Marketing Operations Management: What Holds Teams Back
Marketing operations management is the discipline of designing, running, and improving the systems that allow marketing to function at scale. It covers how campaigns get planned and executed, how data flows between tools, how budgets get tracked, and how performance gets measured against business outcomes. Done well, it is the difference between a marketing team that produces results and one that produces activity.
Most marketing teams underinvest in operations until something breaks. By that point, the dysfunction is usually structural, not cosmetic, and fixing it takes far longer than building it right would have.
Key Takeaways
- Marketing operations management is a structural discipline, not a support function. Teams that treat it as admin consistently underperform those that treat it as infrastructure.
- The most common failure point is not technology. It is process fragmentation, where tools exist but workflows do not connect them to outcomes.
- Operational debt accumulates quietly. Workarounds, manual reporting, and disconnected data compound until they consume the team’s capacity for actual marketing.
- Governance matters more than headcount. A small team with clear ownership and decision rights will outperform a large team operating without them.
- Measurement frameworks built inside the operations function tend to be more commercially honest than those built by the people being measured.
In This Article
- Why Marketing Operations Gets Treated as a Back-Office Function
- What Does Marketing Operations Management Actually Cover?
- The Operational Debt Problem Most Teams Are Ignoring
- How Governance Structures Determine Operational Effectiveness
- The Technology Trap: When Tooling Becomes a Substitute for Process
- Budget Visibility and the Reporting Gap
- Alignment Between Marketing Operations and Commercial Teams
- What Mature Marketing Operations Management Looks Like in Practice
Why Marketing Operations Gets Treated as a Back-Office Function
There is a persistent tendency in marketing leadership to treat operations as the part of the team that keeps the lights on. The creative work, the strategy, the campaigns, those get the attention. Operations gets the leftover budget and a junior hire who is good with spreadsheets.
I have seen this pattern across agencies and client-side teams for two decades. When I was growing an agency from around 20 people to over 100, the operational infrastructure was the thing that either enabled or strangled growth at every stage. We could win new business. We could hire good people. But if the systems for briefing, trafficking, reporting, and billing were not solid, the growth created chaos rather than scale. The two are not the same thing.
The reason operations gets deprioritised is partly cultural and partly structural. Marketing has always rewarded visibility, and operations is, by design, invisible when it works. Nobody congratulates the person who built the campaign trafficking process that saved three hours a week across a team of fifteen. But everyone notices when a campaign goes live with the wrong creative because there was no approval workflow.
The three pillars of marketing operations have been discussed for years: people, process, and technology. The problem is that most teams invest heavily in technology, moderately in people, and almost nothing in process. Then they wonder why the technology is not delivering the expected return.
If you want a broader view of how this function fits into the commercial structure of a marketing team, the marketing operations hub covers the full landscape, from planning and measurement to team design and tooling.
What Does Marketing Operations Management Actually Cover?
The scope of marketing operations management varies by organisation size and maturity, but there are consistent domains that fall under it regardless of context.
Planning and budgeting infrastructure sits at the centre. This means how campaigns get scoped, how budget gets allocated across channels and periods, how forecasts get built, and how actual spend gets tracked against plan. In most organisations, this process is held together with a combination of spreadsheets, email threads, and institutional memory. That works until someone leaves or the business scales, at which point it stops working almost immediately.
Data and technology governance is the second domain. This covers the marketing technology stack, how tools connect to each other, how data flows between platforms, and who owns what. The average mid-size marketing team is running more tools than anyone has a complete map of. Some of those tools overlap. Some of them are not connected. Some of them are producing data that contradicts data from other tools, and nobody has decided which source to trust.
Campaign execution and workflow management is the third. This is the operational layer between strategy and live campaigns: briefing processes, creative production workflows, approval chains, trafficking, QA, and post-campaign review. Most teams have informal versions of these. Fewer have documented, enforced versions that survive personnel changes.
Performance measurement and reporting rounds it out. Not just what gets reported, but how it gets produced, who owns it, and how it connects to business decisions. A well-structured marketing process treats measurement as an input to decision-making, not an output of activity. That distinction matters more than most teams acknowledge.
The Operational Debt Problem Most Teams Are Ignoring
Operational debt is the marketing equivalent of technical debt in software development. Every time a team builds a workaround instead of fixing a process, every time a report gets produced manually because the integration was never built, every time a decision gets made based on data that nobody fully trusts, the debt accumulates.
It accumulates quietly. The team adapts. People develop personal workarounds. Institutional knowledge fills the gaps that documentation should fill. And then someone leaves, or the business grows, or a new platform gets introduced, and suddenly the workarounds collapse under their own weight.
I have walked into situations where a team’s weekly reporting process was consuming the equivalent of one full-time person across the team. Not because the data was complex, but because nobody had ever connected the systems properly. The data had to be pulled from four platforms, formatted in two different ways depending on the recipient, and cross-checked manually because the numbers rarely agreed. Every week. For years. The cost of that debt, in time alone, was significant. The cost in terms of decisions being made on unreliable data was harder to quantify but probably larger.
The challenge with operational debt is that addressing it requires investment that does not produce immediate, visible output. You are fixing infrastructure, not launching campaigns. Leadership that measures marketing by campaign volume will always deprioritise this work. Leadership that measures marketing by commercial outcome tends to see it differently.
How Governance Structures Determine Operational Effectiveness
Governance in marketing operations is not about bureaucracy. It is about clarity. Who owns which decisions, who has sign-off authority on which types of spend, who is responsible for the accuracy of which data, and what happens when those responsibilities conflict.
The absence of governance does not mean decisions do not get made. It means they get made inconsistently, often by whoever shouts loudest or whoever happens to be in the room. That creates an environment where the quality of a decision depends on the politics surrounding it rather than the logic behind it.
When I was running an agency, one of the structural changes that had the most impact was separating decision rights clearly. Who could approve a campaign brief, who could approve spend above certain thresholds, who could sign off on a new technology contract. It sounds administrative. In practice, it removed an enormous amount of friction and ambiguity from the team’s day-to-day operation. People stopped waiting for permission they did not need. Leaders stopped being pulled into decisions that should have been made two levels below them.
BCG’s research on agile marketing organisations points to governance as a critical enabler of speed, not an inhibitor of it. The teams that move fastest are not the ones with the fewest rules. They are the ones where the rules are clear enough that people do not have to stop and ask before acting.
Governance also matters for vendor and agency relationships. Outsourcing marketing operations can work well, but only when the internal governance structure is clear enough to brief, manage, and evaluate external partners effectively. Outsourcing operational chaos does not resolve it. It just distributes it.
The Technology Trap: When Tooling Becomes a Substitute for Process
Marketing technology has expanded dramatically over the past decade. The number of tools available to a marketing team is not the constraint it once was. The constraint is the capacity to implement, integrate, and actually use those tools in ways that produce better outcomes.
The pattern I see repeatedly is this: a team identifies a problem, buys a tool to solve it, implements the tool without redesigning the underlying process, and then finds that the problem persists in a slightly different form. The tool gets blamed. A new tool gets evaluated. The cycle repeats.
Early in my career, I taught myself to code because the business would not fund a new website. That experience shaped how I think about technology. The tool is not the answer. The problem definition is the answer. If you understand the problem precisely, the technology question becomes much simpler. If you are vague about the problem, you will buy tools that solve the wrong version of it.
Marketing operations management requires someone who can evaluate technology not on its feature list but on its fit with the specific workflows the team needs to run. That is a different skill from knowing which platforms are popular or which vendors have the best sales pitch. It requires enough operational understanding to model what a tool will actually change in practice, not just what it promises to change in theory.
Unbounce’s experience scaling their marketing team illustrates what intentional operational design looks like in a growth context. The tools they used mattered far less than the clarity with which they defined what each role and each process needed to accomplish.
Budget Visibility and the Reporting Gap
One of the most consistent operational failures I encounter is the gap between what marketing spends and what leadership can see about that spending in real time. Budget visibility sounds like a finance problem. In practice, it is a marketing operations problem.
When I managed large paid media accounts, the ability to see spend pacing accurately and in near-real time was not a nice-to-have. It was a commercial necessity. At lastminute.com, I ran a paid search campaign for a music festival that generated six figures of revenue within roughly a day. That kind of performance only stays controlled if you know exactly what you are spending, in what channels, against what return. Lose visibility on that and you either underspend on what is working or overspend past the point of profitability.
The same principle applies to broader marketing budgets. Forrester’s analysis of B2B marketing budgets highlights how frequently budget allocation decisions are made without adequate visibility into what current spend is actually delivering. The result is that budget planning becomes a negotiation based on historical patterns rather than a decision based on current performance data.
Good marketing operations management builds the infrastructure for budget visibility as a standard output, not a special request. That means real-time or near-real-time spend tracking, clear ownership of budget lines, and a reporting cadence that connects spend to outcomes rather than just recording what was spent.
Alignment Between Marketing Operations and Commercial Teams
Marketing operations does not exist in isolation. The outputs of a well-run marketing operation, qualified leads, pipeline contribution, customer data, campaign performance, feed directly into sales and commercial planning. The quality of that feed determines whether marketing and sales operate as connected functions or parallel ones.
The alignment problem between marketing and sales is not new, but it is often operational rather than cultural. Marketing produces leads that sales does not follow up on. Sales complains about lead quality. Marketing argues the leads are fine. Neither side has a shared definition of what a qualified lead looks like, or a shared view of what happens to leads after they are passed across. That is an operational failure before it is a relationship failure.
Forrester’s work on sales and marketing alignment frames this as a structural issue that requires operational solutions: shared definitions, shared data, and shared accountability for pipeline outcomes rather than separate scorecards for each function.
When I have seen this work well, it is because the marketing operations function owns the data layer that both teams use. Lead definitions live in the CRM and are enforced by the operations process, not negotiated in quarterly meetings. Handoff criteria are documented and tracked. Feedback loops between sales and marketing are built into the operational cadence, not left to goodwill.
There is more on how this connects to broader commercial planning across the marketing operations section of The Marketing Juice, including how measurement frameworks can be built to serve both functions rather than just one of them.
What Mature Marketing Operations Management Looks Like in Practice
Maturity in marketing operations is not about having the most sophisticated technology stack or the largest operations team. It is about the degree to which operational infrastructure enables the marketing function to make better decisions faster, with less friction and less waste.
In mature operations, planning cycles are structured and documented. Budget allocation is tied to performance data, not just historical precedent. Campaign workflows have clear ownership at every stage. Data from different tools is reconciled against agreed-upon sources of truth. Reporting serves decision-making rather than compliance. And when something breaks, there is a process for identifying the cause and fixing it rather than just absorbing it as a cost of doing business.
Maturity also shows up in how the operations function relates to the rest of the business. A mature marketing operations team is not the department that says no to things. It is the function that makes it possible to say yes to more things, faster, with greater confidence about the likely outcome.
Getting there is rarely a single transformation project. It tends to happen in layers: first stabilising the basics, then building visibility, then optimising for speed and quality, then building the feedback loops that allow continuous improvement. Each layer depends on the one below it. Teams that try to skip to optimisation without stable foundations tend to find themselves rebuilding the same things repeatedly.
The Effie Awards process, which I have judged, is instructive here. The campaigns that win are almost never the ones with the most creative ambition. They are the ones where operational discipline, clear objectives, rigorous measurement, and consistent execution, allowed the creative idea to deliver at scale. The idea gets the credit. The operations made it possible.
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.
