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Is Marketing a Good Career Path?

A picture of different marketing words asking if marketing is a good career path

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If you’re considering pursuing a marketing career, you may be wondering if marketing is a good career path. What types of jobs are in the field, what are the different types of marketing job titles, and what kind of professional progress is possible? The marketing field covers an array of job titles and duties with an equally diverse pool of workers.

Ready to dive in and learn more about marketing? This guide covers it all.

What Is Marketing?

Before deciding on marketing as a career path, it’s important to understand what marketing is and is not.

Marketing is not the same thing as sales or selling. When you’re in sales, you focus on closing the deal and convincing the consumer to buy the product. 

But marketing isn’t about closing the deal. “Marketing is all about bridging the connection between your product and end users,” says Julia Baily, vice president of consumer marketing at Forage. “Whether that’s through targeting, product positioning, or messaging there are dozens of ways (and just as many marketing pros) responsible for making that happen.”

Tessa Chen, financial communications at Pinterest, adds, “The end goal of a marketer is to promote sales, whether that is through content, brand awareness, last-click, etc.”

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While marketers connect users to products and services, there are many ways they accomplish that goal. Here are a few sample marketing job titles and what they do:

  • Social media marketing: using social media networks to connect with potential customers
  • Content marketing: using channels like blogs, videos, and podcasts to promote the brand
  • Advertising: creating and producing advertisements about the product or service
  • Business-to-business marketing (B2B): marketing the product and services to other businesses
  • Business-to-consumer marketing (B2C): marketing the product and services to consumers
  • Email marketing: using email to promote the product or service
  • Public relations: strategic communications that build relationships between companies and the public
  • Event marketing: promoting the product or service with live events (in-person or online)

As you can see, marketing is a broad industry. And while the types of marketing overlap, you’ll lean on different skills depending on the specific type of marketing career path you pursue. “There’s a bit of something for everyone, no matter your skill set,” notes Stephanie Wei, former vice president of marketing at NerdWallet and current Forage advisor.

For example, a career in public relations relies heavily on written and verbal communication skills. You’ll likely send out regular press releases to let the public know about what’s new and exciting at the company and respond to media inquiries. 

A career in content marketing will, of course, rely heavily on writing skills. However, content marketing also requires data analysis skills to help you understand and identify which of your content marketing efforts are working and why they’re successful.

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How Many Jobs Are in Marketing?

The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) groups advertising, promotions, and marketing managers under the same umbrella. Overall, employment for managers in marketing is expected to grow between 2% and 7% from 2022 to 2032, depending on the specific subcategory:

CategoryExpected Growth Rate
Marketing Managers7%
Advertising, promotions, and marketing managers6%
Advertising, marketing, promotions, public relations, and sales managers5%
Advertising and promotions managers2%

The BLS also notes that during that same timeframe, there will be approximately 34,000 job openings each year for advertising, promotions, and marketing managers. 

Interestingly, the BLS points out that while marketing, in general, will be an in-demand job, the need for those who specialize in print marketing or advertising will decrease. 

As more people use electronic media, companies will have to invest in electronic marketing and advertising. Therefore, job seekers who specialize in creating digital media campaigns (like websites, social media, and live chat) will likely be able to find more employment opportunities than people who specialize in traditional advertising and marketing (like print campaigns).

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What Do Marketing Jobs Pay?

According to the BLS, in May 2022, the annual median wage for managers in marketing was:

CategoryAnnual Median Wage
Marketing managers$140,040
Advertising, promotions, and marketing managers$138,730
Advertising, marketing, promotions, public relations, and sales managers$132,820
Advertising and promotions managers$127,830

Glassdoor offers a more detailed insight into marketing job salaries. Here are some marketing job titles and the salary range for specific positions with zero to one year of experience:

Job TitleTotal Pay Range
Social media marketing manager
$44,000 – $71,000
Content Marketer$44,000 – $72,000
Email marketing specialist$44,000 – $63,000
Public relations specialist$45,000 – $77,000
Social media coordinator$37,000 – $54,000
Event marketing coordinator$43,000 – $59,000
Social media manager$44,000 – $70,000
Public relations manager$51,000 – $84,000
Brand manager$55,000 – $88,000

Types of Careers in Marketing

As noted above, there are many options for careers in marketing. But, no matter which one you pursue, a marketing career path generally follows the same steps.

>>MORE: Top 10 Jobs for Marketing Majors

Entry-Level Careers in Marketing

Most entry-level careers in marketing start at the “coordinator” level. In this role, you’ll do a lot of basic tasks (like compiling data or scheduling posts to publish on a specific date). But this can help you learn the ropes and understand how your kind of marketing works from the ground up.

In some cases, entry-level roles use the word “specialist” instead of “coordinator,” but that’s not always the case. You may start at a coordinator level, then work your way up to a specialist role.

Marketing Manager Career Path: The Next Step Up

Whether you start at a coordinator or specialist-level role, after a few years, you’ll have enough skills and experience to move into a marketing management career path. Depending on the specifics of the role and the size of your company, you may or may not manage people. What you will manage, though, are accounts or marketing campaigns, and a crucial part of your role will be executing the marketing strategy.

For example, if you move into a community manager role, you’ll handle a website’s forums or chat functions and help ensure the company builds strong, positive relationships with its audience. As a social media manager, you’ll be in charge of the company’s social media accounts and presence.

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Senior Roles

After manager-level roles, you can move into senior-level marketing positions. In these roles, you’ll create the marketing strategy, determine what will work, and define the process to make the marketing plan a success.

While many senior marketing career titles are director, it can also include vice president and chief marketing officer. After that, you could start your own marketing company!

>>MORE: What Does a Marketing Analyst Do?

Marketing Career Path Pros

Marketing is a diverse industry with many career options. Here are some of the pros of pursuing a marketing career path.

Lots of Options

No matter the company or product, it likely needs more than word-of-mouth advertising to grow its user base. As a result, you’ll have many employment options.

“Most companies need marketing,” notes Baily, “so if you have a preference for a specific industry, company size, type of product, or even region you want to live and work in, chances are there’s a relevant marketing job out there for you.” 

See Your Impact

Careers in marketing are often fast-paced, meaning you’ll see the outcome and results of your efforts quickly. This helps you replicate winning strategies and build on your success while learning from your failures. What’s more, according to Christian Bauman, chief creative officer at The Bloc, “It doesn’t matter who you are or where you went to school. What you can do is what matters.” And if you’re good at what you do, “You will rise and be rewarded.”

What’s more, you’ll be able to see how your results improve and drive the business without working endless hours. “You don’t have to work crazy investment banking hours to see the impact of your work and increase the business’ bottom line,” explains Baily.

Collaborate and Learn

You’ll also gain a lot of experience collaborating with people inside and outside your immediate team. “A lot of teams work together and you’re part of a larger effort,” says Bauman. And, adds Baily, “From product design to sales and business development, there’s the opportunity to work with so many different teams.”

For example, you might work with the sales team to find out what potential customers are saying, the customer service team to understand what users say, and the product team to fully understand what it is you’re marketing.

Expand Your Skill Set

Because you’ll collaborate with other teams and the fact that marketing is a diverse career field, you’ll have ample opportunities to expand and develop your skill set. “A career in marketing allows you to develop a number of transferable skills. Effective communication, structured thinking, prioritization, and fluency with data are in-demand skills. They can make someone a dynamic marketer as well as a strong addition to any organization,” says Baily.

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Open to All

While you can major in marketing, having a degree in marketing isn’t necessary. Baily says she graduated without a formal degree in marketing and has had successful careers at several companies. In addition, several of her marketing colleagues have majored in things like computer science, psychology, and political science.

“In general, I think it’s more about your curiosity, drive, passion, and collective set of experiences that make you successful, not what you majored in,” she says.

Marketing Career Path Cons

However, marketing jobs aren’t necessarily the right fit for everyone. Here are some of the cons to consider before pursuing a marketing career path.

Fast-Paced

The marketing industry is fast-paced and strategies that work one day may not work at all the next. And though Wei points out that marketing is a great career path for “those who are fearful of being stuck in a low-growth, auto-pilot mode,” to be successful, you have to remain committed to learning and staying on top of marketing trends. If continuous learning isn’t something you’re interested in, a marketing career path may not be the best fit.

>>MORE: What Is a Growth Mindset?

Perception Problem

Those in the marketing field sometimes feel that people misunderstand what they do and how it gets done — which may lead to inadequate budgets or not enough staff if company executives aren’t on board. For example, sometimes marketing efforts have an immediate impact on the company. However, that’s not always the case and other marketing efforts take longer to achieve.

Unclear Outcomes

While marketers often see results quickly, sometimes it isn’t clear what’s being accomplished. Chen notes that sometimes you’re dealing with “fuzzy metrics and KPIs” in careers in marketing. 

When that happens, it will be up to you to clear things up. It may be challenging to interpret the data and ensure it makes sense to everyone else, something you may find difficult to do on top of everything else. Plus, sometimes you’ll be the bearer of bad news, which isn’t for everyone.

Want to test-drive a marketing job? Sign up for a free Forage marketing job simulation and see if this is the right career path for you.

Image credit: Canva

Rachel Pelta is the Head Writer at Forage. Previously, she was a Content Specialist at FlexJobs, writing articles for job seekers and employers. Her work has been featured in Fast Company, The Ladders, MSN, and Money Talks News.

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