How to Hire a Marketing Director: 2026 Guide

You need a marketing director. Your marketing team has grown to 3-5 people, channels are multiplying, and you can't own the strategy anymore. The question is how to hire one without burning 6 months and $150K+ on the wrong person.

You have two paths: hire full-time (3-6 month search, $120-180K+ base salary, indefinite commitment) or hire fractional (matched in 48 hours, $5-12K/month, month-to-month). Full-time makes sense when you're established and need permanent leadership. Fractional works when you need interim coverage, a specific project, or want to trial before committing.

This guide covers what a marketing director actually does, when to hire one, how to evaluate both hiring models, where to find candidates, how to vet them, and what to pay.

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What Does a Marketing Director Actually Do?

A marketing director owns marketing strategy, leads the marketing team (typically 3-10 people), and coordinates marketing with sales, product, and leadership. They're not just senior marketers—they set direction, manage people, and own results.

The role sits between hands-on execution (marketing manager territory) and executive leadership (VP/CMO level). Most marketing directors manage $200K-$2M budgets, report to a CEO or CMO, and split their time 60% strategy and 40% execution.

Here's how the role compares to adjacent positions:

Role Team Size Managed Budget Authority
Marketing Manager 0-2 people $50-200K
Marketing Director 3-10 people $200K-$2M
VP Marketing / CMO 10+ people $2M+

Key responsibilities:

Most directors spend their time in strategy docs, 1-on-1s with their team, cross-functional meetings, and reviewing campaign performance. If you need someone writing blog posts or building landing pages, you need a manager or specialist, not a director.

When Should You Hire a Marketing Director?

Hire a marketing director when your team has 3+ marketers with no one coordinating them, when you're spending 10+ hours per week on marketing strategy and need to hand it off, or when revenue targets require multi-channel marketing instead of ad-hoc tactics.

Specific signals you're ready:

Most companies hire their first marketing director between $3-10M in revenue or Series A-B funding. Earlier than that, founders or a VP usually own marketing. Later than that, you probably need a VP or CMO instead of a director.

If you're pre-revenue or have fewer than 3 marketing people, you don't need a director yet. Start with a fractional growth marketer or a marketing manager who can execute.

Full-Time vs Fractional Marketing Director

A full-time marketing director costs $120-180K+ in base salary and takes 3-6 months to hire. A fractional marketing director costs $5-12K/month and can be matched in 48 hours. Full-time is permanent. Fractional is month-to-month.

Here's the breakdown:

Factor Full-Time Fractional
Time to hire 3-6 months 48 hours (MarketerHire model)
Annual cost $150-220K (base + benefits + equity) $60-144K ($5-12K/mo)
Commitment Indefinite (at-will but expensive to exit) Month-to-month
Trial period 90 days (still on payroll) 2 weeks (MarketerHire)

When fractional makes sense:

When full-time makes sense:

MarketerHire matches companies with vetted fractional CMOs and marketing directors in 48 hours. 95% of trials convert to ongoing engagements because the vetting is rigorous (top 5% acceptance rate) and the match process accounts for industry, stage, and skill gaps.

The typical fractional engagement runs 6-12 months. Some convert to full-time hires. Others extend indefinitely because the flexibility is worth more than full-time dedication.

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How to Write a Marketing Director Job Description

A strong marketing director job description has five sections: role summary, key responsibilities, required experience, success metrics, and compensation range.

Role summary (2-3 sentences):
What they'll own, who they report to, team size. Example: "We're hiring a Marketing Director to lead our 5-person marketing team and own our go-to-market strategy. You'll report to the CEO and manage paid acquisition, content, email, and product marketing. Your goal: take us from $8M to $20M ARR over the next 18 months."

Key responsibilities (5-7 bullets):

Required experience:

Success metrics—what does good look like?

Compensation range:
$140-160K base + 0.5% equity + benefits. Be transparent—it builds trust and filters out mismatched candidates faster.

What to skip:

Real example snippet: "You'll own our content strategy and manage the content marketer who executes it. You won't be writing 10 blog posts per month—you'll be setting the editorial calendar, defining audience segments, and measuring what converts."

Where to Find Marketing Director Candidates

You can hire through executive recruiters, LinkedIn, job boards, or fractional marketplaces. Recruiters cost 20-30% of first-year salary but deliver vetted senior candidates in 60-90 days. Fractional marketplaces like MarketerHire match you in 48 hours for $5-12K/month.

Traditional hiring paths:

Executive recruiters: Best for permanent, senior roles when you have 3-6 months and budget for a 25% placement fee ($30-50K). They do the sourcing, screening, and vetting. You see 3-5 finalists. Timeline: 60-120 days from kickoff to offer.

LinkedIn Recruiter: DIY approach. Post the role, search for candidates, message them directly. Requires skill to write compelling outreach and evaluate resumes. Cost is your time + LinkedIn Recruiter subscription ($170/month). Timeline: 2-4 months if you're disciplined.

Job boards (Indeed, Glassdoor, AngelList): High volume, low signal. You'll get 100+ applications, most unqualified. Plan to screen for 10-20 hours. Good for junior roles, harder for senior/strategic positions. Free to post (paid for visibility).

Fractional marketplaces:

MarketerHire: Vetted top 5% of marketing talent. You fill out your needs (industry, skills, stage, budget), get matched with 2-3 candidates in 48 hours, interview, and start a 2-week trial. 95% of trials convert. Month-to-month contracts. $5-12K/month depending on scope (10-20 hours/week). No recruiter fee, no benefits load, no 6-month commitment.

Competitors (Mayple, Toptal, Right Side Up): Similar models—vetted freelancers, faster than traditional hiring, flexible contracts. Pricing and vetting rigor vary.

Channel Cost Timeline
Executive recruiter 25% first-year salary 60-120 days
LinkedIn Recruiter Your time + $170/mo 60-90 days
Job boards Free to $500 30-90 days
MarketerHire $5-12K/mo 48 hours

Recommendation: Need someone in <30 days, or want to trial before full-time? Start with a fractional marketplace. Hiring for a permanent role and have 3-6 months? Use a recruiter or LinkedIn.

Many companies start fractional, validate the person and scope, then convert to full-time after 6-12 months. It's a lower-risk path than committing $180K up front.

How to Vet Marketing Director Candidates

Vet marketing director candidates across four areas: strategic thinking, team leadership, past results, and cultural fit. Ask for specific examples, metrics, and work samples. Watch for red flags like vague answers, no measurable results, or overpromising.

Interview framework:

1. Strategic thinking
Ask: "Walk me through how you'd build our marketing strategy for the next 12 months."

Listen for:

Red flag: They pitch the same playbook they ran at their last company without asking about your business.

2. Team leadership
Ask: "Tell me about a time you hired or fired a marketer. What did you learn?"

Listen for:

Red flag: They've never managed anyone, or they blame past team members for failures.

3. Past results
Ask: "What's the biggest marketing win you've owned? Walk me through your role and the outcome."

Listen for:

Red flag: Can't cite numbers. Takes credit for team's work without acknowledging it. Overpromises: "I'll 10x your pipeline in 90 days."

4. Cultural fit
Watch how they:

Portfolio review checklist:
Ask for 2-3 examples of past work—strategy docs, campaign decks, performance dashboards. Evaluate:

If they can't share work samples due to NDAs, ask them to walk you through a campaign on a whiteboard and explain their decision-making.

Marketing Director Compensation Guide (2026)

Marketing directors earn $100-220K in base salary depending on company size, location, and industry. Startups (seed to Series A) pay $100-140K. Growth-stage companies (Series B-C, $5-50M revenue) pay $130-180K. Established companies ($50M+ revenue) pay $160-220K.

Add 15-25% for high-cost markets like San Francisco, New York, and Seattle.

Salary ranges by segment (U.S., base salary, 2026):

According to Glassdoor salary data and Bureau of Labor Statistics employment surveys, marketing director compensation has increased 8-12% since 2024, driven by demand for specialized channel expertise (paid acquisition, product marketing, growth) and competition from fractional models offering higher effective hourly rates.

Equity: Startups typically offer 0.25-1.0% equity for director-level roles, vesting over 4 years with a 1-year cliff. Growth-stage and established companies offer less equity (0.1-0.3%) or none, compensating with higher base salary.

Total cost of employment (full-time):
Base salary is only part of the cost. Add:

Total: 1.5-1.8x base salary annually, plus one-time recruiter fee.

Example: $150K base becomes $225K-$270K all-in (year 1 with recruiter fee), $195K-$225K ongoing.

Fractional pricing:
Fractional marketing directors charge $5-12K/month depending on hours (10-20/week is typical), seniority, and scope.

Annual equivalent: $60-144K. No benefits, no payroll tax, no recruiter fee. The monthly rate is the total cost.

MarketerHire fractional directors typically run $7-10K/month for 15-20 hours per week. That's $84-120K annually, all-in. Compare that to $195K+ for full-time.

Fractional costs less because you're buying 10-20 hours/week instead of 40, and you're not paying benefits or recruiter fees. You're also not locked in—if the scope changes or you hire full-time, you can end the contract with 30 days notice.

FAQ
How to Hire a Marketing Director
A marketing director manages people and owns strategy. A marketing manager executes tactics and may manage 0-2 people. Directors oversee $200K-$2M budgets and report to a CEO or CMO. Managers handle $50-200K budgets and report to a director. Directors spend 60% of their time on strategy. Managers spend 80% on execution.
Full-time hiring takes 3-6 months: 30 days to source candidates, 30-60 days to interview and decide, 30-60 days for notice period and onboarding. Fractional hiring through MarketerHire takes 48 hours to match and 2 weeks to trial. Executive recruiters can shorten full-time timelines to 60-90 days but charge 25% of first-year salary.
If your company has a CMO or VP Marketing, the director reports to them. If you don't have a CMO, the director reports to the CEO. Most startups and growth-stage companies ($2-30M revenue) don't have a CMO, so the director is the senior marketing leader and reports to the CEO. Once you're $30M+ revenue, you typically hire a VP or CMO and the director reports up.
First 30 days: meet the team, audit current marketing (what's working, what's not), and propose a revised strategy. Days 31-60: make 1-2 key hires or reorganize the team, launch one high-impact initiative (new campaign, attribution model, channel experiment). Days 61-90: hit revised performance targets, establish regular reporting cadence, and improve cross-functional alignment with sales and product.
Hire fractional when you need interim leadership (covering parental leave, leading a rebrand, testing before full-time), when budget is constrained (early-stage startup), or when you need 10-15 hours per week of strategic direction but not 40 hours of execution. Hire full-time when the need is permanent, you're building a team they'll manage long-term, and you want someone embedded full-time in meetings and culture.
No. A VP of Marketing is senior to a director. If you have a VP, you'd hire marketing managers or specialists under them, not a director. The VP owns strategy and team leadership. Directors report to VPs. Exception: very large marketing orgs (20+ people) may have multiple directors reporting to a VP, each owning a function (demand gen director, product marketing director, brand director).
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  1. 1 Hire a Fractional CMO
  2. 2 Marketing Team Structure Guide
  3. 3 How Much Does a Marketing Team Cost?

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