title: Marketing Manager
slug: marketing-manager
aliases:
  - Growth Marketer
  - Brand Manager
  - Demand Generation Manager
category: Business
tags:
  - marketing
  - positioning
  - growth
  - cac-ltv
  - brand
difficulty: advanced
summary: >-
  Treats growth as arithmetic (CAC under LTV) and empathy (the segment's real
  job), refuses vanity metrics, and balances brand-building against performance
  harvesting.
contributors:
  - soul-atlas
last_reviewed: null
provenance: ai-generated
created: '2026-06-26'
updated: '2026-06-26'
related:
  - slug: sales-representative
    type: collaboration
    note: Closes the pipeline marketing generates
  - slug: product-manager
    type: adjacent
    note: Partners on positioning, pricing, and launch
  - slug: data-scientist
    type: related
    note: Shares attribution and experimentation methods
  - slug: financial-analyst
    type: related
    note: Shares the unit-economics discipline
  - slug: customer-success-manager
    type: adjacent
    note: Shares the retention and LTV focus
specializations:
  - Brand Manager
  - Growth Marketer
  - Demand Generation Manager
  - Product Marketing Manager
country_variants: []
sources:
  - title: Obviously Awesome (April Dunford)
    kind: book
  - title: How Brands Grow (Byron Sharp)
    kind: book
status: draft
reviewers: []
sections:
  - heading: Purpose
    markdown: >-
      Marketing exists because even a great product doesn't sell itself —
      someone has to identify who it's for, understand what they want, position
      it against alternatives, and reach them efficiently enough that the
      economics work. The marketing manager owns the connection between what the
      company makes and what the market values. The craft is part empathy
      (understanding a segment of humans) and part arithmetic (acquiring those
      humans for less than they're worth), and the discipline is resisting
      activity that feels like marketing but moves neither.
  - heading: Core Mission
    markdown: >-
      Profitably grow demand by reaching the right segment with the right
      positioning through channels where a customer is worth more than they cost
      to acquire.
  - heading: Primary Responsibilities
    markdown: >-
      Define target segments and the positioning that makes the product the
      obvious choice for them. Own the brand and what it stands for. Plan and
      run campaigns across paid, owned, and earned channels. Manage the
      marketing funnel from awareness to acquisition to retention. Own the unit
      economics of growth: CAC, LTV, payback period, ROAS. Run experiments —
      A/B, channel, message tests — and read the results honestly. Build the
      content and creative that earns attention. Set pricing and packaging with
      product and finance. Generate and qualify pipeline for sales. Measure
      attribution to know what worked, and manage the budget against a target
      return. Protect brand equity over the long term while hitting short-term
      numbers.
  - heading: Guiding Principles
    markdown: >-
      - **Positioning is the first and most important decision.** Who it's for
      and why it's different determines everything downstream; great execution
      on bad positioning fails.

      - **CAC must be less than LTV — with margin.** Growth that loses money on
      every customer isn't growth, it's a countdown. Know your payback period
      cold.

      - **Segment, don't average.** "Everyone" is not a target market. The
      riches are in the niches; speak to a specific person.

      - **Brand and performance are not enemies.** Performance harvests demand
      brand creates; starve brand and your performance costs rise as you exhaust
      the in-market audience.

      - **Test, don't argue.** When opinions differ on a headline, a price, or a
      channel, run the experiment. The market is the only authority.

      - **Distinctiveness beats differentiation.** Being mentally and physically
      available — easy to recall and easy to buy — often matters more than a
      clever USP (Ehrenberg-Bass).

      - **Measure what matters, not what's easy.** Vanity metrics (impressions,
      likes) flatter; revenue, CAC, and retention tell the truth.
  - heading: Mental Models
    markdown: >-
      - **The funnel / AARRR (pirate metrics).** Acquisition, Activation,
      Retention, Referral, Revenue. Fix the biggest leak, not the loudest one.

      - **CAC / LTV and payback.** Customer Acquisition Cost vs. Lifetime Value,
      and how fast CAC is recovered — the governing economics of any growth
      engine.

      - **Positioning (Ries & Trout; April Dunford).** Own a distinct position
      in the customer's mind relative to alternatives — the competitive frame,
      the differentiator, the value it enables.

      - **STP — Segmentation, Targeting, Positioning.** Divide the market,
      choose where to play, define how to win there.

      - **The 4 Ps (7 Ps for services).** Product, Price, Place, Promotion — and
      promotion is only one quarter of the job.

      - **Jobs to be Done (Christensen).** Customers "hire" a product to make
      progress on a job; understand the job, not just the demographic.

      - **The 95-5 rule (Ehrenberg-Bass).** At any moment ~95% of buyers aren't
      in-market; brand-building reaches them now so you're remembered when they
      enter. Brand equity — the asset of awareness, associations, and loyalty —
      lets you charge more and acquire cheaper over time.
  - heading: First Principles
    markdown: >-
      Growth is governed by arithmetic: you must acquire a customer for less
      than the profit they'll generate, or scale only accelerates the loss.
      Attention is scarce and earned by relevance, so understanding a specific
      segment's actual job beats broadcasting to everyone. And demand has two
      engines — long-term brand memory and short-term activation — and
      neglecting either eventually starves the other.
  - heading: Questions Experts Constantly Ask
    markdown: >-
      - Who exactly is this for, and what job are they hiring it to do?

      - What's the CAC by channel, and what's the payback period?

      - Is LTV holding up, or is retention quietly eroding the economics?

      - Where is the funnel leaking the most — and is that the constraint?

      - What's our position relative to the real alternative (often "do
      nothing")?

      - Is this a brand investment or a performance harvest, and is the mix
      right?

      - What does the data attribute to this channel — and do I trust the
      attribution?

      - What's the smallest test that would settle this debate?

      - If we cut this spend tomorrow, would anyone notice the loss in pipeline?
  - heading: Decision Frameworks
    markdown: >-
      For channel allocation: rank by CAC and payback, scale what's profitable,
      cut or fix what isn't, and reserve a test budget (a 70/20/10 split across
      proven, scaling, and experimental). For budget split: balance brand and
      activation by growth stage — the long-and-short rule suggests roughly
      60/40 brand/activation for established brands, more activation early. For
      pricing: anchor to value and willingness-to-pay (van Westendorp /
      conjoint), not cost-plus. For prioritizing experiments: rank by impact ×
      confidence × ease (ICE), running only tests with enough power to read. For
      attribution: triangulate platform-reported, multi-touch, and
      incrementality tests (holdouts/geo-tests), trusting incrementality most.
  - heading: Workflow
    markdown: >-
      Trigger: a growth target, a launch, a campaign cycle, or a leak in the
      funnel. Start with the customer and the segment — research the job, the
      alternatives, the objections. Define or sharpen positioning and the
      message. Build the funnel and instrument it so every stage is measurable.
      Plan the channel mix against CAC targets and the brand/activation balance.
      Create assets, set up tracking and tests. Launch, then watch the metrics
      daily: CAC, conversion at each step, ROAS, leading indicators of LTV. Run
      A/B tests on the highest-leverage variables, read results against
      significance, kill losers, scale winners. Report on pipeline, CAC, and
      contribution to revenue, and feed learnings into the next cycle. Done when
      the channel hits its CAC/payback target and the funnel improvement is real
      and durable, not a test artifact.
  - heading: Common Tradeoffs
    markdown: >-
      - **Brand vs. performance.** Performance shows immediate ROI and is easy
      to justify; brand pays off slowly and is hard to attribute but lowers
      future CAC. Cutting brand looks free until performance gets expensive.

      - **Reach vs. precision.** Broad targeting builds awareness cheaply but
      wastes spend on non-buyers; tight targeting converts better but caps scale
      and raises CAC.

      - **Short-term sales vs. long-term equity.** Discounting drives this
      quarter's volume but trains customers to wait for deals and erodes brand
      and margin.

      - **Speed vs. statistical rigor.** Calling a test early feels decisive but
      risks acting on noise; waiting for significance costs time.

      - **Personalization vs. privacy/cost.** Granular targeting lifts relevance
      but raises data, privacy, and complexity costs.
  - heading: Rules of Thumb
    markdown: >-
      - LTV:CAC below 3:1 means you're either under-monetizing or over-paying
      for customers.

      - Watch payback period, not just ROAS — cash dies before profit does.

      - Retention is the cheapest growth lever; fix the leaky bucket before
      pouring more in.

      - If you can't measure incrementality, you don't know what your ads did.

      - Discounting is borrowing sales from the future at a high interest rate.

      - The brand pays the bills when you stop spending; don't starve it.
  - heading: Failure Modes
    markdown: >-
      Chasing vanity metrics that don't convert to revenue. Over-attributing
      results to the last-click channel and over-investing there. Scaling a
      channel before its unit economics are proven, then watching CAC balloon.
      Cutting brand investment to hit a quarter, then paying for it in rising
      performance costs. Discounting into a margin death-spiral and training
      customers to wait. Targeting too broadly and wasting budget on non-buyers,
      or too narrowly and capping growth. Reading tests too early and acting on
      noise. Ignoring retention while pouring money into a leaky funnel.
  - heading: Anti-patterns
    markdown: >-
      - **Spray and pray:** broad, untargeted spend with no segment or measure.

      - **Last-click worship:** crediting the final touch and defunding channels
      that created demand.

      - **Vanity-metric reporting:** a dashboard of impressions and likes with
      no line to revenue.

      - **The perpetual discount:** standing promotions that destroy reference
      price.

      - **HiPPO creative:** shipping the highest-paid-person's-opinion ad
      instead of testing.

      - **Test theater:** A/B tests with samples too small to reach
      significance.
  - heading: Vocabulary
    markdown: >-
      - **CAC:** Customer Acquisition Cost — total cost to acquire one customer.

      - **LTV:** Lifetime Value — total margin a customer generates over their
      lifetime.

      - **Payback period:** time to recoup CAC from a customer's margin.

      - **Funnel / AARRR:** the acquisition-to-revenue stages of the customer
      journey.

      - **Positioning:** the distinct place a product occupies in the customer's
      mind vs. alternatives.

      - **Segmentation:** dividing the market into groups with shared needs.

      - **The 4 Ps:** Product, Price, Place, Promotion — the marketing mix.

      - **Brand equity:** the value of awareness, associations, and loyalty.

      - **Attribution:** assigning credit for a conversion across touchpoints.

      - **ROAS:** Return on Ad Spend — revenue per dollar of advertising.

      - **Incrementality:** the lift caused by marketing beyond what would have
      happened anyway.

      - **A/B test:** a controlled experiment comparing two variants.
  - heading: Tools
    markdown: >-
      Analytics: Google Analytics 4, Amplitude, Mixpanel. Ad platforms: Google
      Ads, Meta, LinkedIn, TikTok. CRM and automation: HubSpot, Salesforce,
      Marketo. A/B testing: Optimizely, VWO. SEO: Ahrefs, SEMrush. Email:
      Klaviyo. Attribution and incrementality tools plus geo-holdout test
      design. A CDP for unified customer data and dashboards in Looker/Tableau.
      And the foundational tools: customer research (interviews, surveys), a
      positioning document, and a spreadsheet modeling CAC, LTV, and payback.
  - heading: Collaboration
    markdown: >-
      Works tightly with sales to align the funnel — marketing generates and
      qualifies pipeline that sales closes, and the handoff (lead definition,
      SLAs) is a perennial negotiation. Partners with product on positioning,
      pricing, launches, and the market-to-roadmap feedback loop. Aligns with
      finance on budget, CAC targets, and the LTV model. Briefs creative and
      agencies on message and brand, and works with data/analytics on
      attribution. The recurring tension with sales over lead quality and with
      finance over brand spend is managed through shared metrics, not turf.
  - heading: Ethics
    markdown: >-
      Don't make false or misleading claims — truth in advertising is both law
      (FTC, ASA) and the basis of brand trust. Disclose sponsorships and paid
      endorsements. Respect privacy and consent in data collection (GDPR, CCPA).
      Avoid dark patterns — manipulative urgency, hidden fees, hard-to-cancel
      subscriptions — that win the sale and lose the trust. Market responsibly
      to vulnerable audiences. Don't astroturf fake reviews. When asked to
      overstate results, hide terms, or run a deceptive promotion, refuse —
      short-term lift bought with deception destroys the brand equity that's the
      real long-term asset.
  - heading: Scenarios
    markdown: >-
      **The channel that looks great until you check incrementality.** Branded
      search ads show a stellar ROAS — 12:1 — and the team wants to double the
      budget. The marketing manager is suspicious: branded search captures
      people already searching for the company by name, so it may just be
      claiming credit for customers who'd have arrived organically. They run a
      geo-holdout — turning off branded search in matched regions for two weeks.
      Conversions barely drop. Reasoning: the ads were largely non-incremental,
      cannibalizing free organic clicks. Instead of doubling spend, they cut it,
      reallocate to a channel with proven incremental lift, and keep a small
      branded-search defense against competitor bids. ROAS lied; incrementality
      told the truth.


      **Brand cut to make the quarter.** Under a revenue miss, the CFO proposes
      zeroing the brand budget and pouring everything into bottom-funnel
      performance. The marketing manager models the consequence: performance
      channels harvest in-market demand, and the in-market pool is finite (the
      95-5 rule). Without brand feeding awareness, the team will exhaust the
      cheap, ready-to-buy audience and CAC will climb as they bid for
      ever-less-qualified clicks. Reasoning: it would flatter this quarter and
      quietly raise the cost of every future one. The compromise: protect a
      baseline brand investment, trim the least-efficient performance spend
      instead, and stand up a brand-tracking study so the value isn't invisible
      next time.


      **Positioning a feature-rich product that isn't selling.** A product with
      great features is converting poorly. Research reveals the problem isn't
      the product or the ads — it's positioning. The team has been selling
      against the wrong competitive frame. Using April Dunford's approach, they
      redefine the competitive alternative (it turned out to be a manual
      spreadsheet, "do nothing"), identify the attributes that matter to the
      segment that hates that status quo, and reframe the value around the job
      the segment is trying to do. Reasoning: no amount of funnel optimization
      fixes a message aimed at the wrong frame. The relaunch with sharpened
      positioning lifts conversion materially with the same spend, because the
      right people finally recognize the product as for them.
  - heading: Related Occupations
    markdown: >-
      Works most closely with sales representatives (the funnel partner) and
      product managers (on positioning, pricing, and launch). Shares analytical
      DNA with data scientists on attribution and experimentation, and financial
      discipline with financial analysts on unit economics. Overlaps with
      graphic designers and writers on creative. The role draws on
      management-consulting structuring and progresses toward CMO and
      general-management positions. Customer success managers share the
      retention and LTV focus.
  - heading: References
    markdown: >-
      April Dunford, *Obviously Awesome*. Al Ries & Jack Trout, *Positioning*.
      Byron Sharp, *How Brands Grow*. Les Binet & Peter Field, *The Long and the
      Short of It*.
