How to Build a Series B Marketing Team (Structure + Hires)
A Series B marketing team typically has 3-8 people covering demand generation, content, product marketing, and operations. The team reports to a VP Marketing or fractional CMO and balances specialist execution with strategic oversight. Most Series B companies ($10-50M revenue, 50-150 employees) spend $500K-$2M annually on marketing — 50-60% on headcount, 40-50% on programs and tools.
This structure differs sharply from Series A (1-3 generalists) and Series C+ (10-20+ specialized marketers). Get it wrong at Series B and you'll burn budget on the wrong hires or fall behind competitors who staff faster.
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Series B marketing teams bridge execution and strategy. Unlike Series A (where 1-2 generalists handle everything), Series B needs specialists in 3-4 core channels. Unlike Series C+ (where you build specialized pods for each function), Series B teams stay lean — 5-8 people covering demand gen, content, product marketing, and ops.
The revenue context matters. Series B companies typically generate $10-50M in ARR, according to High Alpha's 2025 SaaS Benchmarks. At this stage, founders no longer run marketing themselves, but the company can't justify a 20-person marketing org yet.
| Stage | Revenue | Team Size |
|---|---|---|
| Series A | $1-10M | 1-3 marketers |
| Series B | $10-50M | 3-8 marketers |
| Series C+ | $50M+ | 10-20+ marketers |
Three things change at Series B:
Channel specialization. Series A marketers are jacks-of-all-trades. At Series B, you need a demand gen specialist who lives in HubSpot and paid channels, a content marketer who can write and manage freelancers, and a product marketer who owns messaging and launches.
Repeatable systems. Series A marketing is experimental. Series B marketing has to scale — templated campaigns, documented processes, dashboards that update automatically.
Strategic oversight. The VP Marketing or fractional CMO spends 50-70% of their time on strategy (GTM planning, board reporting, channel mix) instead of execution. They're building the marketing machine, not just running campaigns.
From our 30,000+ marketer matches, Series B companies that try to stretch 2-3 generalists typically hit a wall around $15M in revenue. The team can't keep up with pipeline targets and quality drops.
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Get the full report →Series B Marketing Team Structure (Org Chart)
A typical Series B marketing org has three layers: leadership (VP Marketing or Fractional CMO), managers or senior ICs, and individual contributors.
Here's the structure we see most often:
| Level | Role | Responsibilities |
|---|---|---|
| Leadership | VP Marketing or Fractional CMO | GTM strategy, board reporting, channel mix, budget allocation, team hiring |
| Senior IC / Manager | Demand Gen Lead | Paid channels, email campaigns, conversion optimization, pipeline reporting |
| Senior IC / Manager | Content Marketing Lead | Blog, SEO, thought leadership, freelance management, content calendar |
| Senior IC / Manager | Product Marketing Manager | Messaging, positioning, launches, sales enablement, competitive intel |
Not every Series B company needs all six roles. A $12M SaaS company might have:
- VP Marketing (fractional, 20 hours/week)
- Demand Gen Manager (full-time)
- Content Marketing Manager (full-time)
- Marketing Ops Specialist (full-time or fractional, 15 hours/week)
A $40M company closer to Series C might add:
- Product Marketing Manager (full-time)
- Paid Social Specialist (full-time)
- Content Writer (full-time)
- Marketing Analyst (full-time)
The reporting structure stays flat. Most Series B marketing teams avoid middle management — the VP Marketing has 3-5 direct reports, each owning a function.
Core Roles to Hire First
Hire in this order:
Hire #1: VP Marketing or Fractional CMO. This hire sets strategy, owns the GTM plan, and manages the board's marketing expectations. Full-time VPs cost $150-250K + equity. Fractional CMOs cost $8-15K/month for 15-25 hours per week.
First Round Review's hiring playbook says the biggest mistake is skipping marketing leadership and promoting a junior IC into the role. Series B needs strategic oversight — someone who's built a $10M+ pipeline before.
Hire #2: Demand Generation Manager. This person owns pipeline. They run paid search, paid social, email nurture, and conversion optimization. Demand gen drives 50-70% of qualified pipeline at most B2B SaaS companies.
Look for someone who's managed $20K+/month in ad spend and built multi-touch attribution models. They should know Google Ads, LinkedIn Ads, and your CRM inside-out.
Hire #3: Content Marketing Manager. Content fuels demand gen. The content manager writes pillar content, manages freelancers, and owns SEO strategy. At Series B, content shifts from founder-written thought leadership to scalable editorial systems.
Hire someone who's published 50+ blog posts, managed a freelance writer pool, and understands keyword research. They'll produce 2-4 pieces per week (mix of in-house and freelance).
Hire #4: Marketing Operations Specialist. Once you're running multi-channel campaigns, ops becomes critical. Marketing ops handles CRM configuration, lead scoring, reporting dashboards, and MarTech stack management.
This hire pays for itself by cleaning up attribution gaps and automating manual reporting.
Hire #5: Product Marketing Manager (optional at early Series B, required by late Series B). Product marketing owns positioning, messaging, launches, and competitive analysis. PMMs bridge marketing and product teams.
If your product has 3+ SKUs or you're entering new markets, hire product marketing earlier. If you're still single-product, you can wait until $25-30M revenue.
From First Round's research, the most common mistake is hiring specialists before leadership. A demand gen manager without a VP to set strategy will optimize for vanity metrics instead of pipeline quality.
Marketing Budget Allocation for Series B Companies
Series B marketing budgets range from $500K to $2M annually, depending on revenue, growth targets, and go-to-market motion.
Gartner benchmarks marketing spend at 8-12% of revenue for B2B SaaS companies in growth mode. A $20M ARR company should plan for $1.6-2.4M in marketing spend.
Here's how that budget typically breaks down:
| Category | % of Budget | Annual Spend (for $1.5M budget) |
|---|---|---|
| Headcount | 50-60% | $750K-900K |
| Paid Channels | 20-30% | $300K-450K |
| Content Production | 8-12% | $120K-180K |
| MarTech Stack | 6-10% | $90K-150K |
The 50-60% headcount ratio is critical. Series B companies that over-index on paid spend (70%+ on ads, <30% on people) hit a ceiling fast — no one's optimizing campaigns, building systems, or creating content.
Conversely, companies that over-hire (70%+ headcount, <30% programs) starve their channels of budget and force marketers to execute without ammunition.
Full-Time vs. Fractional Marketing Talent at Series B
Series B is the sweet spot for fractional marketing talent. You need senior expertise but can't justify six-figure salaries for every function.
Here's when to hire full-time vs. fractional:
| Role | Full-Time | Fractional |
|---|---|---|
| VP Marketing / CMO | If you need 30+ hrs/week and plan to scale to 10+ marketers in 12 months | If you need strategic oversight but not daily execution (15-25 hrs/week) |
| Demand Gen Manager | Yes | Rarely fractional |
| Content Marketing Manager | Yes, if publishing 4+ pieces/week | Fractional (20 hrs/week) if publishing 2-3 pieces/week |
| Product Marketing | If launching monthly, multi-product | Fractional for 1-2 launches per quarter |
Cost comparison (annual):
- Full-time Demand Gen Manager: $110-140K + 15-20% benefits + equity = $130-170K all-in
- Fractional Demand Gen Manager (20 hrs/week): $6-9K/month × 12 = $72-108K/year
- Full-time VP Marketing: $180-250K + benefits + equity = $210-300K all-in
- Fractional CMO (20 hrs/week): $10-15K/month × 12 = $120-180K/year
Fractional saves 30-40% on comp while getting senior talent. The tradeoff: less availability for ad-hoc requests and slower ramp time on company-specific context.
From our marketplace data, 62% of Series B companies use at least one fractional marketer. The most common fractional roles: CMO/VP Marketing, Marketing Ops, and Product Marketing.
Common Hiring Mistakes at Series B (and How to Avoid Them)
Mistake #1: Hiring generalists when you need specialists. Series A generalists can't scale Series B pipeline. A "full-stack marketer" who dabbles in paid, content, and product marketing will underperform a specialist demand gen manager by 3-5x.
How to avoid it: Write job descriptions for specific outcomes ("build a $2M pipeline from paid channels") not generic responsibilities ("manage all digital marketing").
Mistake #2: Promoting your first marketing hire into VP Marketing. Your Series A hire was a great IC. That doesn't mean they can run a team, own board-level strategy, or allocate a $1.5M budget.
How to avoid it: If your first marketing hire doesn't have VP-level experience, hire a fractional CMO to provide strategic oversight and let your IC focus on execution. Promote when they've demonstrated leadership, not just execution.
Mistake #3: Hiring too junior to save money. A $70K marketing coordinator can't build your demand gen engine. You'll spend 6 months training them, then they'll leave for a senior role elsewhere.
How to avoid it: Hire senior ICs (4-7 years experience) for your first 3-4 marketing roles. You need people who've done this before. Save junior hires for Series C when you have managers to train them.
Mistake #4: Building the team before validating the GTM motion. If you haven't proven repeatable $50K+ deal flow, don't hire a 6-person marketing team. You'll burn $500K+ optimizing the wrong channels.
How to avoid it: Get to $5-10M revenue with 2-3 marketers. Validate your ICP, messaging, and core channels. Then scale the team.
Mistake #5: Ignoring marketing ops until attribution breaks. Most Series B companies hire marketing ops as the 5th or 6th marketer. By then, your CRM is a mess, attribution is broken, and no one trusts the pipeline dashboard.
How to avoid it: Hire a fractional marketing ops specialist after your second marketer. 10-15 hours per week to set up lead scoring, build dashboards, and maintain CRM hygiene. This hire saves you from scrambling to fix attribution when the board asks for pipeline metrics.
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