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No slandered structure for the marketing department. It depends on the company volume and (product/service) type
Companies are taking note of inbound marketing and revamping their strategy and talent pool to generate higher quality leads at about a 60% lower cost per lead than outbound marketing. Want to know how you can transform your marketing department to become an inbound lead generating machine helping your sales team KILL it and grow your business
Great answer Mr. Vinod
Thanks for the invite
I fully agree with the answer been added by MR Vinod Jetley ............... Thanks
you need to deliver more leads to your sales team and provide them with a lot more tools to help close deals. In this environment, you still want team members coming in with some of those 'utility player' characteristics, but ideally, each of them is also exceptionally strong at one of a few areas. You are creating a melting pot of talent that can't be too siloed and could jump in and help each other out at a moments' notice.
It's important to note that NONE of the roles above absolve folks from being content creators or let them crawl into an email or social media silo. In fact, at HubSpot, when we were a team of about5-8 marketers, we routinely swapped job roles to ensure that no one was missing a key skill and the team didn't stagnate.
That means the same utility player mentioned above could be the perfect fit for any of the roles on this team. The important part is to determine if your utility player has fallen in love with one of the major disciplines and might want to have a bit more ownership but still be able to swap and help out at a moment's notice.
Enterprise: Specialists With Content ChopsYou've been growing like crazy, and your company of1,000+ has serious marketing demands ranging from analyst relations to events to SEM. Even though we cringe at the silos that can sometimes befall the specialist team, you are at a point where your efficiency will be greater with people who are truly expert at one core aspect of marketing and can also contribute to the content engine along the way. Although we aren't yet a1,000 person company, HubSpot's rapid growth demands a marketing engine that is getting close to what we'd expect to see at a much larger company.
Without going into a full org chart, here are some of the types of roles and specialties that exist:
Even though you see a lot of specialists here, each player has a combo of expertise in their area plus content creation or support for another area to ensure your team maintains agility. Even more notable is the omission of an analytics person -- because each team should be analytically inclined and OWN the numbers for the element they specialize in with results rolling into the directors and CMO level.
Hiring in this environment can be tricky. You can find folks who have done tons of email marketing but have never had to come up with the actual content offer itself. Steer clear of one-trick ponies, and opt instead for someone with perhaps a little less depth of experience but great overall communications skills and marketing savvy.
Regardless of company size or type, hiring great talent is one of the most difficult growth challenges you'll face. Resist the temptation to hire an okay person; there are stellar talents out there who are worth the wait. We find a lot of them through our personal networks and via social media as well as a very active intern program.
A Note on Interns: THEY ROCKWhether you are an SMB or in a massive company, getting summer interns or co-ops during the semester is one of THE best ways to trial out talent and fit while also getting some work done. We've hired6 amazingly talented people, all out of our intern pool of probably20 folks over the last3 years. Each intern has done some great things and a few really went above and beyond to show us they could learn fast and take on real ownership for projects. The only way you'll really be able to evaluate an intern fairly is if you give them both a meaty project to own and a variety of smaller areas to contribute.
A summer might look like: intern writes10 blog posts,1 per week, supports1 webinar, writes one ebook , and does an analytical study on your lead quality with recommendations that get presented to your sales and marketing departments. They need your leadership and guidance, but if they are truly awesome and can do all of this, you might have just found yourself your next utility player!