What Is an Internet Marketing Consultant? (And When to Hire One)
An internet marketing consultant is a contracted expert who builds and executes digital marketing strategies for companies. Most work fractionally (10-30 hours per week) at $3,000-$15,000 per month. Companies hire them when internal teams are stretched, marketing strategy doesn't exist, or full-time hiring takes too long.
The typical engagement: a VP of Marketing needs a paid search expert but can't justify a $120K full-time hire. Or a founder knows the product works but has no idea how to generate leads consistently. A consultant fills the gap — senior expertise, deployed fast, no long-term commitment.
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An internet marketing consultant is an expert marketer hired on contract to build and execute digital growth strategies. They work across channels like SEO, paid ads, email, content, and analytics — usually fractionally (10-30 hours per week) for multiple clients at once.
The role differs from an agency. Agencies assign junior staff across 15 accounts. A consultant is one person, dedicated to your business, accountable for results.
It's also different from hiring full-time. Full-time takes 3-6 months and costs $100K+ annually with benefits. A consultant starts in days or weeks, works month-to-month, and costs a fraction of a salaried employee.
Most consultants specialize. You don't hire one person for everything — you hire a PPC specialist, an SEO expert, or a fractional CMO depending on your gap.
Core responsibilities include:
- Building marketing strategy and channel roadmaps
- Running campaigns (Google Ads, Facebook, LinkedIn, email)
- Reporting on performance and ROI
- Training internal teams on tools and processes
- Auditing existing marketing and fixing what's broken
The best consultants bring 8-15 years of hands-on execution. They've run campaigns at scale, know what works, and can start contributing in week one.
What Does an Internet Marketing Consultant Do?
Internet marketing consultants handle strategy, execution, and reporting across digital channels. Most deliver marketing audits, campaign management, analytics setup, team training, and tool recommendations based on your specific gaps.
The specific mix depends on your needs, but most deliver some combination of these services:
1. Marketing strategy development
They audit your current marketing, identify gaps, and build a 90-day roadmap. Deliverables: channel prioritization, budget allocation, KPI framework, competitive analysis.
2. Channel execution
They run the campaigns. Paid search experts manage Google Ads and Bing. SEO consultants handle technical audits, content strategy, and link building. Email marketers build automation flows and nurture sequences. Paid social specialists optimize Facebook Ads, Instagram, and LinkedIn campaigns.
3. Analytics and reporting
They set up dashboards (Google Analytics, Looker, HubSpot), define attribution models, and report weekly or monthly on what's working. No vanity metrics — they tie marketing spend to pipeline and revenue.
4. Team training and enablement
They onboard your internal team on tools (HubSpot, Salesforce, Google Analytics) and processes (campaign planning, A/B testing, reporting templates). The goal: build internal capability so you're not dependent on them forever.
5. Marketing technology evaluation
They recommend and implement tools. Should you use HubSpot or Marketo? Webflow or WordPress? Google Analytics 4 or Mixpanel? They've used all of them and know which fits your stage and budget.
Typical deliverables in the first 30 days:
- Marketing audit report (15-25 pages covering all active channels)
- 90-day growth plan with budget and resource needs
- Campaign setup (accounts, tracking, creative briefs)
- Weekly performance dashboard
- Bi-weekly stakeholder updates
You're not hiring someone to "consult" in the abstract. You're hiring execution. The best consultants are hands-on operators who've managed $500K-$5M in annual ad spend, built content engines that drive 100K+ monthly visitors, or scaled email lists from 5K to 200K subscribers.
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Get your free audit →When Should You Hire an Internet Marketing Consultant?
Hire a consultant when your team has gaps, marketing isn't working, or full-time hiring is too slow or expensive. The strongest signals: no marketing strategy, stretched internal team, launching new channels, post-acquisition integration, or needing speed over a 3-6 month hiring process.
Specific signals:
You have no marketing strategy. You're running ads, publishing blog posts, posting on social — but nothing connects to a plan. A consultant builds the strategy, prioritizes channels, and sets measurable goals.
Your internal team is stretched. Your one marketer is doing everything: writing blog posts, running ads, managing the website, analyzing data. Quality suffers because nobody can focus. A consultant takes one channel off their plate entirely.
You're launching a new channel. You've never run paid search, don't know SEO, or have no email automation. Hiring full-time for an unproven channel is risky. A consultant tests it, proves ROI, then you decide whether to bring it in-house.
You're post-acquisition or mid-integration. Private equity bought your company. The portfolio needs a marketing function but doesn't have one. A consultant builds it from zero: tech stack, process, team structure, reporting.
Full-time hiring takes too long. You need someone productive this quarter. Full-time hiring takes 3-6 months (sourcing, interviews, offer negotiation, onboarding). Fractional marketers start in 48 hours to 2 weeks.
You can't afford a bad hire. A $120K full-time marketing manager who doesn't work out costs you 6-12 months and another $50K in severance, recruiting fees, and opportunity cost. A consultant works month-to-month with a 2-week trial. If it's not a fit, you move on.
Real example from MarketerHire's customer base: a Series B SaaS company had a VP of Marketing managing 4 people. They needed a demand gen lead but couldn't get headcount approved. They hired a fractional demand gen consultant at $8K/month, ran ABM campaigns, built a lead scoring model, and increased MQLs by 40% in 90 days. Six months later, the board approved a full-time hire — and the consultant helped interview and onboard them.
Internet Marketing Consultant vs. Agency vs. Full-Time Hire
A consultant delivers senior expertise in days at $3K-$15K/month with no contract. An agency charges $5K-$25K/month, assigns junior staff, and requires 6-12 month commitments. A full-time hire costs $130K-$200K total comp and takes 3-6 months to onboard. Choose based on speed, budget, and whether you need specialist execution or long-term team building.
Here's how consultants compare to the two main alternatives:
| Consultant | Agency | |
|---|---|---|
| Speed to Start | 48 hours to 2 weeks | 2-6 weeks (pitch, proposal, onboarding) |
| Cost | $3K-$15K/month | $5K-$25K/month (retainer) |
| Commitment | Month-to-month | 6-12 month contracts |
| Expertise | Senior (8-15 years), vetted, top 5% | Junior staff on your account, one of many clients |
When a consultant wins: You need specialist execution fast. Your team has gaps. You're testing a channel before committing full-time resources. You want senior expertise without the $150K salary.
When an agency wins: You need creative production (video, design, brand campaigns) at scale. You lack any internal marketing and need a full team immediately.
When full-time wins: You're building a long-term team. The role requires deep company knowledge (product marketing, customer marketing). You have 3-6 months to hire and onboard.
MarketerHire combines the best of consultants and agencies: vetted experts (top 5% acceptance rate), matched in 48 hours, month-to-month contracts, 2-week trial to validate fit. 95% of trials convert to ongoing engagements because the vetting works.
If you've tried agencies and been assigned junior staff, or spent 4 months interviewing for a full-time role that didn't work out, the fractional model solves both problems.
How Much Does an Internet Marketing Consultant Cost?
Most internet marketing consultants charge $100-$250 per hour or $3,000-$15,000 per month on retainer. Junior consultants (3-5 years) charge $75-$125/hour. Senior specialists (10+ years) charge $200-$350/hour. Monthly retainers range from $3K for part-time (10-15 hours/week) to $18K for near full-time (30-35 hours/week).
Cost depends on seniority, scope, and geography.
Hourly rates:
- Junior consultant (3-5 years experience): $75-$125/hour
- Mid-level consultant (5-10 years): $125-$200/hour
- Senior consultant or specialist (10+ years): $200-$350/hour
Monthly retainers (more common):
- Part-time (10-15 hours/week): $3,000-$6,000/month
- Fractional (15-25 hours/week): $6,000-$12,000/month
- Near full-time (30-35 hours/week): $12,000-$18,000/month
Project-based pricing:
Some consultants charge fixed fees for audits ($2,500-$7,500), strategy buildouts ($5,000-$15,000), or campaign launches ($3,000-$10,000). This works for one-time projects but doesn't fit ongoing execution.
Factors that affect cost:
Seniority and track record. A consultant who's scaled paid search at a $50M company charges more than someone with 3 years at an agency. You're paying for pattern recognition — they've seen your problem before and know the fix.
Scope of work. Managing one channel (SEO or paid ads) costs less than full-stack growth consulting (strategy + multichannel execution + team training).
Geography. Consultants in SF and NYC charge more than those in Austin or remote. But most work remotely, so geography matters less than it used to.
In-demand specialties. Paid search, paid social, and analytics consultants command higher rates than general "digital marketing" consultants. Specialists with proven ROI in your industry (B2B SaaS, e-commerce, healthcare) charge a premium.
At MarketerHire, typical fractional engagements run $7,000-$10,000 per month for 15-25 hours per week. That's a senior marketer (vetted top 5%) working dedicated hours on your business for 40-60% less than a full-time hire.
ROI framing: if a $8K/month paid search consultant increases monthly revenue by $50K through better campaign management and landing page optimization, the 6X return pays for itself in month one. Compare that to a $150K full-time hire who takes 3-6 months to ramp.
For budget planning, use this rule: if the role would cost $120K+ full-time, a fractional consultant at $6K-$10K/month delivers 60-80% of the output at 50-60% of the cost — and starts immediately.
See how much a marketing team costs for full breakdown by company stage.
How to Hire the Right Internet Marketing Consultant
Hiring the right consultant comes down to vetting expertise, verifying results, and testing fit before committing. Review portfolios with specific metrics, verify channel expertise matches your need, assess communication fit, require a trial period, and check references from the past 12 months.
Here's the checklist:
1. Review their portfolio and past results. Ask for 2-3 case studies with specific metrics. "Increased leads by 40%" is vague. "Rebuilt paid search account structure, reduced CPA from $180 to $95, and increased MQLs from 120 to 210/month in 90 days" is real. Look for numbers, timelines, and the specific actions they took.
2. Verify channel expertise matches your need. If you need paid search help, hire someone who's managed $500K+ in annual Google Ads spend — not a generalist who "does PPC sometimes." Ask: What's the largest monthly ad budget you've managed? Which industries? What attribution models have you used?
3. Assess communication style and cultural fit. You'll talk to this person weekly. Do they explain things clearly or hide behind jargon? Are they collaborative or dictatorial? Do they ask good questions about your business or jump straight to tactics?
4. Require a trial period. The best consultants offer 2-week or 30-day trials. You validate fit, they validate that your team and data are workable. MarketerHire's 2-week trial converts at 95% because both sides know fast whether it's working.
5. Check references. Ask for 2 references from clients in the past 12 months. Questions to ask: What did they deliver in the first 30 days? How did they handle a campaign that underperformed? Would you hire them again?
Red flags to avoid:
- Overpromising results. "We'll 10X your traffic in 60 days" is a red flag. Real consultants talk about testing, iteration, and realistic timelines.
- No trial or cancellation terms. If they require a 6-month contract with no trial, walk away. Confident consultants let their work speak.
- Vague on past results. If they can't show you a dashboard, a report, or specific outcomes they've driven, they haven't done the work.
- Generalist positioning. "I do SEO, PPC, email, social, content, and analytics" usually means they're mediocre at all of them. Hire specialists.
- No questions about your business. If they don't ask about your goals, current challenges, team structure, or data setup in the first conversation, they're not doing discovery — they're pitching a one-size-fits-all package.
MarketerHire vets marketers at <5% acceptance rate. Every expert has 8+ years of experience, references from past clients, and a portfolio reviewed by our team. You get matched in 48 hours, start a 2-week trial, and only continue if it's working.
If you've been burned by agencies assigning junior staff or spent months on a hiring process that failed, vetting matters. The right consultant pays for themselves in the first 60 days.
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