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Reviewed by Jacob Whitmore, Whito · Fact-checked for accuracy

Last Updated on April 6, 2026

At some point, every growing UK business faces this decision. Do you hire a marketer or outsource to an agency or freelancer? The answer depends on your stage, budget, and what you actually need.

LinkedIn Marketing Solutions for B2B advertising
LinkedIn is a key channel whether you hire in-house or outsource your marketing.

Both options work. Both fail frequently. The difference is matching the right model to your stage, budget, and needs.

When Outsourcing Makes Sense

Outsourcing works best when you need specialist skills you cannot justify full-time, when your marketing needs are project-based rather than continuous, when you are still testing channels and do not yet know what works, or when your total marketing budget is under £3,000 per month.

Whether you hire a marketer or outsource depends on three factors: budget, complexity, and how much control you need.

A good agency or freelancer brings experience across multiple clients and industries. They have already made the expensive mistakes elsewhere. For businesses under £1m turnover, outsourcing is usually the smarter investment because you get senior-level thinking without the full-time cost.

The downside is control. An external team will never understand your business as deeply as an internal person. Response times are slower. Priorities compete with other clients.

When Hiring Makes Sense

Hiring makes sense when marketing is a daily operational need, when you need someone embedded in the business who understands the product and customers deeply, when you are spending over £5,000 per month on marketing and need someone to manage it full-time, or when coordination between sales, operations, and marketing requires constant internal communication.

An in-house marketer gives you speed, context, and dedication. They attend meetings, hear customer feedback firsthand, and can react to opportunities in real time.

The downside is breadth. A single marketing hire cannot be an expert in SEO, paid ads, content, email, social media, analytics, and design. You will still need external specialists for certain channels.

The Real Cost Comparison

A mid-level marketing hire in the UK costs between £30,000 and £45,000 in salary. Add employer NICs, pension contributions, equipment, software licences, and training, and the true cost is closer to £40,000 to £60,000 per year. That is £3,300 to £5,000 per month before any ad spend or tool costs.

A competent agency retainer for an SME typically runs £1,500 to £4,000 per month. A specialist freelancer charges £300 to £600 per day.

The numbers look similar, but the output is different. The in-house person gives you 40 hours per week of dedicated attention. The agency gives you a fraction of that time but with more specialised expertise.

The Hybrid Model

Most scaling UK businesses end up with a hybrid model. One internal marketing person who manages strategy, coordinates activity, and handles day-to-day execution, supported by external specialists for SEO, paid ads, design, or other technical disciplines.

This gives you the best of both worlds. Internal context and daily execution. External expertise and specialist skills. The internal person becomes the bridge between the business and its external partners.

Note: Before hiring, document your marketing processes. What do you do weekly? Monthly? Quarterly? If you cannot describe the role clearly, you cannot hire for it effectively. The documentation also makes onboarding faster and expectations clearer.

What to Look for in Your First Marketing Hire

Do not hire a specialist first. Hire a generalist who can manage multiple channels, write competent copy, understand data, and coordinate with external suppliers. You need someone who can think strategically and execute tactically.

Look for commercial awareness over creative flair. Your first marketing hire should understand revenue, not just engagement. They should be comfortable with spreadsheets, CRM data, and conversion metrics.

Experience in a similar-sized business matters more than agency experience. Someone who has worked in a three-person marketing team at a growing company understands the reality of limited budgets and competing priorities in a way that an agency strategist might not.

Red Flags When Outsourcing

Watch for agencies that lock you into long contracts before proving results, will not share access to your ad accounts or analytics, report on vanity metrics instead of commercial outcomes, cannot clearly explain what they do each month, or resist transparency about how your budget is spent.

A good agency wants you to understand what they do. A bad agency relies on you not understanding.

The Bottom Line

The Bottom Line There is no universally correct answer. The right choice depends on your stage, your budget, and the complexity of your marketing needs. Under £1m turnover: outsource. £1m to £3m: consider a generalist hire supported by specialists. Over £3m: build a small internal team. At every stage, maintain external partnerships for specialist work. Match the model to the stage. Review it every 12 months as the business evolves.

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author avatar
Jacob Whito Ltd - Co founder
Jacob is a UK SEO and growth strategist helping small businesses grow without wasting money.With experience inside competitive, performance-driven brands, he focuses on what actually drives enquiries and revenue. Through Whito, he helps businesses simplify their marketing, fix what is not working, and build systems that deliver consistent results.
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