One of the most common complaints from hiring managers is sheer volume. Entry-level marketing roles often attract hundreds of applicants. According to various UK recruitment surveys, junior marketing vacancies can attract 100–300+ applications, particularly in urban areas. The problem isn’t scarcity. It’s signal-to-noise ratio.
Many CVs look similar. A marketing degree, a few group projects, maybe a short internship, not to mention that most people’s CVs are now enhanced using AI. Differentiating between someone who understands marketing theory and someone who can execute commercially is difficult from paper alone.
Then comes the interview.
A frequent frustration? Candidates talk confidently about “brand storytelling” and “engagement strategies” but struggle when asked practical questions such as:
- How would you increase leads next quarter with a £2,000 budget?
- What metrics would you prioritise for our business and why?
- How would you handle underperforming campaigns?
There’s often a gap between academic knowledge and commercial application. That’s not necessarily the graduate’s fault. University marketing education is often broad. SMEs, however, need narrow and practical.
Capability vs Capacity
Once hired, the pressure shifts.
In a sub-50-employee business, a junior marketer isn’t “one of many.” They may be the marketing function.
Hiring managers frequently report:
- Over-reliance on tactical tasks (social posts, design tweaks) with limited strategic understanding
- Weak commercial awareness (e.g., difficulty linking activity to revenue)
- Poor prioritisation when juggling channels
- Limited confidence presenting to senior stakeholders
There’s also the management burden. Smaller businesses rarely have structured training frameworks. The assumption becomes: “They’ll learn as they go.” But learning as you go requires time, feedback, and guidance — three things founders and senior managers are often short on.
The result? A junior marketer who is busy but not necessarily effective. And a business owner is wondering why marketing still feels inconsistent.
Cultural and Expectation Gaps
Another recurring issue is expectation mismatch.
Some graduates expect rapid progression, creative autonomy, or a purely strategic role. Many SMEs need someone hands-on: uploading blogs, building email sequences, cleaning data, writing copy, chasing suppliers. The glamour of “brand marketing” can quickly collide with the reality of operational execution.
Equally, employers sometimes expect immediate impact from someone who is still learning how campaign attribution works.
That tension can quietly erode performance on both sides.
Risk Concentration in Small Teams
In larger organisations, underperformance can be absorbed. In a 12-person company, it can’t. A junior hire who takes 9–12 months to reach competence represents both salary cost and opportunity cost.
And unlike hiring a mid-level marketer, you’re not just buying output. You’re committing to development.
A Practical Consideration
None of this means hiring graduates is a bad idea. Many become excellent marketers.
But smaller businesses should recognise that without structured development, mentorship, and clear performance frameworks, they are effectively designing the training programme themselves.
There are structured routes available — including formal apprenticeship programmes — that combine employment with guided development and external accountability. For some SMEs, that additional scaffolding can reduce risk and clarify expectations from day one.
At the very least, it’s worth considering how much of the “junior marketer challenge” is about talent — and how much is about structure.
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