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A marketing operations manager builds and maintains the infrastructure that makes marketing teams work. They manage the tech stack (CRM, marketing automation, analytics), optimize workflows, govern data quality, and ensure campaigns run efficiently. Think of them as the systems architect for your marketing org — less about creating campaigns, more about making sure all the pieces connect and function properly.
Most companies add this role when they hit 5-10 marketers and start feeling the pain of disconnected tools, messy data, or manual processes that don't scale. The operations manager doesn't run campaigns — they build the systems that let campaign managers, content teams, and demand gen specialists do their jobs without friction.
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Get your free audit →Core Responsibilities of a Marketing Operations Manager
Marketing operations managers own the infrastructure. Their day-to-day work centers on keeping systems running and making workflows more efficient.
1. Tech stack management
They select, implement, and maintain marketing tools. CRM (Salesforce, HubSpot), marketing automation platforms (Marketo, Pardot), analytics (Google Analytics, Tableau), and everything in between. They own the integrations between systems and troubleshoot when data doesn't flow correctly.
2. Data governance and hygiene
They set standards for how data enters the CRM, how leads are scored, what fields are required, and how duplicates get handled. Without this, your database turns into a mess within six months.
3. Campaign operations support
They build the technical infrastructure for campaigns — email templates, landing page frameworks, tracking parameters, lead routing rules. Campaign managers focus on messaging and targeting; ops managers ensure the technical execution works.
4. Process design and optimization
They document how things should work, then automate what can be automated. Lead handoff from marketing to sales. Campaign approval workflows. Reporting cadences. If a marketer is doing something manually more than twice, the ops manager should be automating it.
5. Reporting and dashboard creation
They build the dashboards that show what's working. Campaign performance, pipeline attribution, channel ROI, funnel conversion rates. They don't just pull reports — they design the measurement framework.
6. Budget and vendor management
They track software spend, negotiate with vendors, and ensure the team isn't paying for tools nobody uses. At mid-size companies, marketing tech spend can hit $500K+ annually. Somebody needs to own that.
7. Cross-functional alignment
They work with sales ops to align systems, with IT to manage security and compliance, with finance to track spend. Marketing ops sits at the intersection of multiple teams.
Skills and Qualifications
Marketing operations managers need technical depth and systems thinking. The role sits between marketing strategy and technical implementation.
Technical skills:
- CRM and marketing automation platforms — deep knowledge of at least one major CRM (Salesforce, HubSpot) and one marketing automation platform (Marketo, Pardot, HubSpot Marketing Hub)
- Analytics and data tools — Google Analytics, Tableau, Looker, or similar BI tools; comfort pulling data and building dashboards
- Basic SQL or data manipulation — ability to query databases, clean data, and work with APIs
- Project management tools — Asana, Monday, Jira for managing cross-functional projects
- HTML/CSS basics — helpful for customizing email templates and landing pages, though not always required
Soft skills:
- Systems thinking — ability to see how pieces fit together and anticipate downstream effects of changes
- Cross-functional collaboration — comfort working with sales, IT, product, and finance teams
- Process documentation — ability to write clear SOPs and training materials
- Problem diagnosis — troubleshooting skills to figure out why data isn't flowing or why a campaign failed technically
- Stakeholder management — balancing requests from multiple teams with competing priorities
Most marketing operations managers come from marketing analyst roles, marketing coordinator positions, or operations roles in other functions (sales ops, revenue ops). Certifications help but aren't required — HubSpot, Salesforce, and Marketo all offer certification programs that signal platform expertise.
Marketing Operations Manager vs. Marketing Manager
The titles sound similar but the roles are fundamentally different.
| Marketing Operations Manager | Marketing Manager |
|---|---|
| Builds infrastructure and optimizes systems | Plans and executes campaigns |
| Outputs: dashboards, workflows, integrations | Outputs: leads, content, campaign results |
| Technical focus: CRM, automation, data | Creative/strategic focus: messaging, positioning, channels |
| Measures: system uptime, data quality, process efficiency | Measures: leads, pipeline, revenue, campaign ROI |
A marketing manager owns "what we say and who we say it to." A marketing operations manager owns "how our systems work and whether our data is accurate."
Both roles are critical. But if you hire a marketing manager expecting them to also fix your CRM and build your dashboards, you'll be disappointed. And if you hire a marketing operations manager expecting them to write copy and run campaigns, same problem.
Companies often hire marketing managers first, then add operations when the team hits 5-10 people and the infrastructure becomes a bottleneck. For more context on how these roles fit together, see our guide on what a marketing manager does.
When to Hire a Marketing Operations Manager
You need a marketing operations manager when infrastructure problems start limiting what your marketing team can accomplish.
Signals you're ready:
- Your marketing team has 5-10+ people. Smaller teams can often get by with a marketing manager who wears the ops hat part-time. Once you hit 5-10 marketers, ops becomes a full-time job.
- Data is messy and nobody trusts the reports. Duplicate leads, incomplete records, conflicting attribution. If every stakeholder meeting starts with "Well, the data isn't perfect, but…" you need someone owning data governance.
- Workflows are manual and don't scale. Your team is still copying data between spreadsheets, manually routing leads, or rebuilding reports from scratch every week. These are ops problems.
- Tools are disconnected. Marketing automation doesn't talk to the CRM. Analytics don't match what the ad platforms report. Nobody knows which system is the source of truth.
- Campaign launches are slow. It takes your team three weeks to launch a simple email campaign because setting up templates, tracking, and lead routing is complex and undocumented.
- You're hiring more marketers but productivity isn't increasing. Each new hire gets less effective because they're fighting infrastructure problems instead of doing marketing work.
Stage and budget context:
Most companies add this role between Series A and Series B. Earlier if you're in a complex B2B space with long sales cycles and sophisticated attribution needs. Budget-wise, expect $80K-$140K for a full-time hire depending on seniority, or $5K-$10K/month for a fractional specialist.
If you're figuring out your full marketing team structure, operations typically comes in as the second or third specialist role after demand gen or content.
How to Hire a Marketing Operations Manager
Hiring for this role is different from hiring other marketers. You're evaluating systems thinking and technical depth, not campaign creativity.
1. Define what you need them to own
Be specific. Is the priority cleaning up your Salesforce instance? Building attribution dashboards? Implementing marketing automation? The role is broad — narrow the scope for the first 90 days.
2. Look in the right places
Marketing operations specialists cluster in specific communities. Operations-focused Slack groups, RevOps communities, platform-specific user groups (Salesforce Trailblazer Community, HubSpot User Groups). Talent marketplaces like MarketerHire vet candidates for ops skills specifically.
3. Interview for systems thinking, not just tool knowledge
Ask: "Walk me through how you'd diagnose why leads aren't syncing from marketing automation to CRM." Or: "How would you design a lead scoring model for a B2B SaaS company?" You want to see their thought process, not just hear that they're certified in Salesforce.
4. Review their portfolio
Ask for examples: dashboards they've built, process docs they've written, integrations they've implemented. Marketing operations work is tangible — you should see artifacts.
5. Decide full-time vs. fractional
If you're a 10-person company and this is your first ops hire, fractional often makes more sense. You need 10-15 hours per week to fix your CRM and build dashboards, not a full-time employee. Once you hit 20+ marketers, full-time becomes necessary.
6. Run a trial
Give them a real project in the first two weeks. "Audit our lead routing and recommend three fixes." Or: "Build a dashboard showing campaign ROI by channel." You'll see quickly if they can deliver.
The most common hiring mistake is bringing in someone who knows one platform deeply but can't think cross-functionally. A Salesforce expert who doesn't understand how marketing automation or analytics fit into the picture will optimize one tool and leave the rest disconnected.
For more guidance on building out your team, check out our resources on startup marketing team structure and B2B marketing team structures.
- 1 Marketing Team Structure: How to Build Your Org
- 2 Startup Marketing Team Structure
- 3 Get matched with a marketing operations specialist
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