better, more cost-effective opportunities elsewhere – both online and offline.

Coaches tell their quarterbacks to keep their eyes down the field when they leave the pocket. For marketers, that analogy is more relevant than ever. Within digitally native brands and traditional retailers-alike: chief marketers have long-leaned heavily on what was measurable, even if that approach has cannibalized longer-term prospects. The Droga5 acquisition suggests that marketers may begin realigning their resources to pursue a more holistic approach to brand messaging, awareness, and sales – efforts beyond the dependency on paid media spend.

Marketers will tolerate more brand-side experimentation and risk-taking. But unlike the marketing and advertising efforts of earlier years – the goal is to use observations to de-risk opportunities as quickly as technologies will allow. Risk aversion is still an objective but more chief marketers will grow to become the explorers of their industry. More than ever, these executives will be tasked with forging new paths and modernizing their approach to measuring the data that tells the story.

Read the No. 312 curation here.

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Member Brief: The Clearbanc Argument

Venture financing is evolving and so are the high growth companies that seek alternatives to traditional venture capital. Recently, Andreessen-Horowitz renounced its VC exemptions to register as a financial advisor. And in a surprising decision by the marketing-savvy group of investors, the shift to financial advisory means a few key changes: regulator personnel hires, employee audits, and perhaps the most impactful evolution – A16Z can no longer advertise its investments on Twitter, LinkedIn, podcasts, or mainstream media. The impact of this pivot may take cycles to recognize. But within another tangent of an evolving industry –  Clearbanc who hopes to have an immediate impact on startups in the eCommerce industry and beyond.

Este resumo para membros foi elaborado exclusivamente para Membros executivosPara facilitar a associação, você pode clicar abaixo e obter acesso a centenas de relatórios, à nossa DTC Power List e a outras ferramentas para ajudá-lo a tomar decisões de alto nível.

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No. 311: Whoop and The Flywheel

Image: courtesy of Gear Patrol

It was a saturday morning in Columbus and Central Ohio was on its last day of hosting the Arnold Classic. Arnold Schwarzenegger hosts an annual event for athletes across fitness, strength, and endurance in town and while we avoid most of it, there was one meeting that I had to take. Alexis (my oldest daughter) and I met for brunch with Iceland’s Katrin Davidsdottir, one of the most recognizable alternative athletes in the world, a two-time “Fittest on Earth”, and family friend. The two athletes discussed the typical sports topics: hard work, diligence, and resilience. Katrin is at the top of her craft and Alexis is an athlete in her own right. The conversation was between two top competitors who recognized each other’s talents, drive, and natural abilities. In this part of the conversation, I was just a bystander.

We quickly moved to more practical matters: the economics of commerce and product marketing. Davidsdottir is also the most marketable athlete in her field and one of her sponsorships is with Whoop. Whoop is a physical band that measures athletic analytics like: strain, depth of sleep, and heart rate variance (HRV). The band allows you to subscribe to an athletics analytics SaaS. In a recent podcast with Whoop, Davidsdottir discussed her journey from a small country to a lucrative, American lifestyle as a competitive athlete. She swears by it; so do I – but for different reasons.

When we recognized the distinct-looking bands wrapped around our respective wrists, we began talking about our affinity for the product. We viewed Whoop from two vantage points: she’s an elite athlete and I’m an entrepreneur – both career paths are stressful to the body, mind, and central nervous system. We went on and on about how often we see the in-app metrics and how it influences our daily decisions. I knew that Whoop would be a force, this conversation confirmed it.

Linear commerce is a core tenet of 2PM’s understanding of the commerce ecosystem. It’s the active prioritization of audience-growth. Product manufacturers typically seek to outsource demand generation. Brands, that are ahead of the curve, emphasize their audience’s growth as much as they address their physical product’s development. And vice versa, digital media companies that follow linear commerce prioritize organic and loyal growth over commodity clicks. By building a system that allows peers to privately compare their lives, Whoop has – perhaps mistakenly – developed its most effective flywheel.

A flywheel is a device that stores and distributes energy. Retail management will use  the term to describe the sociology of keeping customers engaged, allowing engaged customers to attract like-minded consumers.

Jonathan Poma is the Founder of Loop and the Chief Evangelist Officer at Brand Value Accelerator; he recently stepped down from the Chief Executive role to spend more quality time with his family. Part of this decision was stress-driven. He’s also an avid technologist. Poma was in the first 1,000 users of Slack, an early Uber user, and when he finally joined Whoop – I knew that it was only a matter of time before he began to maximize the platform’s functionality. In a recent conversation with him, we discussed the platform’s latest development for us non-athletes. A consumer will be hard pressed to find Whoop branding or messaging that represents consumers like us. When Poma made the request to Whoop for group reporting access, Whoop allowed him to use the “team” functionality for a test group of colleagues. After a few weeks of this using this group setting, Poma chimed in:

Whoop is 100x cooler than I even thought it was two weeks ago.

Prior to this in-app solution, we found that we’d screenshot our best fitness and recovery days and send them to one another via iMessage. Our Whoop group began to grow until we averaged 1-2 new buyers per week; we’d often pitch our friends on buying one so that we’d be able to compare our data. All high risk entrepreneurs, Whoop’s ability to track fitness, sleep, and strain on the central nervous system became a necessity for early-adopting entrepreneurs – a group that traveled often, slept sub-optimally, and works long hours. Our crude iMessage format evolved into an ability to check, compete, and support colleagues.

Through the mobile and desktop applications, we have full visibility of one another’s holistic health. It drives conversations around work ethic, reduction of alcohol / sugar, and improving physical capacity. In this way, Whoop has successfully duplicated the value of the group fitness experience and replaced it with personal software. In essence, the grouped colleagues are always working towards health and training goals in concert.

Despite a selection of elite athletes as sponsors and a top podcast, Whoop is primed to jump the chasm by promoting this functionality for its civilian consumer. In this way, Whoop’s latest offering may become its greatest (and most timely) marketing asset. Why? Data suggests that consumers are evaluating their relationships with: health, community, and luxury – at scale.

2PM Data: On Telemedicine

In a recently published index, 2PM tracked 45+ of the top companies in telemedicine on the DTC Health Index, a list that comprises a list of companies that are privatizing the healthcare industry. Whoop, a company that’s raised $49.8 million, is part of a larger trend towards consumers owning more of their own health and wellness. It is showing, Whoop’s on-site traffic has doubled in the last six months. Of this traffic, only 6% of is by way of paid customer acquisition. The flywheel is spinning.

On desktop and mobile web in the last 6 months

Anticipated growth in digital health systems and analytics are driving a lot of this interest. For instance, Apple recently innovated around this effort to democratize consumer care with its ECG app. And Core is launching a meditation device that actively tracks its effects by tracking HRV. Whoop is one of a handful of platforms that tracks heart rate variance, a measure that allows consumers to quantitatively measure the strain on their central nervous system. Entrepreneurs and other high risk professionals have used this measure to discuss their levels of stress and depression for a time; however, HRV’s interest is growing quickly in non-athletic spaces.


What is HRV? It is the delta between successive heart beats. The heart’s irregular rhythm causes heart beat timing to change. It was initially used by emergency room healthcare professionals to predict patient mortality rates post medical emergency. The application of HRV is now being studied as a measure of physiological response to stress and exercise. The higher the number – on your 30-day baseline – the more recovered the body.


2014-2024: digital health market size ($ billions)

2015-2020: projected CAGR for the global digital health market

On Health and Modern Luxury

In a recent report by Business of Fashion: “The Future of Luxury is Freedom” , the magazine’s resident retail prophet discusses the changing definition of luxury. Doug Stephens writes:

Today, luxury is evolving once again and brands are wrestling with the fact that consumers are increasingly shifting spend from products and services to experiences. This is especially true among young consumers in the West. According to a 2018 Harris Poll study of US millennials, 78 percent say they’d rather spend money on a “desirable experience or event over buying something desirable.”

In No. 265, we discussed this in the context of Peloton, the in-home cycling and media phenomenon that shares a somewhat similar target consumer with Whoop.

Não é mais suficiente definir os produtos de luxo pelo grau de dificuldade de obtê-los. O tempo é o recurso mais escasso e o maior luxo. Ser uma marca de luxo moderna significa ter consciência de si mesma. Essas marcas vendem o tempo como uma escassez e, em seguida, criam produtos em torno dele.

Health and wellness – a scarce resource measured by time and ability – is emerging as one of the most foremost American luxuries as traditional healthcare costs skyrocket. For direct to consumer (DTC) healthcare companies like Whoop, their platform has somewhat accidentally entered the conversation. While designed for athletes working to peak their physical performance, Whoop has found its software co-opted by normal consumers who use the software to measure the markers that influence the scarcity of a consumer’s time and ability.

Whoop is a company of about 100 workers who more than likely train, sleep, and work with the band that they’re helping to build, improve, and market. As the trends around healthcare, luxury, and self-quantification continue to converge in the company’s favor – consumers will will see more of HRV in the context of quantification.

In this way, Whoop and its community are contributing to more than its own marketing flywheel. The long-tail effect of the popularization of HRV means that we’re bound to see more products that address one of the top questions in Whoop’s community: “how do I improve my HRV?” This is the question that will launch its own consumer product sector.

Read the No. 311 curation here.

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