In part 1 of our series on hiring growth marketing talent, we established the eight key functions that comprise a core growth marketing team.
But what is the best way to fill all of those roles? And how can you deliver rapid growth without creating excessive admin for your marketing managers?
Your two basic options are building an in-house growth marketing team or hiring a growth marketing agency.
Here is a quick breakdown of the pros and cons of each:
Pros
Cons
Pros
Cons
Clearly, there are multiple benefits to hiring a growth marketing agency or building an in-house team. But for the vast majority of brands, at least some outsourcing will be necessary. This raises some big questions, many of which we answer below:
There is a big trend towards using freelancers in the marketing world, particularly since COVID-19. The growing marketplace for specialists in all of the areas we’ve covered makes this a viable strategy for B2B brands, as they can likely access quality talent with relative ease. However, there are a few challenges to address.
Leaning too heavily on freelancers will likely lead to a large talent pool, and all of those relationships have to be managed individually. On top of that, coordinating workflows can be a big challenge with numerous siloed freelancers, which can create bottlenecks for your growth marketing efforts.
Freelancers may help you plug gaps in the early stages of your marketing. But as your business scales, it will probably be more efficient to use a growth marketing agency and allow them to source and manage any freelancers you might need.
As growth marketing has grown in prominence, the number of agencies has skyrocketed. Given that most agencies offer similar services — and make similar claims — it can feel like rolling the dice when you hire one.
The reality is there are a few basic requirements that will help you filter out 90% of prospective partners. Any growth marketing agency worth hiring will have:
Ask them: Do you have a proven track record of measurable success working with other brands? Can you showcase the quality work you’ve produced? What makes a great growth marketing strategy?
Ask them: Can your team scale as our brand grows? How do you handle excess demand? How responsive are you?
Ask them: How much experience do you have in our market? How well do you understand the challenges our buyers face? Can you show us evidence of previous success in our industry?
Ask them: How do you define a successful client relationship? What are your priorities when working with a brand?
The best growth marketing agencies will have strong, authoritative answers to all of these questions. But that begs the question: Once you’ve hired a growth marketing agency, how do you ensure the collaboration runs smoothly?
The first few weeks of working with an agency may be the most crucial. It’s during this period you establish the tone and cadence of communication, the baseline expectations of your engagement, and the level of involvement your team will have in the marketing process.
Invest more time and effort during these weeks to ensure your agency has a detailed understanding of your products or services and buyers. This could range from a simple platform walkthrough to a full factory visit.
Also, ensure the agency spends a lot of time early on getting to grips with your existing data and tech stack. Their efforts will be defined by the quality of data and their ability to leverage it. They might have to totally revamp your system; they might simply integrate or migrate it to a new CRM.
Regular communication is key to ensuring you have proper visibility of your agency’s activities. It’s also important that the agency feels comfortable asking for additional information or support to improve the quality of their work.
Set up regular meeting cadences and establish clear lines of communication as soon as possible. Each party should know who their primary point of contact is and how they prefer to receive communication.
Growth marketing is all about increasing revenue and scaling your profitability. Measurement is a key part of that, and any agency worth working with should be ready to be held to high expectations.
Agree on detailed KPIs and quarterly targets, but bear in mind that these targets will affect the agency’s priorities. You should therefore ensure any goal you set encourages the right strategic approach.
For example: don’t focus exclusively on click-through rates (CTRs); instead, look at how many prospects are requesting demos and are converting into viable opportunities. This measures the actual impact an ad has, not just how many clicks it generates — and incentivizes your agency to focus on what makes a real difference to your brand.
ProperExpression makes growth marketing your brand's secret weapon. We manage everything from demand generation and lead nurturing to sales optimization and tracking — delivering a 65% increase in revenue for one B2B SaaS client.
Want to learn how we can take the burden off your internal team, reduce your need for full-time hires and drive lasting growth for your brand?