It’s hard getting ahead in Marketing. It’s a discipline changing every year (certainly true of 2020), it covers an enormous breadth of disciplines which need a great variety of skills and it’s notoriously difficult to prove the impact of your work. So what can you do to give yourself the best chance of success? Of growth and moving to the next level?
I’ve always believed that a significant part of your career success is dependent on the organisations you work for. You can be the smartest marketer around, but if you’re working at a deadbeat company in decline, you’ll struggle to grow and show success. Equally, for better-or-worse, if you’re only an average marketer working at a place growing 100% year-on-year, you may get away with perhaps more than you should!
So obviously we all try to work for exciting growing companies. But the other big factor is the size of the company you work for. I’ve worked at companies of 50,000 employees and of 2 employees (one of which was me!) and it makes an enormous difference, not only to the sort of work you do, but also your chances of learning and growing. A growth mindset is crucial for your future success. I’ve personally found that Scaleups – organisations that sit between early stage startups and the big corporates, focused on scaling up to the next level – have provided the best opportunities for growth.
My first job out of college was at British Airways, as a developer. I had no idea what to expect, but it started well. The first month was a formal training program (on their systems), and it felt very structured, almost a continuation of college. I was getting training and everyone seemed to know what they were doing.
So a great start. But 6-12 months later, something didn’t feel quite right. I soon realised that every problem (at my level), every process, every significant decision had already been figured out by someone, likely years before. A simple example – the precise naming, file location, structure, font and format of every doc I had to write had all been worked out approximately 10 years before. I suggested “Perhaps for a small change, we can just write a short note (a ‘Minimal viable document’!), something really useful to the reader, rather than writing 25 pages, taking more time than the actual code change”. That didn’t go anywhere. I soon found that my ability to grow on-the-job was very limited – it’s a cliche, but you quickly become a cog in the machine.
So many years later I tried a startup. A very small startup in fact, just two of us. There was not a formal training program when I joined here! And it was really exciting – I did really enjoy this time. Certainly, a little hairy at times – there wasn’t the backup of a large corporate with deep pockets. But the rollercoaster ride was part of the fun. And I definitely felt like I had an enormous influence over the strategy for the company – this is one of the key attractions for smaller orgs.
But this comes at a price – I was there for over 3 years in a Product Manager role. But my growth in the disciplines of product management and marketing was pretty close to zero. I learnt a lot about the hustle of working at a startup. I learnt a lot about closing deals, about getting 25 things done all at once. But my understanding of the emerging disciplines of product management, product marketing, brand, digital marketing, marketing operations etc etc didn’t advance in three years.
So where’s the Goldilocks zone? Where can you get this sort of support for growth without just becoming part of the machine?
I now work at a company of 400 people, in a strong growth phase with a laser-focus on learning and development of its employees. A Scaleup like this – somewhere moving from the stage of “Everyone doing everything, just get the release out!” in to a more disciplined stage of “Okay, how do we scale all this? We have success already, how do we make this 10x bigger?” is the sort of environment where you can really become a master of your discipline.
When I worked at the startup, I did all of the product management, a lot of marketing, some development work, and a lot more besides. I did what needed to be done to survive, as we did everything we could to find some sort of product-market fit. I didn’t have the time to work out “What would be a better way of running that digital marketing program? How would I do that better next time?” – the rollercoaster was moving too fast for this sort of introspection.
At Redgate, we have a marketing department around 45 people strong. We have product marketing, digital marketing, brand, ABM and customer marketing functions (all with disciplines within each of these) as well as a nascent marketing operations function. We pride ourselves on being world-class in all of these areas. Of course we’re not there yet – part of a growth mindset is accepting that you’ll always be striving to do better – but I feel we improve at everything we do year after year. However great, say, our digital marketing team was a year ago, they’re better this year (through growth and learning activities), and will be even better this time next year.
We even run an internal conference devoted to the goal of growing our capability. Called “Level Up”, this year will be a week long event covering an enormous range of topics across the whole business. Previous years have been a single-day offsite, but with everyone working remotely this year, we’re trying something new. I’m really excited about this as, yet again it reinforces the crucial role that learning and development plays when a company is scaling up. It’s just not good enough to still be working in the same way this year as we did a year ago – as the business grows, we need to grow as well.
Right now we’re recruiting for two roles in marketing, with more to come soon. We’re looking for people who bring great expertise, but who want to take their careers to the next level. If you’re interested in growing your own skillset and becoming world-class at what you do, right now we’re looking for a Digital Marketing Manager, and very soon we’ll be looking for a Product Marketing Manager too (keep an eye on the website, or get in touch).
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