The first 90 days in a new marketing leadership role feel like a mash-up of excitement, pressure, and wild inbox velocity.
Start strong, build trust fast, and prove you’re exactly who they needed.
1) Immerse yourself in the business
Team and skills
- Who owns what?
- Where are the strengths?
- Where are the gaps?
- Who is operating as the unofficial “glue” (and burning out quietly)?
Processes and workflows
- How long does a campaign take to ship?
- How many approvals does one email require?
- Is content consistent or “interpretive art”?
Tech stack
Every new marketing leader discovers at least one of the following:
- A platform no one uses
- A platform everyone uses incorrectly
- A platform that was added “temporarily” 3 years ago
This is your moment to simplify, consolidate, and introduce tools that support speed, consistency, and scale. Marketing tech stacks have the potential to get pretty out-of-control, so take a stance early.
- A platform no one uses
- A platform everyone uses incorrectly
- A platform that was added “temporarily” 3 years ago
3) Deliver quick wins that show you're here to make an impact
Yes, you’re doing deep discovery. But quick wins build momentum — and political capital.
Even small improvements can make you look like a hero, such as:
- Fixing lead routing (hello, faster follow-up and happier sales)
- Refreshing outdated messaging on high-traffic pages
- Improving reporting so executives actually trust the numbers
- Adding AI workflows that shave days off content creation
- Tidying up campaign templates you can tell are driving people crazy
These quick but visible wins tell your org: “I get it. I’m on it. And we’re moving forward.”
4) Build alignment with sales and product (your make-or-break relationships)
The most successful marketing leaders don’t operate in silos. Instead, they build alignment like their bonus depends on it. And boy, does it play off well long-term.
Marketing ↔ sales (otherwise known as smarketing)
- Agree on definitions of MQL, SQL, and SAL (for real this time)
- Finalize SLAs around follow-up and routing
- Commit to shared pipeline goals and shared dashboards
Marketing ↔ product
- Connect customer feedback to product decisions
- Sync roadmaps with campaign planning
- Adopt a shared messaging framework so “how we talk about the product” doesn’t vary by department
Marketing ↔ finance
- Align on budgets
- Show how marketing influences efficiency
- Prove long-term value, not just last-touch attribution
When these three relationships work, everything gets easier and a whole lot smoother. 🤝
5) Define success metrics, then build the narrative that aligns the whole company
Once you understand the business, the team, and the motion, it’s time to clarify what success looks like.
This is where you shift from onboarding to leadership.
Set the KPIs that actually matter
Think beyond vanity metrics. Focus on:
- Marketing-influenced pipeline
- Win rate lift
- Channel mix efficiency
- Content output and activation
- Full-funnel conversion health
Build a narrative that unites your org
Your brand story, positioning, and messaging aren’t just external assets — they’re internal alignment tools.
Clear narrative = clearer strategy = faster impact.
6 tick-offs to make sure your branding is landing? Here's our brand consistency checklist.
A quick 30-60-90 roadmap to keep you focused
30 days: Listen, learn, audit, ask brave questions
60 days: Deliver quick wins, streamline workflows, align cross-functionally
90 days: Define your strategy, build your narrative, set your KPIs, and launch something meaningful
Want help accelerating your first 90 days?
Optimizely One is an end-to-end platform built especially for marketers, helping new marketing leaders:
- Understand what’s working (and what’s not) fast
- Scale content with AI (Optimizely Opal) that actually knows your brand
- Build consistency across teams and channels
- Unlock better collaboration across sales, product, and marketing
Whether your new company is evaluating fresh tech or revisiting previous favorites, we’d love to support your growth.