Marketing Architect of Record™ (MAOR)

Accountability for the Marketing System

Most marketing problems do not come from poor execution. They come from unclear ownership of the system itself.

Strategy gets defined. Execution gets delivered. Results get measured. But when complexity increases, decisions slow, or performance drifts, accountability becomes fragmented.

The Marketing Architect of Record exists to solve that problem.

System Accountability

We are accountable for the integrity of the marketing system itself — not individual campaigns, channels, or assets.

Structural Clarity

We ensure strategy, execution, governance, and measurement remain aligned as complexity increases.

Durable Ownership

We make ownership explicit so decisions do not get lost in handoffs, silos, or ambiguity.

Stewardship of the System — Not the Work

Decision Integrity

Protects strategic decision logic as priorities shift, ensuring tradeoffs remain deliberate and documented.

Governance Without Friction

Maintains governance that enables speed instead of slowing execution or adding bureaucracy.

Ownership Continuity

Ensures accountability remains clear even as teams, partners, or leadership change.

How Accountability Works in Practice

01.

Establish System Ownership

We formally define accountability for the marketing system, including decision rights, governance rules, and escalation paths.

02.

Maintain Structural Coherence

As execution continues, we ensure the system does not quietly revert to ad hoc decisions, duplicated effort, or misaligned priorities.

03.

Absorb Change Without Resetting

Growth, pressure, and leadership change are absorbed by the system without requiring reinvention or loss of momentum.

04.

Prepare for Transition

Governance is documented, ownership is made durable, and architectural responsibility is designed to transfer internally over time.

The Marketing Architect of Record is not meant to be permanent. The role exists to create a marketing system that can hold under real conditions — and eventually stand on its own.

This engagement is typically recommended after an Architecture Sprint or Architecture Assessment, once the system has been intentionally designed and tested.

The goal is not dependency. It is long-term coherence.