If you’ve been browsing job boards lately, you’ve probably noticed a pattern: many marketing job descriptions read like a wish list of every possible skill. Founders often expect one marketer to be a brand strategist, content writer, graphic designer, SEO expert, media buyer, CRM admin, and event planner — all rolled into one.
This is especially common when startups hire their first marketing lead. The intention is good: they want to set up marketing properly. But when expectations are unrealistic, it leads to burnout, frustration, and ultimately, high turnover.
As seasoned marketers, we’ve seen this play out too often. Here’s why it happens, and how to set a more realistic plan that keeps both founders and marketers aligned.
When a marketing job description reads like 10 different roles in one, that’s a red flag. A few warning signs include:
These types of job postings set candidates up for failure. One person cannot realistically build an entire marketing engine overnight.
When founders hire their first marketer, the goal is often to maximise impact right away. They want one person to drive brand awareness, generate leads, support sales, and even build a community. It’s understandable — startups usually operate with limited budgets and expect their first marketing hire to be highly hands-on. The challenge is that many underestimate:
Instead of a never-ending checklist, break down marketing into phases with achievable KPIs. This gives the marketer room to succeed, and the company a clear way to measure progress.
Here’s a sample realistic timeline for a first marketing hire in a startup or SME:
Months 1–3: Foundation Building
Focus: Set up systems and establish brand basics.
KPIs:
Months 4–6: Awareness and Early Demand
Focus: Grow visibility and start generating leads.
KPIs:
Months 7–9: Lead Nurturing and Optimization
Focus: Scale efforts and refine messaging.
KPIs:
Months 10–12: Scale and Align with Sales
Focus: Integrate marketing deeper into revenue goals.
KPIs:
By breaking the role into phases with realistic KPIs:
Hiring an experienced marketer is one of the smartest investments a founder can make. But it’s important to remember: marketing is a long game, not an overnight miracle.
Set expectations too high, and you risk losing good talent. Set them realistically — with clear KPIs and timelines — and you’ll not only retain your marketer, you’ll build a sustainable growth engine.
At Fractional Marketer, we help founders design these roadmaps so they can avoid common pitfalls and set their first hires up for success.
Thinking about hiring your first marketer? Let’s talk about how to set the right KPIs and build a realistic growth plan.
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