The Agentic Economy requires a new role. A role that did not exist five years ago. A role that most organizations have not yet created but desperately need.
I call it the Marketing Security Officer (MSO) .
Why Existing Roles Fall Short
Let me explain why your current leadership cannot absorb this function.
The CMO understands brand, narrative, and audience. But most CMOs lack security training. They do not think in terms of threat vectors, attack surfaces, or integrity verification. When narrative drift occurs, they see a messaging problem. They rewrite the copy. They do not investigate the structural vulnerability.
The CISO understands threats, controls, and verification. But most CISOs lack marketing training. They do not think in terms of resonance, positioning, or discovery. When AI agents hallucinate brand claims, they see an LLM problem. They do not see a narrative architecture problem.
The CEO sets vision and allocates resources. But the CEO cannot be the daily steward of narrative integrity. They have too many other demands. Marketing Security requires continuous attention, not executive oversight.
The result is a gap. Narrative vulnerabilities go undetected. Drift accumulates. Hallucinations spread. No one has clear accountability for preventing or correcting these failures.
What a Marketing Security Officer Does
The MSO sits at the intersection of marketing and security. Their responsibilities span both domains.
Responsibility One: Narrative Threat Assessment
The MSO continuously evaluates how the brand narrative could be compromised. Not just by competitors or malicious actors. By drift. By hallucination. By misalignment.
They ask: Where is our meaning most vulnerable? Which claims are most likely to distort across channels? Which AI systems represent us incorrectly?
This is not a quarterly exercise. It is a weekly discipline.
Responsibility Two: Semantic Architecture Maintenance
The MSO owns the narrative ledger. They update entity definitions. They maintain relationship mappings. They ensure consistency across all digital touchpoints.
When the brand positioning evolves, the MSO updates the semantic layer before any content changes. Meaning changes first. Content follows.
Responsibility Three: Retrieval Monitoring
The MSO tracks how AI systems represent the brand. They run weekly retrieval queries. They document hallucinations. They measure drift scores.
When representation degrades, the MSO investigates and remediates. They do not wait for the monthly marketing report. They act immediately.
Responsibility Four: Cross-Functional Integration
The MSO ensures that marketing, security, data, and product teams share a common understanding of narrative integrity.
They translate between domains. They help the CISO understand why machine readability matters. They help the CMO understand why verification matters. They prevent integration failures before they occur.
Responsibility Five: Incident Response for Narrative Breaches
When narrative drift is detected, the MSO leads the response. They correct external representations. They update the narrative ledger. They communicate internally about what happened and why.
Narrative breaches are not optional. They will happen. The MSO ensures they are fixed quickly and learned from thoroughly.
Where the MSO Sits in the Organization
I have seen several models work. The right model depends on your organization’s size, maturity, and threat exposure.
Model One: Within Marketing (with dotted line to Security)
Suitable for most organizations. The MSO reports to the CMO but has formal access to security tools and threat intelligence. This works when the primary threat is narrative drift and semantic misalignment rather than malicious attacks.
Model Two: Within Security (with dotted line to Marketing)
Suitable for high-security industries (defense, finance, critical infrastructure). The MSO reports to the CISO but has deep marketing expertise. This works when the primary threat is adversarial narrative manipulation.
Model Three: Independent Function (reporting to CEO or COO)
Suitable for enterprises where narrative integrity is mission-critical. The MSO operates independently of both marketing and security, providing objective assessment. This works when internal politics would otherwise block integration.
I have deployed all three models. Model One is the most common starting point. Model Three becomes necessary as organizations scale and narrative risk increases.
The Skills an MSO Needs
This is not an entry-level role. The MSO requires a rare combination of capabilities.
Marketing expertise: The MSO must understand brand architecture, content strategy, audience psychology, and discovery mechanics. They must speak the language of marketers.
Security literacy: The MSO must understand threat modeling, integrity verification, access control principles, and incident response. They must speak the language of security professionals.
Data fluency: The MSO must work with knowledge graphs, entity extraction tools, retrieval metrics, and structured data formats. They do not need to be engineers, but they must collaborate with engineers effectively.
Cross-domain translation: The MSO must explain security concepts to marketers and marketing concepts to security professionals. They must build bridges, not walls.
Continuous learning: The threat environment changes constantly. The MSO must stay current on LLM capabilities, platform changes, and emerging vulnerabilities.
How to Train or Hire an MSO
You have two pathways.
Pathway One: Upskill a Senior Marketer
Take a senior marketing leader (content strategist, brand director, marketing operations manager). Train them in security fundamentals: threat modeling, integrity verification, incident response. This takes three to six months of focused learning.
The advantage: They already understand narrative, audience, and discovery. The disadvantage: Security thinking does not come naturally to most marketers.
Pathway Two: Upskill a Security Professional
Take a security analyst or engineer. Train them in marketing fundamentals: brand architecture, content strategy, audience psychology, discovery mechanics. This also takes three to six months.
The advantage: They already think in terms of threats and verification. The disadvantage: Marketing thinking requires a different mindset that some security professionals resist.
Pathway Three: Hire Externally
The role is new, but candidates exist. Look for professionals with experience in both marketing technology and security operations. Content strategists who have worked on compliance. Security analysts who have supported go-to-market teams.
I have trained MSOs through all three pathways. The most successful often come from a technical marketing background (marketing operations, marketing technology) with additional security training.
The MSO’s Toolkit
An effective MSO needs specific tools and access.
Tool One: Semantic Extraction and Analysis
Access to entity extraction tools (Google Natural Language API, AWS Comprehend, spaCy). Ability to run retrieval audits across LLM providers.
Tool Two: Narrative Ledger Platform
A system for maintaining the narrative ledger. This can be as simple as a structured document with version control, or as sophisticated as a graph database with API access.
Tool Three: Monitoring Dashboards
Continuous tracking of drift scores, hallucination indices, and retrieval rates. Weekly automated reports with anomaly detection.
Tool Four: Incident Response Playbooks
Documented procedures for responding to narrative breaches. Who is notified? How is the ledger updated? How are external sources corrected?
Tool Five: Cross-Functional Access
Read-only access to security tools (threat intelligence feeds, SIEM alerts). Read-write access to marketing systems (CMS, social publishing, analytics). Ability to attend both marketing and security staff meetings.
Case Study: The First MSO
I worked with an enterprise software company to create their first MSO role in 2025. They had experienced three significant narrative breaches in eighteen months. Each breach had cost them customer trust and sales cycles.
They promoted a senior content strategist into the role. She spent three months in security training. She attended CISO staff meetings. She learned threat modeling and incident response.
Within six months of her appointment:
- Narrative drift scores improved from 52% to 78%
- Hallucination indices dropped from 65% to 82% accuracy
- Retrieval rates for priority queries increased by 40%
- Two narrative breaches were detected and corrected within 24 hours (previously, detection took weeks)
The CMO initially worried that the MSO would slow down marketing. The opposite happened. Marketing became more efficient because they stopped wasting time on inconsistent messaging and reactive corrections.
The CISO initially worried that the MSO would create security friction. The opposite happened. Security gained a partner who helped them understand why marketing needed certain capabilities.
Why Your Organization Needs an MSO Now
You might think you are not large enough for a dedicated MSO. You might think your narrative is not valuable enough to require protection. You might think the threats are exaggerated.
I have heard these objections before. I have watched organizations that delayed creating an MSO suffer predictable consequences.
Within six months of delay: Drift accumulates. Hallucinations spread. No one notices because no one is measuring. Opportunities are lost invisibly.
Within twelve months: A narrative breach becomes visible. A customer references a capability you do not have. An investor asks about a claim you never made. Reputation damage occurs publicly.
Within eighteen months: Competitors who appointed an MSO early have established authoritative precedence. Their retrieval rates exceed yours. Their trust metrics are stronger. The gap widens.
The cost of an MSO (salary, training, tools) is trivial compared to the cost of narrative compromise.
A Practical First Step
If you cannot hire or train a full-time MSO immediately, start with a fractional approach.
Identify a senior marketer and a senior security professional. Give them joint responsibility for narrative integrity. Have them meet weekly. Have them run a baseline audit together. Have them document the first version of your narrative ledger.
This fractional MSO function is better than nothing. It builds muscle memory. It demonstrates value. It creates the business case for a dedicated role.
Within six months, you will have data. Drift scores. Hallucination indices. Retrieval rates. That data will justify the investment.
The Future of the Role
The Marketing Security Officer will become as common as the Chief Information Security Officer within the decade.
I do not say this because I coined Marketing Security. I say this because the threat environment demands it.
Every organization with a valuable brand narrative will need someone whose job is to protect that narrative. Not as a side responsibility. Not as a quarterly project. As a dedicated, resourced, accountable role.
The organizations that create the MSO role early will have first-mover advantage. They will hire the best talent before competitors. They will establish precedents that become industry standards.
The organizations that wait will play catch-up. They will compete for scarce talent. They will learn from expensive mistakes.
The choice is clear.
Conclusion: From Gap to Role
The gap between marketing and security is not going to close itself. Hoping that your CMO and CISO will figure it out is not a strategy.
The Marketing Security Officer is the bridge. The integrator. The guardian of narrative integrity.
If you are a founder, create this role now. If you are a marketing leader, advocate for it. If you are a security leader, demand it.
The Agentic Economy will not wait for your organization to catch up. Build the role. Fill it. Protect what matters.