The way you structure your B2B marketing team is a crucial decision that can greatly impact the success of your engineering company.
While each company organizes its marketing team based on its own unique culture, budget, and expected outcomes, there are three general approaches you can take:
Each has advantages and disadvantages to thoroughly evaluate before making the best choice for your company. In this post, we’ll walk through the pros, cons, and cost analysis of each option to help you decide which approach works best for you. In addition, we will discuss the benefits of a hybrid approach.
In small engineering companies, a few technical staff members often share marketing responsibilities. For instance, an R&D engineer may also fix the website and/or write code and content to update pages. A technical salesperson may be responsible for creating materials for a trade show in between customer visits and writing proposals.
Advantages
Disadvantages
Cost
A bare minimum inbound marketing program requires 15 to 20 hours per week to create one content piece per month, blog once a week, manage leads, support sales needs, improve SEO, update the website, and assess metrics.
You can roughly estimate your annual cost based on the income of the engineer or salesperson who executes the marketing activities. Using a salary of $90,000, that calculates to $33,750 to $45,000, not including the opportunity cost of that person’s time spent on closing business, developing products, or delivering to clients.
For this reason, the DIY approach can be quite expensive given an engineer’s salary and lost high-value productivity and revenue.
If your company doesn’t have the bandwidth or expertise to carry out these marketing tasks in a consistent and timely fashion, you may need to bring on a marketing specialist.
Advantages
Disadvantages
Cost
The approximate salary of a marketing specialist ranges from $55,000 to $70,000, not including other benefits and taxes. That means this person is now on your payroll, rain or shine, so even if times are lean, be prepared to cover the costs of this overhead expense.
Word of Warning
You may be tempted to hire a “free” marketing intern, but remember, interns are looking for learning experiences and chances to grow their marketing skills. As students, they are much less experienced and require a marketing mentor to spend time guiding them. Be careful whom you choose as a mentor. Bad marketing not only delivers poor results but also damages your company’s reputation (think emails with spelling errors or inaccurate images). Engineers have little patience with poor quality.
The third option is to outsource marketing to a team of experts with a special focus on targeting technical audiences. Marketing firms come in many flavors. Some focus on only one specialty (e.g., SEO, web design, PR, strategy, or brand), while others are full-service and cover all or most areas of inbound and/or outbound marketing. Some focus primarily on project execution while others tackle marketing from the top down: strategy first and then activities and tactics to follow. Because individual activities may need to change to support the overall strategy, a full-service firm with all the marketing tools at its fingertips can more easily take advantage of opportunities to best accomplish your business goals.
Advantages
Disadvantages
Cost
Monthly costs for marketing services at SMB technical companies can range from $3,500 to over $20,000+ per month and are driven by the results you are seeking and how quickly you are seeking them. You can turn them off or down as lean times come and go. However, be aware that marketing is a long-term investment and not a one-time expense. To keep visitors coming in and leads converting, you must consistently build awareness, create and promote new content, and execute lead nurturing.
Often, the ideal approach is a hybrid one that optimizes existing resources and areas of expertise (such as technical content development) and focuses outsourced efforts on marketing gaps.
For example:
In terms of internal team structure, as you grow beyond the DIY approach and become ready to hire your first internal marketing resource, I recommend your first hire be a marketing specialist.
I have seen growing technical businesses hire a senior-level marketing manager only to find they’re paying a high salary for the strategy and foundational work but still have to outsource all the execution. Or they hire a narrowly skilled role, such as a graphic designer, who is low in salary and high in management overhead. Instead, hire a marketing generalist with three to four years of experience and preferably a communications, advertising, or journalism degree. The specialist should oversee the time-intensive day-to-day management and coordination of content generation, reviews, and promotion; website updates and maintenance; SEO implementation on the blog and website and in new content; blog publishing; technical writing (e.g., case studies, top-level web pages, etc.); and your leads database, marketing automation, and lead nurturing. You can stretch your dollars far with highly motivated marketers who are interested in technology and are looking for autonomous roles that allow them to manage their workloads, be held accountable to expected outcomes, and be able to lean on an outsourced, experienced marketing team for strategy, specialized execution support, and mentorship.
From there, the next hires to consider for your marketing team may include a product, service, or segment marketing engineer to help with demos, technical content development, events, and sales support; a part- or full-time writer to develop all content using a journalistic approach to interview subject-matter experts for more technical pieces; and a marketing coordinator to help offload your growing marketing specialist, who may eventually be promotable to marketing manager.
Whichever approach you decide on, ensure you set your organization up for success with a documented, measurable, marketing plan. Learn how in our Guide to B2B Marketing Planning.
TREW is a marketing agency dedicated to reaching engineering and technical audiences through a range of marketing initiatives. Contact us today to learn more about the services we offer.