Marketing Team Roles & Hiring
Marketing Skills Matrix for Small B2B Teams
A small B2B team does not need every marketing skill in-house. It needs to know which capabilities matter now, which are missing, which can be outsourced, and which should be owned internally.

Key takeaways
- A skills matrix separates roles from capabilities.
- Small teams should not try to own every marketing skill internally.
- The most important skills depend on the current business constraint.
- Paid search, SEO, analytics, landing pages, CRM, content, and reporting should be visible.
- The matrix helps decide what to hire, delegate, automate, or ignore.
What is a marketing skills matrix?
A marketing skills matrix is a simple table that shows which marketing capabilities the business needs, who currently owns them, and where the gaps are.
It is not only an HR document. It is a planning tool for marketing operations.
- What skills exist inside the team?
- Which skills are missing?
- Which skills are covered by contractors?
- Which gaps affect leads, conversion, reporting, or sales handoff?
- Which next hire would remove the biggest constraint?
Why small B2B teams need one
Small B2B teams often operate with limited people. Without a skills matrix, nobody can clearly see which capabilities are strong and which are missing.
- hiring for tasks instead of constraints
- expecting one person to cover too much
- ignoring analytics until reporting breaks
- producing content without SEO direction
- running paid ads without lead quality review
- improving traffic without improving conversion
Core marketing capabilities to map
| Capability | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Paid search | Captures high-intent demand and creates measurable acquisition flow |
| SEO | Builds organic visibility for commercial and educational topics |
| Content strategy | Connects search demand, buyer questions, and publishing priorities |
| Landing pages | Converts traffic into qualified inquiries |
| Analytics | Shows what is working and what is unclear |
| CRM and lead flow | Connects marketing activity to sales follow-up |
| Reporting | Helps leadership make decisions |
| Offer and positioning | Clarifies why the market should care |
| Marketing operations | Keeps workflows, tools, and accountability organized |
| Experiment planning | Helps the team improve through controlled tests |
Skill levels and ownership
A matrix should not use only yes or no. Most skills exist at different levels.
| Level | Meaning |
|---|---|
| 0 | Missing |
| 1 | Basic understanding |
| 2 | Can execute with guidance |
| 3 | Can own the function |
| 4 | Can build and improve the system |
Example matrix for a small team
| Capability | Founder | Marketer | Contractor | Gap |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Paid search | 1 | 2 | 3 | Medium |
| SEO | 1 | 2 | 0 | High |
| Analytics | 2 | 1 | 0 | High |
| Landing pages | 2 | 2 | 3 | Low |
| CRM and lead flow | 2 | 1 | 0 | Medium |
| Content production | 2 | 3 | 0 | Low |
| Reporting | 2 | 1 | 0 | High |
| Marketing operations | 2 | 2 | 0 | Medium |
This example shows that the team can produce content and has contractor support for landing pages and paid search, but it has weak analytics, SEO depth, reporting, and CRM visibility.
How to use the matrix for hiring
What should be hired?
Hire when the capability needs ongoing internal ownership, frequent decisions, internal context, and cross-functional communication.
What should be delegated?
Delegate when the task requires specialist execution but not daily internal ownership.
What should be automated?
Automate when the work is repetitive and rule-based.
What should be ignored for now?
Ignore skills that do not affect the current constraint. A small team does not need to chase every marketing trend.
Role examples by capability
| Needed capability | Possible role | Alternative |
|---|---|---|
| Paid search ownership | Paid search specialist | Contractor with internal reporting owner |
| SEO growth | SEO strategist | Content lead plus SEO consultant |
| Analytics clarity | Marketing analyst | Fractional analytics support |
| Landing page conversion | CRO or landing page specialist | Designer plus conversion reviewer |
| CRM handoff | Marketing operations specialist | Sales ops support |
| Content production | Content marketer | Freelance writers with editorial owner |
| Reporting rhythm | Marketing operations manager | Founder-led weekly review with analyst support |
Common mistakes
- Confusing tool knowledge with business skill.
- Expecting one person to cover every gap.
- Ignoring analytics and CRM.
- Not connecting skills to business impact.
- Treating the matrix as a static document.
Practical template
| Capability | Current owner | Skill level | Business impact | Action |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Paid search | Contractor | 3 | High | Keep contractor, improve reporting |
| SEO | Marketer | 2 | Medium | Add external review |
| Analytics | Founder | 2 | High | Assign owner or hire support |
| Landing pages | Contractor | 3 | High | Keep project-based support |
| CRM flow | Sales | 1 | High | Build handoff process |
| Content | Marketer | 3 | Medium | Improve briefs and search intent |
| Reporting | None | 0 | High | Create weekly dashboard owner |
FAQ
What is a marketing skills matrix?
A marketing skills matrix maps required marketing capabilities, current owners, skill levels, business impact, and next actions.
What skills should a B2B marketing team have?
A B2B marketing team usually needs capabilities across paid search, SEO, content, landing pages, analytics, CRM flow, reporting, positioning, and marketing operations.
How do you identify marketing skill gaps?
List the capabilities needed for acquisition and sales, then map who owns each capability, how strong ownership is, and whether the gap affects leads, conversion, reporting, or pipeline movement.
Should small teams hire generalists or specialists?
Small teams often need a mix. A generalist can coordinate and manage execution, while specialists can handle deeper channel work.
Which marketing skills should be outsourced?
Outsource specialized or periodic work that does not need daily internal ownership, such as technical SEO audits, landing page design, tracking implementation, campaign cleanup, or dashboard setup.
Practical summary
A marketing skills matrix helps a small B2B team see capability gaps before those gaps become execution problems. It turns a vague concern like “we need more marketing help” into a clearer view of which skills are covered, missing, overloaded, or unnecessary right now.
The matrix is most useful when it supports decisions. It should help the team decide what to hire, what to outsource, what to automate, and what to ignore until the business has enough signal or capacity.
- Map capabilities by business importance, not by trendiness.
- Separate ownership from support so accountability stays clear.
- Use the matrix before hiring, outsourcing, or adding tools.
- Update it when channels, sales process, or reporting needs change.
The goal is not to build a perfect marketing department on paper. The goal is to understand which capabilities matter most for the current stage and how to cover them without creating unnecessary complexity.





