Ruthlessly Simplify the Complex
Marilyn Mead, former CMO of Winmo and fractional marketing leader, draws on nearly eight years building a B2B SaaS brand to explain the discipline of simplification, why the buying committee demands a different message for every person in the room, and why product-led growth is the model she is most excited about.
“You have very little time. You have to figure out the things that make the lightbulb go off for them.”
Marilyn Mead is a B2B marketing leader and fractional CMO who spent nearly eight years at Winmo, the sales intelligence platform for the media and marketing industry, building the brand from product marketer to Chief Marketing Officer. She led marketing through a transaction to MediaRadar and now advises and consults for technology companies navigating growth and positioning challenges.
Marilyn started her career in editorial and copy editing roles, a background that gave her a sculptor’s instinct for stripping away language rather than adding to it. That superpower followed her into product marketing at Advertising Database (later List Partners), where she was the first dedicated marketer for a B2B prospecting tool that was eventually acquired.
She joined what became Winmo and over almost eight years progressed from Product Marketing Manager to CMO. Along the way she spearheaded re-packaging and AI-driven feature releases that doubled contract value across new logos, drove 110% growth in lead volume for the services division, and built the brand into a recognised authority across the advertising and media industry. She holds a master’s degree from Northwestern’s Medill School of Journalism.
“Good marketing is like sculpture. You start with a big block and you just keep paring down.”
“Ruthlessly simplify the complex. That has been my mantra in every role.”
Marilyn traces her most important marketing instinct directly to her time as a copy editor and journalist. In B2B SaaS, where products carry genuine complexity, the temptation to explain everything is constant and almost always counterproductive. The marketer’s job is to find the one thing that makes the lightbulb go off, and to let everything else go.
“People want to talk to sales, but that point is now much closer to the actual purchase than it used to be.”
Buyers now complete most of their research before any human sales interaction takes place. That means marketing carries a larger share of the persuasion work: reviews, interactive demos, peer content, and Marilyn’s response was to build marketing that gives buyers the tools to sell the product upward in their own organisations.
“Product-led growth lets people guide themselves to purchase. That is the future of B2B.”
The model Marilyn is most enthusiastic about removes the friction of a human sales process for the majority of accounts, freeing sales teams to concentrate on the enterprise relationships that genuinely require them. It also changes the nature of what marketing is responsible for: not just generating leads but designing an experience that carries the buyer through to a confident decision on their own terms.
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