Business Marketing Management: How to Run Marketing Like a Managed Function

By Christoph Olivier, Founder, CO Consulting
Last reviewed: July 2026
Most 7-figure owners do not have a marketing problem. They have a marketing management problem. Campaigns run, invoices arrive, and nobody can say what the money bought. This guide treats marketing as a business function you run on a fixed loop, not a set of tactics you buy. It is not a definitions primer, a hiring pitch, or a list of what a marketing team does. It is the operating system: how you plan it, fund it, staff it, execute it, and hold it to a number.
What is business marketing management?
Business marketing management is the ongoing process of running marketing as a controlled business function: analyzing the market, planning objectives, allocating a budget, resourcing the work with a team or agency, executing, and measuring results against a target. It is a continuous loop, not a project. The job is to convert spend into pipeline and revenue you can attribute, then repeat the loop with better inputs each cycle.
The distinction that matters for an owner: strategy decides where you are going, and management decides how you run the vehicle every week. You can hire a strategist and still have no management. Without a loop, marketing drifts into whatever the loudest vendor pitched last. For the strategy layer that feeds this loop, see the digital marketing strategy framework.
The marketing management process: five stages that repeat
The marketing management process runs in five stages that feed each other: analyze the market and current results, plan objectives and channels, budget and allocate the spend, execute through your team or agency, then measure and control against the plan. The output of measurement becomes the input of the next analysis. Treat it as a quarterly loop with a monthly review inside it.
| Stage | Core question | Owner output | Cadence |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Analyze | Where is revenue coming from, and where is it leaking? | Channel-by-channel CAC and pipeline read | Quarterly |
| 2. Plan | What are we trying to move, and through which channels? | 2-4 objectives with target numbers | Quarterly |
| 3. Budget | How much, split how, with what reserve? | Allocated budget by channel + 10-20% test reserve | Quarterly / annual |
| 4. Execute | Who does the work, by when? | Owned briefs, deadlines, accountable owner | Weekly |
| 5. Measure & control | Did it work, and what do we change? | Dashboard vs target, one decision per metric | Monthly |
The mistake I see most often is running stages 4 and 5 while skipping 1 through 3. Activity without a plan and a number is just spend. Anchor the whole loop to a written plan; a marketing plan built for a 7-figure business gives you the document the loop revolves around.
Stage 1-2: Analyze and plan objectives
Start every cycle by reading last quarter’s results by channel, not by campaign. You want customer acquisition cost, lead volume, and closed revenue per channel, so you know which stages of the loop earned their place. Then plan two to four objectives with target numbers, because more than four means none of them will get managed. Objectives beat activity lists every time.
Write objectives as movements, not tasks. “Cut blended CAC from $420 to $340 by Q4” is manageable. “Do more content” is not. Each objective needs an owner, a channel, and a metric. This is where you decide what marketing is accountable for this quarter, and it is the fork that separates a managed function from a busy one. Benchmark your numbers against reality using conversion rate benchmarks so your targets are grounded, not guessed.
Stage 3: Budget the function
Budgeting turns objectives into money. Most healthy service businesses run marketing at roughly 7-12% of revenue, though early-growth firms often push higher to buy share. Split the budget across channels tied to your objectives, and hold back a 10-20% test reserve for experiments, because a function with no test budget stops improving. Fund the plan, not the vendor list.
A workable starting split for a 7-figure service business is below. Treat it as a hypothesis to adjust once stage-5 data comes back, not a fixed allocation.
| Bucket | Typical share | What it covers |
|---|---|---|
| Demand capture | 35-45% | Paid search, SEO, high-intent channels |
| Demand creation | 25-35% | Content, video, social, brand |
| Tools & ops | 10-15% | CRM, automation, analytics, attribution |
| Test reserve | 10-20% | New channels and offers, protected budget |
For a full owner-level model on sizing and defending the number, use the marketing budget framework for 7-figure businesses.
Stage 4: Resource execution with a team, an agency, or a hybrid
Execution is a staffing decision before it is a task list. You have three ways to resource the function: build an in-house team, hire an agency, or run a hybrid where one internal owner directs outside specialists. The right choice depends on volume, specialization, and how much management capacity the owner actually has. Most 7-figure firms are under-resourced on management, not labor.
| Model | Best when | Watch-out |
|---|---|---|
| In-house team | Consistent, high-volume needs; deep product context | Fixed cost; hard to staff every specialty well |
| Agency | You need specialists fast without headcount | Needs an internal owner or it drifts |
| Hybrid + fractional lead | You want senior direction without a full-time CMO salary | Requires clear scope so it does not sprawl |
Whatever you pick, one person must own the marketing number. If nobody owns it, the loop has no manager and stage 5 becomes a report nobody acts on. When the owner cannot hold that seat, a senior part-time lead often fills it; the fractional CMO guide for 7-figure businesses covers when that makes sense and what it costs.
Stage 5: Measure and control against the plan
Measurement closes the loop by comparing results to the plan and forcing one decision per metric: keep, cut, or change. Run a monthly review off a single dashboard that shows spend, pipeline, CAC, and closed revenue by channel against target. The goal is not a prettier report. It is a decision, made monthly, that changes what next month’s budget funds.
Keep the dashboard to metrics an owner would defend to a CFO. My working rule is one screen: blended CAC, pipeline created, cost per qualified lead, and payback period. Everything else is diagnostic detail you open only when a headline number moves the wrong way. To pressure-test your own numbers against the market, the lead generation statistics give current cost and conversion baselines.
A worked example: one quarter through the loop
Here is a condensed real-pattern example from a 7-figure professional-services client. Q1 analysis showed 70% of spend in paid search with a blended CAC of $610 and a stalling pipeline. Plan: cut CAC to $470 and shift budget toward two under-funded channels. Budget: moved 15% from paid search into content and a protected test reserve. Execution: kept the agency for paid, added one internal owner to direct content briefs.
Measurement at the end of the quarter: paid CAC held, content-sourced pipeline covered its cost by month three, and blended CAC landed at $498. Not the $470 target, but a defensible move with a clear next step: hold the shift and expand the winning content topic. That is the loop working. No heroics, one decision per metric, funded from the plan. The unmarked version of most businesses skips the analysis and the number, so they cannot tell whether a quarter succeeded.
Common failures in marketing management
Marketing management breaks in predictable ways: no written plan, no owned number, no test budget, and reviewing activity instead of results. Each failure removes one stage of the loop, and a loop missing a stage does not compound. The fix is rarely a new channel. It is restoring the missing stage so the function can improve cycle over cycle.
- No owner: marketing is everyone’s side job, so nobody manages the number.
- No plan document: the loop has nothing to measure against, so every review becomes an opinion.
- No test reserve: the function stops experimenting and slowly decays as channels fatigue.
- Activity reporting: reports show tasks done, not revenue moved, so budget never reallocates.
If you want a second set of eyes on your loop before the next quarter, book a consultation and we will map your current stages and find the missing one.
Frequently asked questions
What is the difference between marketing strategy and marketing management?
Strategy decides where you are going: which markets, positioning, and channels. Marketing management is how you run the function day to day to get there: planning objectives, allocating budget, resourcing execution, and measuring results against the plan. Strategy is set periodically; management is the recurring loop that turns that strategy into revenue you can attribute and control.
What are the stages of the marketing management process?
The marketing management process runs in five repeating stages: analyze the market and current results, plan objectives with target numbers, budget and allocate spend, execute through a team or agency, then measure and control against the plan. The output of measurement feeds the next analysis, so it is a continuous quarterly loop rather than a one-time linear sequence.
How much should a business spend on marketing management?
Most healthy service businesses spend roughly 7-12% of revenue on marketing, with early-growth firms often pushing higher to buy market share. Within that budget, reserve 10-20% for testing so the function keeps improving. The right figure depends on margins, growth targets, and CAC, so treat any benchmark as a starting hypothesis you adjust with your own measurement data.
Should I manage marketing in-house or use an agency?
It depends on volume, specialization, and your management capacity. In-house suits consistent high-volume needs with deep product context; agencies deliver specialists fast without headcount but need an internal owner to stay on target. Many 7-figure firms run a hybrid with a fractional senior lead directing outside specialists, which buys direction without a full-time executive salary.
Who should own marketing in a small business?
One person must own the marketing number, even in a small business. Often that is the owner early on, then a marketing manager or a fractional CMO as the function grows. The owner does not need to do the work, but someone must be accountable for the plan, the budget, and the monthly decision to keep, cut, or change spend by channel.
