Forbes named Netflix Chief Marketing Officer Marian Lee the world’s most influential CMO, placing her first for the third straight year in its 14th annual ranking. The recognition lands as Netflix expands its ad-supported tier and leans into global franchises, putting marketing at the core of its growth strategy.
The list highlights which marketing leaders are shaping culture and moving markets now. It also signals where the industry is heading, as brands juggle subscriber growth, privacy rules, and a choppy economy.
“Forbes today unveiled its 14th annual World’s Most Influential CMOs list, with Netflix’s Chief Marketing Officer Marian Lee claiming the top spot for the third year in a row.”
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ToggleWhy This Ranking Matters
Forbes’ annual list has become a scorecard for marketing power. It weighs leadership impact, cultural relevance, and results across sectors. The repeat win for Lee suggests Netflix’s marketing machine continues to deliver, even as streaming competition stays fierce and attention spans shrink.
CMOs on this list are not only brand stewards. They are growth architects. Their decisions ripple through content investments, partnerships, and pricing. A three-peat signals staying power, not a one-off campaign hit.
How Netflix’s Marketing Shifted
Since taking the top marketing job, Lee has helped steer Netflix through a period of reinvention. The company added an ad-supported plan, tightened account sharing, and turned shows into global events. Marketing amplified each shift, aiming for scale without losing voice.
The playbook relies on speed, global reach, and fandom. Campaigns build anticipation around tentpole releases, while social teams fuel meme-ready moments. Trailers and art drops arrive in waves, designed to spark conversation before a season lands.
- Event-style launches for titles like Squid Game, Wednesday, and Bridgerton.
- Global campaigns tailored to local trends and humor.
- Data-informed creative that meets fans where they are.
The push into live and sports-adjacent content adds new marketing terrain. As Netflix lines up more live spectacles and franchise extensions, the job becomes part studio chief, part community builder.
The Wider CMO Playbook in 2026
Marketing leaders face a tighter path to growth. Privacy changes limit targeting. Creative needs to carry more weight. Partnerships, creator tie-ins, and owned communities help offset rising ad costs. CMOs also answer for brand safety and misinformation risks.
Streaming raises the stakes. Viewers churn faster. Hits travel faster, too. The leaders on lists like this often have three shared traits: they ship work quickly, take smart swings with franchises, and turn feedback loops into a creative edge.
Methodology and Debates
Rankings of influence always invite questions. Influence is part data, part perception. Media resonance, social signals, and business results do not always point in the same direction. Entertainment brands may over-index on cultural buzz, while B2B giants create quiet value.
Still, stability at the top is rare. A three-year run suggests consistency across different markets and quarters. It also reflects how streaming marketing now sets the tone for other sectors, from retail to gaming.
What This Signals for Brands
The message for marketers is plain: build franchises, not just campaigns. Treat each release as a season-long relationship, not a single weekend splash. Tie creative ideas to clear outcomes, whether that’s sign-ups, watch time, or ad-tier growth.
Expect more crossovers between content and commerce. Character-driven drops, limited editions, and live fan moments will keep driving attention. The border between advertising and entertainment keeps getting thinner, and the winners manage both crafts at once.
For consumers, this means bigger cultural moments around a few global hits. For the industry, it means sharper bets and quicker exits. The margin for error is slim, but the payoff for sticky franchises is large.
Forbes’ latest list crowns a familiar leader, and it sets a challenge for others: make work that moves people and the business in the same stroke. Watch for how Netflix markets its next wave of live programming and franchise spin-offs. If those campaigns land, a fourth win for Lee would surprise no one—and keep the pressure on rivals to rethink their own playbooks.







