Branding isn’t just about logos or websites — it’s about aligning every team that touches the customer journey around one unified value story.
This is the approach of Alex Rumble, Chief Marketing Officer at HTEC. Alex leads with the view that Marketing, Sales, and Customer Success are all co-owners of the brand promise — and that alignment across these teams must be grounded in process, accountability, and transparency.
Her focus is on building shared ownership through clear communication, consistent messaging, and a culture of internal collaboration that supports the entire buyer lifecycle.
She outlines four key steps to making that alignment real:
1️⃣ Start with the Customer Journey
Alex always begins with the customer journey — not as a metaphor, but as a practical map to align internal actions. “Every function is delivering something for another,” she explains. “It’s an internal customer-supplier relationship.”
Mapping each team’s contributions across the journey builds shared accountability and makes it clear that no team operates in isolation. Marketing owns PR placements, audience engagement, and lead generation, while product marketing owns messaging and content to connect the journey, and sales owns opportunity conversion to won deals and new customers.
2️⃣ Define the Value Proposition Holistically
Rather than focusing narrowly on features, Alex champions a holistic value proposition that includes “product, ecosystem, people, and services.” She emphasizes an “outside-in” approach to defining customer personas — based not just on job titles, but on pain points and success metrics.
The goal: make sure every function understands who they’re talking to and what they’re solving for. It is not enough to stop with high-level value props. Personas play a fundamental part. Influencers, buyers, and executives all view value differently and need to understand what success means for them to get on board with a new purchase or expansion.
3️⃣ Align Teams Through Transparency and Metrics
To drive alignment, Alex introduces a “metrics pyramid” that starts with operations and ladders up to business outcomes like pipeline contribution and deal velocity. That metrics pyramid needs to connect audience engagements to leads generated to leads that closed, and the full sales cycle.
Visibility is critical. “I create a pod-level Gantt chart so everyone can see the full marketing plan,” she says. This transparency creates natural conversations and stronger collaboration, especially with sales, for iteration and optimization of marketing investments.
4️⃣ Enable Feedback Loops with Win-Loss Analysis
Finally, Alex stresses the value of externalized win-loss analysis to close the loop between what’s being marketed and what’s resonating in the field. “If the feedback is that the salesperson didn’t understand the buyer’s problem — that’s an enablement issue,” she says. These insights fuel continuous improvement across messaging, sales readiness, and positioning.
🏆 In conclusion, Alex’s approach shows that cross-functional alignment isn’t just about good intentions — it’s about structure. By rooting collaboration in the customer journey, clearly defining value, making plans transparent, and creating feedback loops, she turns alignment into impact.