Marketing Department Structure: Build It Around Output, Not Org Charts
A marketing department structure defines how your team is organised, who owns what, and how work gets done. The right structure connects people to outcomes. The wrong one creates silos, duplicates effort, and produces a lot of activity that never quite adds up to results.
Most teams inherit their structure rather than design it. Someone hired a content person, then a PPC person, then a social person, and eventually the org chart became a record of past hiring decisions rather than a deliberate blueprint for commercial output.
There is a better way to think about this.
Key Takeaways
- Structure should follow strategy, not headcount history. Most teams are shaped by who was hired, not what the business needs to achieve.
- There is no single correct model. Functional, pod-based, and hybrid structures each suit different stages of business maturity and team size.
- Marketing operations is the connective tissue that makes any structure work. Without it, even well-designed teams underperform.
- Generalist-heavy teams move faster in early stages. Specialist-heavy teams scale better, but only with strong coordination.
- The org chart is the last thing you should design. Start with the outcomes you need, then work backwards to the people and roles required.
In This Article
- Why Most Marketing Structures Are Accidents, Not Decisions
- The Three Core Models and When Each One Makes Sense
- The Role Marketing Operations Plays in Any Structure
- How Team Size Should Shape Your Thinking
- Generalists vs Specialists: The Perennial Debate
- In-House vs Agency vs Freelance: Where Structure Gets Complicated
- Compliance, Data, and the Structural Implications Nobody Plans For
- How to Actually Design Your Structure
- The Signals That Your Structure Has Stopped Working
Why Most Marketing Structures Are Accidents, Not Decisions
When I ran agencies, I saw this pattern constantly. A business would bring in a marketing leader, that person would build a team around their own experience and preferences, and within two or three years the structure had calcified. By the time a new CMO arrived, dismantling it felt politically risky, so they worked around it instead.
The result is a team that is organised around functions rather than outcomes. You have a content team producing content. You have a paid media team running campaigns. You have a brand team protecting the brand. But nobody owns the full customer experience, nobody is accountable for revenue, and the handoffs between teams are where deals go to die.
Forrester has written about what org charts reveal, and the conclusion is uncomfortable: your marketing org chart is often a mirror of your internal politics, not your customer’s needs. I would add that it is also a mirror of your past, not your future.
Structure is not a neutral administrative decision. It determines what gets prioritised, who gets heard in planning meetings, and where budget flows. Getting it wrong is expensive in ways that rarely show up cleanly on a P&L.
The Three Core Models and When Each One Makes Sense
There are three structural models that most marketing teams fall into, and each has genuine strengths alongside real limitations. The mistake is treating any one of them as universally correct.
The Functional Model
This is the most common structure. Teams are organised by discipline: content, paid media, SEO, brand, social, email, and so on. Each function has a lead, and the CMO or marketing director sits above them all.
It works well when your marketing activity is relatively stable, your channels are established, and your team is large enough that deep specialisation makes sense. The problem is coordination. When a campaign requires content, paid, and SEO to work together, you need someone to manage the handoffs. Without that, each function optimises for its own metrics and the whole becomes less than the sum of its parts.
I have seen functional structures produce excellent output in mature, well-resourced teams where the marketing director has the bandwidth to act as the integrating layer. I have also seen them produce beautiful work that had almost no commercial impact, because each team was executing its own brief with no shared accountability for outcomes.
The Pod Model
Pod-based structures group people by product line, customer segment, or geography rather than by discipline. Each pod contains the mix of skills it needs: a strategist, a content person, a performance marketer, maybe a designer. They operate with significant autonomy and are accountable for results within their domain.
This model is increasingly popular in growth-stage businesses and in companies where different products or markets require genuinely different approaches. The upside is speed and accountability. The downside is duplication. You end up with three pods each maintaining their own email templates, their own reporting processes, their own agency relationships. Shared infrastructure gets neglected because nobody owns it centrally.
Pod models work best when you have strong marketing operations sitting alongside them, providing shared tooling, governance, and measurement. Without that backbone, the autonomy becomes fragmentation.
The Hybrid Model
Most teams of any meaningful size end up here, whether by design or drift. A central function handles brand, operations, and shared channels. Pods or embedded marketers sit within business units or product teams. The central team sets standards and provides services; the embedded teams execute against local priorities.
Done well, this is genuinely the most scalable structure. Done poorly, it creates a permanent tension between central and local, where the centre feels ignored and the business units feel constrained. The governance model matters enormously here. You need clear rules about what is centralised, what is devolved, and who has authority when those two things conflict.
The Role Marketing Operations Plays in Any Structure
Whichever model you choose, marketing operations is the function that makes it work. It is the connective tissue: the systems, processes, data infrastructure, and governance that allow the rest of the team to operate efficiently and measure what matters.
If you are building or rebuilding a marketing team, operations should not be an afterthought. It should be one of the first things you design. The three pillars of marketing operations, people, process, and performance, are what hold the structure together regardless of which model you use.
I have written in more depth about this across the Marketing Operations hub on The Marketing Juice, covering everything from planning and measurement to team governance and tooling. If you are thinking about structure, that is worth reading alongside this article.
The practical point is this: a well-structured team without operational infrastructure is like a well-designed car with no fuel system. The engineering looks right, but nothing moves. Marketing operations as a discipline has matured significantly, and teams that invest in it consistently outperform those that treat it as administrative overhead.
How Team Size Should Shape Your Thinking
Structure that works for a team of five will not work for a team of fifty. This sounds obvious, but I have seen businesses apply enterprise-level structures to small teams and wonder why everything moves slowly, and I have seen fast-growing companies keep their scrappy early structure long past the point where it stopped serving them.
When I was building the agency team at iProspect, we went from around 20 people to over 100 across a few years. The structure that worked at 20 was genuinely unsuitable at 60, and what worked at 60 needed significant redesign by the time we hit 100. Each growth stage required a deliberate structural decision, not just more headcount added to existing boxes on the org chart.
Here is a rough framework for thinking about structure by team size:
1 to 5 people: Everyone does everything. Roles are defined loosely by aptitude and workload. The marketing lead is also the strategist, the copywriter, and the reporting analyst. Structure at this stage is less about org design and more about prioritisation. What channels matter most? What can wait?
5 to 15 people: You start to see genuine specialisation. A content person, a performance marketer, someone who owns brand or creative. The marketing leader is still close to execution but needs to spend more time on planning and coordination. This is where a simple operational layer, shared briefs, regular reporting, clear ownership, starts to pay off.
15 to 40 people: Functional leads become essential. You need people who own a discipline and can manage others within it. The risk here is that functional silos form and the team loses its ability to work fluidly across channels. Integrated campaign planning becomes a formal process rather than a conversation.
40 people and above: You are now running a serious operation. Marketing operations becomes a dedicated function. You need formal governance, shared measurement frameworks, and probably some version of a hybrid structure to balance central coordination with local responsiveness. At this scale, the CMO’s job is more about architecture and culture than execution.
Generalists vs Specialists: The Perennial Debate
Every marketing leader has a view on this, and most of them are shaped by their own career path. Former specialists tend to over-index on deep expertise. Former generalists tend to value breadth and adaptability. Both instincts are partially right.
The honest answer is that generalists give you speed and flexibility, particularly in early-stage teams where the strategy is still being tested. Specialists give you depth and quality, particularly in channels where technical complexity matters, paid search, SEO, marketing automation, data analysis.
Early in my career, I taught myself to code because the business would not fund a developer. That was a generalist move born of necessity, and it served me well at the time. But as the business grew, the right answer was not more generalists doing more things adequately. It was specialists doing fewer things excellently, coordinated by someone who understood the whole picture.
The most effective teams I have seen combine a generalist layer at the strategic and coordination level with specialists at the execution level. The generalists ensure that the work adds up to something coherent. The specialists ensure the execution is good enough to compete.
How marketing teams are structured internally affects not just output quality but how well they understand and respond to customer behaviour. Teams that are too siloed by function often miss signals that would be obvious if someone was looking across the whole picture.
In-House vs Agency vs Freelance: Where Structure Gets Complicated
Most marketing departments are not purely in-house. They use agencies for some things, freelancers for others, and internal teams for the rest. The structural question is not just how to organise the people on your payroll. It is how to integrate external resource into a coherent operating model.
I spent most of my career on the agency side, which means I have seen every possible version of the client-agency relationship. The ones that worked well had clear briefs, genuine trust, and a client-side contact who understood what good looked like. The ones that failed usually had unclear ownership, too many stakeholders, and an expectation that the agency would compensate for strategic gaps that should have been resolved internally.
If you are running a hybrid model with significant agency involvement, the in-house team needs to own strategy, briefing, and measurement. The moment you outsource those things, you lose control of your own marketing. The agency becomes the de facto marketing department, which is fine if that is a deliberate choice, but it is rarely acknowledged as one.
Freelancers sit differently. They work best when the brief is specific and the work is well-defined: a content writer producing a defined number of articles per month, a designer working to a clear brand system, a PPC specialist managing a contained account. Where freelancers struggle is in roles that require strategic judgment, stakeholder management, or deep institutional knowledge. Those roles need people who are genuinely invested in the business.
If you are working with influencers as part of your marketing mix, the structural question is who owns that relationship. It is a common gap. Influencer marketing planning requires a level of coordination and governance that does not fit neatly into most existing functional structures, and teams that treat it as a social media add-on tend to underinvest in the management layer it requires.
Compliance, Data, and the Structural Implications Nobody Plans For
Most marketing structure conversations focus on channels, campaigns, and creative. Very few start with compliance. That is a mistake, particularly for teams operating in regulated industries or across multiple markets.
Data protection legislation has changed what marketing teams need to own internally. GDPR and its equivalents have real implications for how marketing data is collected, stored, and used, and those implications need to be reflected in your team structure. Someone needs to own this. If nobody does, you are one audit or complaint away from a problem that goes well beyond marketing.
The structural response is not necessarily a dedicated compliance hire within marketing. It might be a clear relationship with the legal or data team, a defined process for reviewing campaigns and data practices, and a marketing operations function that builds compliance into its workflows rather than treating it as an external check.
The teams I have seen handle this best are the ones where operations owns the process and compliance is embedded into how work gets done, not bolted on at the end as a sign-off step.
How to Actually Design Your Structure
Most structure redesigns start with the org chart. That is the wrong place to start. The org chart is the output of the design process, not the input to it.
Start with three questions. What outcomes does the business need marketing to deliver in the next 12 to 24 months? What capabilities are required to deliver those outcomes? And what does the team currently have, what is missing, and what is surplus to requirements?
The answers to those questions should drive the structure. If the business needs to build brand awareness in a new market, you probably need a different configuration than if the priority is improving conversion rates across an existing customer base. The channels, the skills, the measurement approach, and therefore the team design, all follow from the strategic objective.
One practical exercise I have used: map every significant marketing activity against a business outcome. Not a marketing metric, a business outcome. Revenue, customer acquisition cost, retention rate, market share. If an activity cannot be connected to a business outcome, that is a signal, not necessarily to cut it, but to be honest about what it is doing and why it is being resourced.
Then look at where the accountability gaps are. Who owns the customer experience end to end? Who is responsible when a campaign underperforms? Who decides when a channel is not worth the investment? If the answer to any of those questions is “it depends” or “we all do,” that is a structural problem, not a people problem.
Marketing operations has long been identified as the function that closes accountability gaps within marketing teams. The businesses that invest in it early tend to build structures that hold together as they scale. The ones that treat it as an administrative function tend to rebuild their structure every two or three years when the gaps become impossible to ignore.
If you want to go deeper on the operational side of building and running a marketing team, the Marketing Operations hub covers the full range of topics, from planning and governance to measurement and tooling. Structure is one piece of the puzzle. Operations is what makes the structure real.
The Signals That Your Structure Has Stopped Working
Structures do not fail overnight. They degrade gradually, and the signals are often misread as people problems or process problems when they are actually structural ones.
Watch for these patterns. Campaigns consistently miss deadlines because too many teams need to be involved in too many decisions. Reporting is fragmented, with each function producing its own numbers that do not reconcile into a coherent picture of marketing performance. New initiatives stall because nobody has clear authority to make a decision. Senior marketers spend most of their time in coordination meetings rather than doing strategic work.
These are not individual failures. They are symptoms of a structure that has outgrown itself or was never designed to handle the volume and complexity of work it is now carrying.
The fix is rarely a wholesale restructure. It is usually a targeted intervention: clarifying ownership in the areas where it is ambiguous, adding an operational layer where coordination is breaking down, or consolidating functions that have drifted apart when they need to work closely together.
I have done enough of these interventions to know that the structural problem is almost never what it first appears to be. The presenting issue is usually a symptom. The diagnosis requires you to follow the work, not the org chart, and understand where things are actually getting stuck.
About the Author
Keith Lacy is a marketing strategist and former agency CEO with 20+ years of experience across agency leadership, performance marketing, and commercial strategy. He writes The Marketing Juice to cut through the noise and share what works.
