Increasing risk of CMO and CFO intelligence loss in Africa


Every year, industry associations in North America and Europe release detailed research on how chief marketing officers and chief financial officers work together. These reports analyze how both functions justify spend, measure value, and agree on investment priorities. In mature markets, such research is now core to corporate strategy.
The moment the story moves to Africa, the data disappears.
Despite Africa’s strength in creativity, rapidly expanding consumer base, and vast commercial opportunities, there is still a lack of comprehensive research into how marketing and finance teams work together. Most global newspapers completely overlook Africa. Silence has more impact than available numbers.
This data gap is no longer just an academic omission. It is a strategic constraint. As budgets shrink and accountability increases, African CMOs must protect their investments with benchmarks that rarely match local realities. Western templates often define effectiveness in markets where media behavior, digital access, income patterns, and informal trade networks are quite different. However, these borrowed frameworks still shape the way African CFOs judge marketing value.
As a result, disagreements persist between the two most influential decision-makers within African companies. CFOs rely on models tested in mature economies. CMOs operate in markets where attribution is difficult, data signals are weak, and consumer behavior flows through both formal and informal systems. Without regional evidence to bridge the gap, both sides remain vigilant. This often leads to underinvestment and delayed decision making.
This problem is especially noticeable in areas where measurement is complex. FMCG brands rely heavily on traditional channels. Banks and fintechs serve diverse audiences across physical branches, apps, USSDs, and agent networks. Carriers track churn in environments with large numbers of prepaid users, making long-term measurement difficult. In the absence of reliable industry-wide benchmarks, many marketing teams rely on intuition, past experience, and piecemeal internal reporting.
But Africa may be one of the best places to prove the economic impact of marketing. The continent’s young population, mobile-first behavior and strong community influence create rich opportunities for measurable engagement. What’s missing is a shared dataset large and frequently aligned enough to show how marketing spend is actually tied to business outcomes.
Global companies have attempted to solve this problem by implementing their own universal ROI frameworks. This builds structure but does not solve the core problem. In Africa, there is still a lack of continent-wide understanding of how CMOs and CFOs work together, where they disagree, and which metrics truly drive growth. Most of Africa’s small and medium-sized enterprises, which make up a large part of the economy, remain completely outside of these global discussions.
Experts across the continent say Africa needs more than just additional data. We need a definition of effectiveness that reflects African realities. An annual multi-country study of the CMO-CFO relationship could change decision-making. It will reveal how companies negotiate budgets, which metrics matter most, how digital transformation is changing reporting, and where measurement gaps continue to slow progress. It would also provide a common reference point that African organizations have not been able to achieve on a large scale.
Until such research exists, African marketers and financial leaders will continue to rely on inherited wisdom and outdated tools while navigating one of the world’s most dynamic markets. This blind spot carries real business risks. Unless the data gap is closed, African businesses will be left out of the global conversation and hard facts, rather than intuition, will increasingly shape growth.
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