Whether you are a founder-led start-up or a large-scale manufacturer with a £50m turnover, the marketing challenge can be the same. You want to use marketing to make your business more successful, but you aren't ready for the overhead of a full-time executive team.
This is why an increasing number of established UK firms are turning to fractional marketing services. This model allows you to inject senior-level strategy into your business without a major salary commitment.
However, buying fractional marketing support can be a minefield if you don't know the difference between a task-based freelancer and a strategic partner. This guide will walk you through how to navigate the market, vet the right talent, and ensure your marketing finally starts driving measurable growth.
Whatever industry you operate in or size business you are, there are some fairly universal signs that you need fractional marketing services.
The most common symptom is that marketing is done in one of three ways:
Marketing by committee: No one has specific marketing responsibility (or expertise) so activity is haphazard, slow and cautious - unless the MD is taking the lead, then it probably happens quickly (maybe done by their PA) and without due process.
Marketing by sales: When the order book is full, the marketing stops. When things go quiet, you panic-purchase marketing activity. Furthermore, if your sales or business development (BD) team is currently responsible for your marketing, they may be influenced by "Shiny Object Syndrome." Good salespeople are always looking for new opportunities and will often request investment in the newest lead-generation tool, platform or event without a cohesive strategy or plan to back up where the return on investment is going to come from.
Marketing by junior: This happens when you hire a junior marketing assistant or an apprentice to ‘sort out the social media’ only to find that a senior director is spending five hours a week managing them. Because the junior lacks a strategic roadmap, they don't know what activity to do or why, or how to prioritise. You end up having to proofread every caption and suggest every blog topic. The commercial results you’re getting are the same as before you hired them.
The problem with all of these situations is that you are too close to the business to ‘see the wood for the trees’.
Your website and sales collateral might look fine to you, but if they aren't generating enquiries, they're not doing their job properly and are more of a liability than an asset.
The term fractional refers to a senior professional who works as an outsourced member of your team for a fraction of the time (and cost) of a full-time hire.
There are many different types of fractional marketing services, and it’s easy to get confused so here is a list:
The Fractional CMO (The Visionary): A Fractional Chief Marketing Officer is a board-level leader. They focus on brand positioning, long-term vision, and high-level budgeting. They tell you where the ship should go, but they are rarely "hands-on." If you have no existing marketing support, a CMO may be "all brain and no hands," leaving you with a brilliant strategy that no one is actually able to execute.
The Fractional Marketing Manager (The Engine Room): This is the role the majority of UK firms actually require. A Fractional Marketing Manager provides the strategy, but they also do the activity and coordinate the success. They act as your marketing lead, managing specialists and ensuring the plan is delivered. They bridge the gap between the high-level "Why" and the tactical "How."
The Specialists: A key advantage of fractional marketing services is the ability to access specialists through your fractional lead. A generalist leader (fraction CMO or marketing manager) will understand how all these pieces fit together. There are many more types of specialist that the ones below, but these are the ones you’re most likely to encounter.
SEO Specialists: To ensure website site health, keyword dominance, and visibility in search engines.
PPC & Paid Media Experts: To manage Google/Meta Ads spend without wasting thousands on irrelevant clicks.
Copywriters: Whilst AI can help to write copy, the quality is usually poor and appears amateurish. Technical copywriters are crucial for manufacturing or B2B sectors where simple prose isn't enough to convey complex value.
Content strategists: Far beyond just writing blogs, these specialists build your brand’s sales collateral - case studies, whitepapers, thought-leadership articles - moving prospects from 'unaware' to 'ready to buy'.
CRM Experts: To build automation, manage data, and turn "one-off" enquiries into long-term clients through sophisticated nurturing.
Graphic Designers: To move away from "Canva-style" templates and create professional, high-impact visual assets.
Website Designers & Developers: To ensure your site isn't just a brochure, but a high-converting lead-generation tool.
Branding Experts: To refine your identity, ensuring your business looks and sounds as prestigious and established as it actually is.
PR & Communications: To manage your reputation and industry "voice" in trade publications and news.
Social Media Strategists: Whilst a secretary or apprentice can write posts, a specialist will have a better idea of what will work and why and embed your marketing strategy into your social media activity. They’ll also maintain a community engagement and authority without the ‘panic-posting’ cycle.
The approach you take depends on whether you need a specialist for a short sprint or a leader for an ongoing relationship.
Consistency is critical in marketing. A one-off campaign almost always fails compared to a 12-month managed roadmap. For ongoing growth, you need the same person designing the strategy and supervising the activity. You can’t achieve this by ‘shopping for individual tasks’. You need to invest in a relationship where the person understands your business and industry as well as you do.
When looking for fractional marketing services, many people turn to platforms like People Per Hour or Fiverr. These are perfectly fine for one-off, technical tasks, for example designing a single PDF or fixing a coding bug. However, freelancers on these platforms are typically "order takers." Most will do exactly what you tell them. If the instructions you give them or your strategy is flawed, you’re unlikely to get a good return on investment.
Don't fall into the trap of always looking for someone local. Unless you are organising physical events, location is irrelevant in 2026. If you limit your search to your town, you are stuck with whoever is there, not whoever is a good marketing leader or specialist. Digital technology allows you to hire the best talent in the UK, ensuring they have the specific sector experience your firm needs.
In the marketing world, you aren't just paying for hours. You want a partner who has seen your specific challenges 50 times before and knows the shortest route to a solution.
If you have a one-off project, look for "Deep Specialists" via LinkedIn or internet searches looking for specialists with their own website.
If you’re going to use platforms like People Per Hour or Fiverr, don’t shop for the cheapest. Look for the most expensive. Many freelancers use these platforms as a way to get introductions to clients for longer relationships.
Vetting should focus on a recent portfolio of previous work. You want someone who has performed this exact task repeatedly.
For a long-term fractional marketing leader, again use LinkedIn or look for fractional marketers who have their own website and specifically talk about the level of leadership and types of experience you're looking for.
There are websites like Malt, the Work Crowd, which rather than helping businesses find cheap freelance help, provide a directory of experienced professionals that you can search through.
There are also marketing collectives or fractional agencies. These organisations vet senior talent and match them with businesses. It can remove the "vetting burden" from you, ensuring you aren't "kissing frogs" to find a reliable partner, however if you’re going to rely on this, check what their vetting process is to see how rigorous it is.
Hiring for fractional marketing services requires a different interview technique than hiring a full-time employee. You aren’t looking for "cultural fit" or long-term potential; you are looking for immediate strategic impact and technical proficiency. The discovery call should not be a sales pitch where the freelancer tells you how great they are. Instead, it should feel like a high-level business consultation where they are auditing your problems in real-time. If they aren't asking difficult questions about your sales margins, your customer lead-to-close ratio, or your historical campaign failures, they aren't a strategic lead.
To ensure you are buying a partner rather than just another "cost centre," use the following framework to audit the specific tier of service you are hiring:
Audit the Level of Leadership
Before the call, define which "fractional" tier you actually need. If you hire a Fractional CMO to fix your email automation, you are overpaying for strategy. If you hire a Fractional Marketing Manager to redefine your entire brand's global positioning, you may be under-hiring for vision.
Test for Strategic Candour
A true fractional leader is a "critical friend." During the initial call, present an idea you’ve been considering—for example, "I think we need to spend £10,000 on a new corporate video." An order-taker will simply say, "I can help with that." A senior professional providing fractional marketing services will ask, "Why? How will that video move the needle on your current bottleneck? Is that the best use of £10k right now compared to fixing your CRM?" If they don’t challenge you, they aren't leading you.
Audit Their 'Scale Experience'
Experience in the wrong context can be as damaging as no experience at all. Ask: "What is the average marketing budget you manage?" A marketer who is used to a £2m annual budget at a global corporate will likely be paralysed by the constraints of a £2,000-a-month budget. Conversely, someone who only knows "lean" start-up tactics may be too risk-averse to invest the sums required for a £50m manufacturer to dominate a new territory.
Length of Experience
When looking for fractional marketing services, look for a minimum of 10 to 15 years of experience. A junior marketer or a "cheap" freelancer will often be learning on the job. They might be confident, but that’s usually because they don't know what they don't know. An experienced professional, however, can look at a stagnant ad account and identify the "dead wood" within minutes.
Fractional marketers will usually save a client money in wasted spend – often enough to pay for their own monthly fee. This is the difference between an expense and an investment.
The "Little Black Book" Test
One of the primary reasons to invest in fractional marketing services is to gain access to a pre-vetted network. Ask them: "When we need a technical SEO audit, a CRM migration, or a high-end graphic designer, who do you pull in?" A senior lead should have a vetted "rolodex" of specialists. This saves you from having to find and vet ten different people yourself. They should be able to explain how they manage these specialists to ensure the strategy remains cohesive and the brand voice is consistent across all channels.
Integration with Existing "Silos"
Whether you are a founder with a junior assistant or a large manufacturer with a 20-person sales team, your fractional lead must be a bridge-builder. Ask exactly how they will work with your current staff. Will they mentor the junior? Will they sit in on sales meetings to ensure marketing materials actually help close deals? If they want to work in a vacuum, your marketing will remain a "bolt-on" rather than a core business driver.
The "Month One" Roadmap
Ask them to talk through what their first month would look like and why. A good marketing leader won't start doing hands-on activity on day one. Their roadmap should look something along the lines of the following:
Discovery & Audit: Reviewing your historical data, Google Analytics, and previous activity.
Stakeholder Interviews: Speaking to your sales team and customers to find out why people actually buy from you (the answer is often different from what the CEO thinks).
Finding the "Low-Hanging Fruit": Identifying immediate improvements, such as poor web copy or confusing messaging, that can be corrected instantly to improve ROI.
IR35 and Contractual Clarity
In the UK, you must be mindful of IR35 regulations. You are hiring an outside service, not an employee. Ensure the contract specifies that they provide their own equipment and have the "right of substitution" where appropriate. Be clear about whether you want them for a set day (e.g., "Marketing Wednesdays") or available for short bursts throughout the month. If you require them to be "on-call" like an employee, expect to pay a premium for that availability.
Like anything, there are pros and cons attached to the fractional marketing services model, which I’ve listed below.
Reduced cost: If you're working with a fractional marketer on a part-time basis, it will inevitably cost a lot less than a full time senior hire.
Reduced Risk: There are no recruitment fees (if you contact a fractional marketer direct), no National Insurance, and no long-term employment contracts. It is easy to scale up or down.
Instant Professionalism: It immediately lifts your marketing from ‘amateur’ to professional and you’ll quickly start looking like a market leader.
Knowledge Transfer: They don't just ‘do’ marketing, they’ll teach you about the what, why and how as they go along so your business will develop a much better understanding of what best practice looks like.
Fresh Perspective: They work with multiple companies (and often industries) and bring best practice and fresh ideas that internal teams who are ‘close to the coalface’ can often miss.
Communication Lag: Fractional marketing professionals balance multiple clients. Unless you have an agreement to get a rapid response (which may cost extra), you cannot expect instant replies as you would from an employee.
The Mentorship Ceiling: If you have an inexperienced junior/apprentice, your fractional marketer can only mentor them so much. They can't provide the hand-holding or desk-side troubleshooting that they might want, unless you're willing to pay for that.
Cultural Diffusion: Much as your fractional marketer will want to get under the skin of your organisation, they are not working within it and are usually working part-time. They will take a while to get to know your business and may miss subtle shifts in company culture or internal politics that influence brand positioning.
Capacity Bottlenecks: If they go on holiday, the strategic thinking or activity (or both) stops. However, they may have recommended partners who can support during absences if they’re likely to be long.
Transitioning from "doing bits of marketing" to having a marketing strategy and robust plan for delivery is a major milestone for any firm, whether you are a growing tech company or a massive manufacturer. It signifies that the business is ready to grow.
Be aware that the transition between the two might feel counter-intuitive at times. Experienced freelancers work faster and more strategically. They won't just churn out rubbish to look busy, they'll produce work that has a genuine impact on your brand and reputation. Quality takes time, but it has more impact.
By utilising fractional marketing services, you gain the experience of a heavy-hitter without the heavy-hitter salary. You are buying back your team’s time and ensuring your business steps up to the next level.
If you're interested in my fractional marketing services, you can learn more about my services here. If you like a chat about upgrading your marketing you can book a discovery call here or get in touch by emailing enquiries@herkessmarketing.com