The Secret Behind Marketing Sleep and Disrupting a $585 Billion Health Market ft. CEO Tim Rosa

America post Staff
5 Min Read


CMOs are being dubbed the new “unicorns,” but is the journey as magical as it sounds? 

In this episode of Marketing Vanguard, host Jenny Rooney sits down with Tim Rosa, CEO of Somnee, to explore the rare and valuable career trajectory from Chief Marketing Officer to Chief Executive Officer, and why brand-driven leaders are uniquely positioned to scale transformative companies in the health and wellness space. 

He shares valuable insights from Somnee’s journey of disrupting a $585 billion industry. 

What you’ll learn:

  • How to leverage CMO experience to accelerate CEO success
  • Why clinical-grade data is non-negotiable in AI-driven health tech
  • The challenger brand playbook for emerging health categories
  • How to build enterprise and B2B revenue streams alongside DTC
  • The counterintuitive marketing strategy of “zigging when others zag”
  • Why self-awareness and surrounding yourself with complementary talent is essential for CMO-to-CEO transitions

About the guest:

Tim Rosa is the CEO of Somnee, a clinical-grade sleep technology and neuroscience company, bringing expertise in brand building, go-to-market strategy, and scaling consumer health companies. With a distinguished background spanning agency work, sports marketing, and seven years as CMO at Fitbit, Tim has developed a unique playbook for translating complex science into compelling consumer narratives. 

His work at Fitbit and now at Somnee has demonstrated that CMOs with operational acumen and cross-functional experience are uniquely positioned to lead companies at the highest level, making this conversation essential for marketing leaders aspiring to executive roles.

Episode Highlights: 

[17:00] Demand Clinical Rigor in AI and Data Claims — Tim delivers a stark warning to any organization deploying AI, saying if your underlying datasets are inaccurate, no algorithm sophistication will save you. And, worse, marketing that product will eventually damage your brand when real-world performance fails to match claims. For CMOs overseeing AI-powered products or services, this is a critical guardrail. Before approving any marketing message about AI capabilities, insist on third-party validation of the data infrastructure supporting those claims. This applies equally to CMO functions using AI for targeting, personalization, or analytics – the algorithms are only as good as the data feeding them. 

[18:30] Position Brand as the Core Driver of CEO Decision-Making — Tim reveals that as CEO, he places brand at the center of every major decision—from supply chain sourcing to hardware design to recruitment—rather than treating marketing as a downstream function. This reflects a fundamental shift in how CMOs transitioning to CEO roles should think about their power. His golden rule is that brand strategy is operational strategy, not just promotional activity. 

[23:15] From CMO to CEO: Mastering Self-Awareness and Surrounding Yourself with Compensatory Talent — Tim’s core advice for CMOs considering CEO roles is deceptively simple: understand your strengths ruthlessly, acknowledge your weaknesses openly, and hire executives smarter than you in areas where you’re weak. Many CMOs assume CEO success requires becoming instantly proficient in finance, operations and legal, when in reality, the CEO role is about being the ultimate decision-maker while leveraging others’ expertise. For marketing leaders evaluating CEO readiness, this suggests the right question isn’t “Am I ready to run everything?” but rather “Can I build the team that compensates for my gaps?” 

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