Marketing leadership is often the last role SMEs feel ready to hire. Responsibility drifts between the MD and Sales, activity ramps up around key dates, and the brand bends to the nearest deadline. Momentum is possible in this model, but coherence is not. The result is a lot of effort for limited compounding value.
Here’s a calmer, workable alternative. It shows what good looks like when there is no full‑time Marketing Director in post, and why fractional leadership can hold strategy and delivery together while a business grows.
The signs are familiar. Campaigns overlap without building on each other. Social content repeats rather than progresses. Trade partners receive mixed messages. Budgets get spread thinly to keep every channel alive, while none of them develop the depth they need to influence preference.[/tk_text_row][tk_text_row sub_heading=”The minimum viable brand system” color_theme=”dark-text” row_height=”default-height” content_width=”col-sm-12″ alignment=”start” bg_type=”color”]Before channels and content, a business needs a simple, shared system that sets direction and speeds decisions. At minimum, that system should define:
- Vision, mission and values. Why the brand exists, how it will win, and the behaviours that guide choices.
- Audience clarity. A practical view of who you are trying to reach, what they value, and where they are most persuadable.
- Messaging and tone of voice. The claims the brand can stand behind, the language to express them, and what never to say.
- Creative look and feel. A visual system that scales from packaging and POS to email and social without reinvention each time.
This is leadership work. It is less about writing a long deck and more about creating tools people actually use. Done well, it reduces noise, accelerates approvals and makes every piece of work feel like it belongs to the same story.[/tk_text_row][tk_text_row sub_heading=”From strategy to spend: The annual plan” color_theme=”dark-text” row_height=”default-height” content_width=”col-sm-12″ alignment=”start” bg_type=”color”]The plan is where strategy shows up. For SMEs, the most useful plan is simple, specific and seasonal.
Start by defining the role of each channel in the next twelve months. Separate creating demand from capturing it. Be clear about the percentage of budget each role gets—and why. A D2C brand with new products to educate will tilt differently to a trade‑led brand with strong retail partners. Let price, margin and sales cycle shape the mix—not a template.
Start with a simple spine for the year. Match your big brand stories to the points where trading matters. Build the plan around what’s real: stock, seasons, and store timelines. Set who decides what, and how work gets signed off, so speed never comes at the cost of standards.[/tk_text_row][tk_text_row sub_heading=”Implementation that holds together” color_theme=”dark-text” row_height=”default-height” content_width=”col-sm-12″ alignment=”start” bg_type=”color”]You’ve got two practical routes. One is to deliver directly with WrightObara’s creative team. The other is to orchestrate a small bench of specialist partners for media, performance or PR. Either way, the job’s the same: hold the brand system, write the briefs, run the approvals, and insist on coherence across every touchpoint.
This is where fractional leadership earns its keep. It keeps the core intact while creating space for fresh work. It protects the team from reactive requests that do not fit the plan. It ensures suppliers work to the same standards and share the same source assets. Most importantly, it makes sure the creative is tied to the commercial intent of the plan, not just to a channel’s best practice.[/tk_text_row][tk_text_row sub_heading=”Operating rhythm: 30/60/90 and quarterly check-ins” color_theme=”dark-text” row_height=”default-height” content_width=”col-sm-12″ alignment=”start” bg_type=”color”]The first ninety days matter. A typical set‑up looks like this:
Days 1–30: discovery, audit and definition. Gather what exists, run short workshops, confirm the brand system and agree immediate priorities.
Days 31–60: planning and pilots. Build the twelve‑month plan, including budget percentages by role. Pilot one or two initiatives to establish a template for briefing, review and QA.
Days 61–90: scale and embed. Move from pilots to programme. Lock the operating rhythm: weekly stand‑ups, a clear status, and monthly steering with senior stakeholders. Agree what changes quarterly and what stays fixed.
After that, the rhythm is predictable. Quarterly, pressure‑test the plan against performance, trading conditions and team capacity. Monthly, report on operating metrics the board will recognise.[/tk_text_row][tk_text_row sub_heading=”Measurement senior leaders trust” color_theme=”dark-text” row_height=”default-height” content_width=”col-sm-12″ alignment=”start” bg_type=”color”]Measure what the brand is trying to change, not just what a platform can count. At a minimum, track recall and preference for brand effects, and rate of sale or velocity for commercial impact. If you’re running performance channels, define CAC and LTV with finance and be honest about attribution. Keep the monthly pack short and comparable. Decisions should get easier as the picture builds.[/tk_text_row][tk_text_row sub_heading=”Governance without friction” color_theme=”dark-text” row_height=”default-height” content_width=”col-sm-12″ alignment=”start” bg_type=”color”]Coherence depends on simple habits. One brief, held in one place. Version control that really controls versions. Asset libraries that are usable by internal teams and partners. Agreed routes for fast approvals and for higher‑stakes reviews. Small disciplines prevent the fire‑drills that burn time and goodwill.[/tk_text_row][tk_text_row sub_heading=”Why fractional leadership works” color_theme=”dark-text” row_height=”default-height” content_width=”col-sm-12″ alignment=”start” bg_type=”color”]A fractional Marketing Director gives you senior judgement without the cost and commitment of a full‑time hire. Crucially, it’s not just advice. It is ownership of the brand system, the annual plan and the operating rhythm, plus the day‑to‑day leadership to deliver them. For many SMEs, it’s the right step between today’s reality and a future where a full in‑house team makes sense.[/tk_text_row][tk_text_row sub_heading=”A practical next step” color_theme=”dark-text” row_height=”default-height” content_width=”col-sm-12″ alignment=”start” bg_type=”color”]If marketing feels busy but not building, the problem is usually ownership, not effort. Start by writing down the minimum viable brand system. Build a twelve‑month plan with clear roles for each channel and a budget split you can defend. Then decide who will own it. If a full‑time Marketing Director is not the next hire, fractional leadership can give you momentum and coherence while you grow.[/tk_text_row]