{"id":3020,"date":"2026-02-27T12:00:00","date_gmt":"2026-02-27T13:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.fliegewiese.org\/?p=3020"},"modified":"2026-04-23T11:57:54","modified_gmt":"2026-04-23T11:57:54","slug":"how-to-scale-a-marketing-team-from-5-to-25-people-and-beyond","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/www.fliegewiese.org\/index.php\/2026\/02\/27\/how-to-scale-a-marketing-team-from-5-to-25-people-and-beyond\/","title":{"rendered":"How to scale a marketing team from 5 to 25 people (and beyond)"},"content":{"rendered":"
In times of growth,<\/span> scaling a marketing team <\/a>is often the last thing on a company’s mind\u2014but that, my friends, <\/span><\/span>is a huge mistake.<\/span> The lean marketing team that got a business off the ground is not the one that will help it scale. Trust me; as a serial marketing team of one, I\u2019ve experienced the fallout firsthand. Failing to scale your marketing team as you grow leads to overwhelm, poor quality, and missed goals, but how exactly do you structure your team for growth?<\/a><\/p>\n The tips shared in this article will help you scale from five to 25 people without losing speed, clarity, or impact. Each phase is triggered by revenue milestones and comes with hiring priorities, role evolution, and structure recommendations.<\/p>\n Table of Contents<\/strong><\/p>\n <\/a> <\/p>\n As companies grow, a scalable marketing team is crucial to preserving momentum.<\/p>\n A recent McKinsey survey found that nearly 67% of organizations<\/a> report being overly complex and inefficient. In other words, poor roles and structure have led to slower decisions, redundancy, <\/strong>and reduced velocity<\/strong>.<\/p>\n But why is that? In my experience, it usually comes back to workload and productivity. More ambitious goals often mean bigger and a higher volume of tasks to tackle. Your marketing team size and roles should reflect your company’s revenue and growth goals, as well as what they demand.<\/p>\n For example, if you want to increase your content output, you need more content creators and strategists. If you\u2019re launching a product, you\u2019ll need a product marketing manager to do it right.<\/p>\n Piling more work on team members with already full plates will only lead to burnout and even employee churn. (Again, I\u2019ve seen this firsthand.)<\/p>\n Co-founder of Stage 2 Capital and former HubSpotter Mark Roberge echoes this<\/a>, saying:<\/p>\n \u201cWe have a long conversation with our founders out of the gate about their five-year scale plan and do a bottom-up analysis to understand the realistic inputs\u2026That\u2018s a critical strategic decision that determines everything \u2014 how many reps you\u2019ll hire, how many support people, how many engineers, how much property.\u201d<\/p>\n Talent is a resource, and if you don\u2019t get the resources needed to get a job done, don\u2019t be surprised if it doesn\u2019t happen. But that doesn\u2019t mean you can just add to headcount mindlessly.<\/p>\n When marketing teams scale without intentional structure, several patterns emerge that undermine performance. Some of the most common are:<\/p>\n Unclear role boundaries:<\/strong> According to Gallup, only 46% of employees<\/a> feel clear about what’s expected of them (down from 56% in 2020). When ownership and responsibilities aren\u2019t defined, critical tasks can fall through the gaps or team members can duplicate efforts. This leads to missed deadlines and confusion about who handles what.<\/p>\n I experienced this many years ago when my company was trying to keep teams as flat. A colleague and I were experts on the same topic and sat in the same seat, with the same responsibilities. In the sea of sameness, when it came to making decisions, and we disagreed, we found ourselves in a stalemate.<\/p>\n To resolve the issue, I outlined suggested lines of ownership and accountability so we always knew who ultimately had the final say.<\/p>\n This also helped protect us from another common issue when growing a marketing team\u2026<\/p>\n Leadership bottlenecks:<\/strong> When all decisions flow through one person \u2014 which is inevitable without unclear roles \u2014 efficiency slows dramatically. Teams end up waiting for approval on routine tasks while opportunities pass by and dependent projects get delayed.<\/p>\n Disconnected channels:<\/strong> When you scale, communication between related departments can suffer. For instance, if content, demand generation, and product marketing operate in silos with no cross-team coordination, messaging can become inconsistent and muddled, taking its toll on final campaign quality.<\/p>\n Meeting fatigue:<\/strong> In an effort to improve communication, most companies turn to meetings, but I think we all know this comes with its own drawbacks. Flowtrace found that employees, on average, spend 392 hours per yea<\/a>r in meetings \u2014 <\/span>that’s over 16 full workdays annually. When talent is in unnecessary team meetings, they have less time to execute and can contribute to bottlenecks.<\/p>\n Underutilized talent:<\/strong> Hiring specialists before validating core channels wastes budget and creates roles without clear deliverables. Teams end up with expensive talent sitting idle.<\/p>\n All of these problems can compound. A well-thought-out hiring plan, like the one we\u2019ll go into next, can help alleviate or even avoid them entirely.<\/p>\n <\/a> <\/p>\n Elad Gil, an entrepreneur, operating executive, and investor\/advisor to Stripe, says organizations can sustain 3x growth<\/a> as team complexity increases by implementing the right organizational design.<\/p>\n That said, a marketing organization that’s scaling up will need a new team structure. The template below walks through three phases on the journey to a team of 25:<\/p>\n Common scaling mistakes include unclear hiring priorities, a lack of process, and poor alignment. We\u2019ll discuss the marketing roles you need at each phase, the associated metrics, when to hire specialists, and what to look for in the right talent.<\/p>\n The best hiring sequence will ultimately vary from company to company, but these suggestions are a great place to start.<\/p>\n As a company reaches $5\u201315M in ARR and acquires over 100 customers, the first phase of team building begins.<\/p>\n That\u2019s why this stage is all about establishing the core marketing functions and setting up essential tools and processes. A big part of this is hiring generalists with wide skill sets who can wear different hats if needed.<\/p>\n Learn more about the skills all marketers should have in our articles, \u201c<\/strong>20 Technical Skills Every Marketer Needs<\/a><\/strong> and \u201c<\/strong>How to Build the Strongest Small Marketing Team<\/a><\/strong>.\u201d<\/strong><\/p>\n While the priority of some roles will depend on the nature of your product and business, others are universal. The actual job titles may change, but here are the roles I\u2019d recommend at this phase:<\/p>\n This role leads strategy, manages early hires, and aligns the team with business goals. They also tend to be the marketing decision-maker and the one held accountable for hitting metrics.<\/p>\n Efficiency Metrics:<\/strong> Return on marketing investment (ROMI), Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC), Marketing-sourced pipeline, Marketing Efficiency Ratio (MER)<\/p>\n They own content creation and SEO. They may create a variety of content themselves (i.e., blog articles, emails, landing pages, videos) or manage the production by others.<\/p>\n Efficiency Metrics: <\/strong>Publishing frequency, organic traffic growth, content-attributed MQLs, first-30-day page traffic<\/p>\n Resources:<\/strong><\/p>\n This role oversees acquisition and pipeline generation. They\u2019re focused on getting conversions and leads to sales.<\/p>\n Efficiency Metrics: <\/strong>MQLs, SQLs, cost per acquisition (CPA), marketing-sourced pipeline, payback period<\/p>\n They create visual content, including website materials, social media, and premium content, among other things.<\/p>\n Efficiency Metrics: <\/strong>Campaign consistency rate, turnaround time per asset, engagement uplift (CTR, social shares), brand adherence audits<\/p>\n They manage advertising, paid social.<\/p>\n Efficiency Metrics: <\/strong>Impressions, CTR, CPC, CPA, ROAS (return on ad spend)<\/p>\n Resources:<\/strong><\/p>\n They manage automation and reporting systems. This would include working with tools like HubSpot.<\/p>\n Efficiency Metrics: <\/strong>Marketing Efficiency Ratio (MER), campaign setup time, funnel conversion rates, data accuracy score<\/p>\n They focus on messaging and positioning.<\/p>\n Efficiency Metrics: <\/strong>Sales enablement usage, win rate uplift, sales cycle reduction, product-qualified leads<\/p>\n Resources:<\/strong><\/p>\n They support in-person events, which may be especially helpful for B2B organizations.<\/p>\n Efficiency Metrics:<\/strong> Leads generated per event, CPL, event attendance rate, pipeline sourced from events<\/p>\n Resources:<\/strong><\/p>\n They monitor, measure, and report on performance.<\/p>\n Efficiency Metrics: <\/strong>Dashboard refresh cadence, attribution model coverage, forecast accuracy, data insights generated<\/p>\n They assist with a variety of executional needs.<\/p>\n Efficiency Metrics: <\/strong>Task completion rate, campaign support accuracy, and coordination turnaround time<\/p>\n During this phase, your marketing team structure is best if it remains flat, with all team members reporting directly to the marketing leader. With fewer people on the team, this hierarchy helps avoid confusion in decision-making and aids in collaboration.<\/p>\n Pro Tip:<\/strong> Gil recommends<\/a> leaders initially \u201callocate functional areas based in part on who has the time and skill set to focus on and make that area succeed.\u201d This doesn\u2019t mean they\u2019re stuck in that area forever. \u201cRemember, nothing needs to be permanent,\u201d Gil continued.<\/p>\n At my last employer, I saw one teammate jump from web development to account management, marketing, sales, then back to web over a decade \u2014 and I\u2019m sure there are other departments I\u2019m missing. It gave me whiplash to watch, but I see why it happened.<\/p>\n For new and smaller businesses, phase one is just about getting a running start. Leaders need reliable people they know can set things up for success and prove the concept before investing fully.<\/p>\n That\u2019s also why the people filling your phase one roles should be generalists. As marketing generalists, each team member will be able to quickly adapt to shifting priorities and help build traction across core channels.<\/p>\n Need a graphic in a crunch, but your designer is busy with your website? The demand gen manager has time to help. Generalists are agile, and agility is key when scaling.<\/p>\n Expected Impact: <\/strong>Establish a functioning funnel, create foundational processes, and generate early pipeline traction.<\/p>\n AI can help support some of these roles<\/a>, of course, but it isn\u2019t foolproof. At every<\/em> phase, you need humans refining and reviewing anything sourced from artificial intelligence, especially generated content.<\/p>\n In my experience, it\u2019s smart to opt for local or in-office team members when you\u2019re just starting to build your marketing team and strategy.<\/p>\n Remote work comes with its own set of challenges<\/a>, like navigating time zone differences, feeling disconnected, and maintaining productivity. Don\u2019t make this phase even more complicated than it already is. Keep things in-office until they\u2019re less in flux.<\/p>\n Once a company surpasses $15M ARR and serves over 500 customers, it enters a new market with larger competitors. This means marketing must become more sophisticated and often complex to attract attention.<\/p>\n With this in mind, phase two introduces specialization and a layer of management. Specialization usually takes place based on channel ownership to improve performance tracking, enable focus, and support repeatable growth.<\/p>\n This role oversees both paid and inbound efforts focused on driving conversions and sales. They\u2019ll also likely manage the demand generation manager.<\/p>\n Efficiency Metrics: <\/strong>Leads generated, <\/strong>task completion rate, campaign support accuracy, and coordination turnaround time<\/p>\n Your content manager handled SEO in phase one, but as you grow, you need more advanced knowledge and skills to see improved visibility and site performance in search engines. That\u2019s where this hire comes in.<\/p>\n Efficiency Metrics: <\/strong>Task completion rate, campaign support accuracy, coordination turnaround time, and organic traffic.<\/p>\n This is another responsibility that grows out of the content marketing manager\u2019s responsibilities. It\u2019s focused on lead nurturing and communications via lifecycle campaigns and retention.<\/p>\n Efficiency Metrics: <\/strong>Number of email campaigns launched, email open\/conversion rate, campaign support accuracy, and coordination turnaround time<\/p>\n Resources<\/strong>:<\/p>\n Social media is a must these days, and as we\u2019ve learned as an industry, it\u2019s a full-time job. This role will manage your brand\u2019s presence and engagement on various platforms.<\/p>\n Efficiency Metrics: <\/strong>Task completion rate, campaign support accuracy, and coordination turnaround time<\/p>\n Video is a non-negotiable in today\u2019s world, mainly thanks to social media. Phase 2 is a smart time to invest in talent that can help you build and scale this strategy.<\/p>\n Efficiency Metrics: <\/strong>Number of videos completed, campaign support accuracy, and coordination turnaround time<\/p>\n From here, additional content writers may also be needed to help scale content output, or a campaign manager coordinates cross-channel initiatives tied to revenue. It depends on your strategy, goals, and bandwidth.<\/p>\n Also, at this point, you are in a better position to explore a remote or hybrid structure<\/strong>. You may even start considering international team members. With your foundation built and solid, you likely have the processes, tools, and documentation needed to support team members in different locations while maintaining consistency.<\/p>\n Organizationally, the team should begin forming functional teams with clear leaders who act as middle managers. Channel-specific ownership improves focus (e.g., content, search, and demand), and the analytics function should stand alone for objectivity and rigor.<\/p>\n Expected Impact<\/strong>: Drive reliable, scalable performance across every channel and introduce efficient campaign processes.<\/p>\n At the final stage \u2014 triggered when the company reaches $40\u2013100M ARR and 1,000+ customers \u2014 structure your marketing team to support global operations and long-term scale.<\/p>\n That means introducing a fully layered marketing organization with both strategic and executional roles across functions and regions.<\/p>\n This role owns and guides the vision for the go-to-market strategy and enablement. They also manage the product team.<\/p>\n Efficiency Metrics: <\/strong>Task completion rate, campaign support accuracy, and coordination turnaround time<\/p>\n This role leads brand storytelling and visual identity. They also likely manage any graphic designers.<\/p>\n Efficiency Metrics: <\/strong>Task completion rate, campaign support accuracy, and coordination turnaround time<\/p>\n This role focuses on marketing to key segments or even specific accounts. It dances the line of sales and marketing and can enable sales and marketing alignment.<\/p>\n Efficiency Metrics: <\/strong>Task completion rate, campaign support accuracy, and coordination turnaround time<\/p>\n Resources<\/strong>:<\/p>\n This role works on improving on-site and funnel conversion rates.<\/p>\n Efficiency Metrics: <\/strong>Conversion rate, Task completion rate<\/p>\n This role supports backend workflows and integrations. This could be related to operations, service, or even web and marketing.<\/p>\n Efficiency Metrics: <\/strong>Workflows launched, Task completion rate<\/p>\n This role drives engagement and retention. They are focused on keeping customers happy and loyal.<\/p>\n Efficiency Metrics: <\/strong>Task completion rate, campaign support accuracy, and coordination turnaround time<\/p>\n As you become a global name, how the media and public perceive you in general becomes increasingly important. This role will oversee media relations and external messaging to help you create the best image.<\/p>\n Efficiency Metrics: <\/strong>Task completion rate, campaign support accuracy, and coordination turnaround time<\/p>\n Speaking of going global, this role will focus on managing localization and regional expansion.<\/p>\n Efficiency Metrics: <\/strong>Task completion rate, campaign support accuracy, and coordination turnaround time<\/p>\n At this stage, the structure should include at least two layers of leadership, with Directors managing Managers and clearly defined functional areas like Brand, Demand Gen, Product Marketing, and Ops.<\/p>\n Expected Impact: <\/strong>An enterprise-ready team that drives both pipeline and brand awareness across markets. The team must also align on both global strategy and localized execution.<\/p>\n Now, let\u2019s put all of this together.<\/p>\n <\/a> <\/p>\n To build a scalable marketing team, you can\u2019t just hire anyone for the sake of headcount. Scaling a marketing team requires structured hiring and team organization aligned with the current state of your business and what it wants to achieve (growth phase).<\/p>\n Follow these five steps:<\/strong><\/p>\n Before hiring, identify which growth phase your company is in based on annual recurring revenue (ARR) and customer count. Each of the three phases (Foundation, Specialization, Scale) has distinct hiring priorities and structural needs.<\/p>\n Use these to evaluate your team, identify the roles you need, and set revenue milestones as hiring checkpoints to avoid premature specialization or understaffing.<\/p>\n Map your existing team\u2019s skills, bandwidth, and effectiveness. Look for any gaps between current output and what’s needed to hit next-phase goals. This will help you decide what areas you need to improve or introduce.<\/p>\n If you\u2019re just getting started, you\u2019ll likely have to start from scratch with your foundational marketing roles and generalists, but if you have those covered, it may be time to start looking into specialists.<\/p>\n Rank potential roles based on your current skill gaps, underperforming channels, and operational strain, along with your revenue goals. Prioritize roles that directly drive pipeline or remove friction. Those will deliver the most immediate results. (But we\u2019ll talk more about prioritization shortly.)<\/p>\n Document responsibilities, success metrics, and reporting order for each role. Unclear roles can create overlap, confusion, and conflict that just work against your goals.<\/p>\n If you\u2019re just getting started with marketing, your founding hires will likely develop the workflows for content production, campaign execution, lead handoff, and performance reporting that work for them. But if you\u2019re scaling and adding specialists, it\u2019s wise to establish some processes and guidelines. New team members onboard faster and maintain consistency when processes exist. Without guidance, growth creates chaos.<\/p>\n Stripe says<\/a> ambitious teams typically restructure every 6\u20139 months to stay aligned with business growth. With that in mind, schedule reviews at least quarterly to assess whether structure still serves goals.<\/p>\n Be ready to adjust reporting lines, combine functions, or split teams as complexity increases.<\/p>\n <\/a> <\/p>\n In the perfect world, you\u2019d love to hire all these folks, right? Unfortunately, the business world is not that rosy (especially right now).<\/p>\n Use these five points to help you decide what marketing roles to prioritize:<\/strong><\/p>\n Depending on your goals and strategy, not every role will need to be a full-time employee (FTE), especially early on. Understanding when to build in-house versus outsourcing can optimize both budget and execution speed.<\/p>\n Pro Tip:<\/strong> As 3Search’s 2024 Annual Pay & Hiring Report<\/a> found, 12% of employees rank \u2018career development opportunities\u2019 as their first priority in a job search, so building a team structure that offers in-house growth will help with retention as well.<\/p>\n In-house vs. outsourcing advice can also vary depending on your company’s phase. Many early-stage companies use fractional CMOs, freelance writers, or design agencies until they can prove viability or secure budget.<\/p>\n Here\u2019s an example of what in-house vs outsourcing could look like by phase:<\/strong><\/p>\n
<\/a><\/p>\n\n
Why Marketing Team Structure Matters in Growth<\/h2>\n
Common Mistakes When Growing a Marketing Team<\/h3>\n
How to Structure Your Marketing Team As You Grow<\/h2>\n
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<\/p>\nPhase 1: Foundation (5\u201310 People) – Foundational marketing roles should be hired early in team scaling.<\/h3>\n
<\/p>\nFoundational Marketing Roles<\/h4>\n
VP or Director of Marketing<\/h5>\n
Content Marketing Manager<\/a><\/h5>\n
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Demand Generation Manager<\/a><\/h5>\n
Graphic Designer<\/h5>\n
Paid Media Specialist<\/h5>\n
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(Optional) Marketing Operations Manager<\/h5>\n
(Optional) Product Marketing Manager<\/h5>\n
\n
(Optional) Event or Field Marketing Manager<\/h5>\n
\n
(Optional) Marketing Analyst<\/h5>\n
(Optional) Marketing Coordinator<\/h5>\n
Can\u2019t I use AI to fill these marketing roles?<\/h5>\n
What about remote talent?<\/h5>\n
Phase 2: Specialization (11\u201317 People) – Specialists are added as company revenue and complexity increase.<\/h3>\n
<\/p>\nSpecialized Marketing Roles<\/h4>\n
Director of Demand Generation<\/h5>\n
SEO Specialist<\/a><\/h5>\n
Email Marketing Manager<\/a><\/h5>\n
\n
Social Media Manager<\/h5>\n
Videographer or Video Marketing Manager<\/h5>\n
Phase 3: Scale (18\u201325 People)<\/h3>\n
<\/p>\nMarketing Roles for Scale<\/h4>\n
New role considerations include:<\/h5>\n
Director of Product Marketing<\/h4>\n
Director of Brand or Creative<\/h5>\n
Account-based Marketing (ABM) Manager<\/h5>\n
\n
Conversion Rate Optimization (CRO) Manager<\/h5>\n
Marketing Automation Specialist<\/h5>\n
Customer Marketing Manager<\/h5>\n
PR\/Communications Manager<\/h5>\n
International Marketing Lead<\/h5>\n
How to Scale a Marketing Team<\/h2>\n
1. Identify your growth phase.<\/h3>\n
2. Assess your current marketing abilities.<\/h3>\n
3. List your hiring priorities.<\/h3>\n
4. Establish clear role definitions, metrics, and expectations.<\/h3>\n
5. Create Regular Structure Review Cadence<\/h3>\n
How to Prioritize Roles When Scaling a Marketing Team<\/h2>\n
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In-house vs Outsourcing<\/h3>\n
Insource (hire full-time) your marketing talent when the work:<\/h4>\n
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Outsource (use contractors\/agencies) your marketing talent when the work:<\/h4>\n
\n
\n