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How to Choose the Right Digital Marketer for Your Brand

Every brand, at some point, faces the same crossroads: you know you need a stronger digital presence, but finding the right person to build it is harder than it looks. The market is flooded with self-proclaimed “growth hackers” and “social media gurus” — and separating genuine talent from noise takes a clear-eyed process.

This guide walks you through exactly what to look for, what to ask, and what to run from.

Step 1: Get clear on what you actually need

Before you post a job or contact an agency, you need to define the problem. Digital marketing is not one skill — it’s a constellation of disciplines. Hiring a paid ads specialist to fix your SEO is like hiring a plumber to rewire your house.

  • Do you need organic growth (SEO, content) or paid growth (Google Ads, Meta Ads)?
  • Are you trying to build brand awareness or drive direct conversions?
  • What platforms matter most to your audience — LinkedIn, Instagram, search engines?
  • Do you need someone to execute, or someone to set strategy — or both?

Step 2: Freelancer, agency, or in-house?

Your budget and growth stage will often decide this for you. Here’s how to think about each option:

Option 01

Freelancer – Best for early-stage brands with limited budgets. Flexible and cost-efficient, but bandwidth is limited.

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Option 02 – Agency – Best for scaling brands. You get a full team across disciplines — at a higher price point.

Option 03 – In-house – Best once you’re established. Deep brand knowledge, but comes with fixed overhead and slower ramp-up.

Step 3: Evaluate their work — not just their words

A great portfolio speaks louder than any certification. When reviewing a candidate’s past work, focus on outcomes, not aesthetics. Did their campaigns move the needle on measurable KPIs? Can they explain why they made specific strategic decisions?

What to look for in a portfolio

  • Specific metrics: traffic growth %, ROAS, conversion rates, email open rates
  • Experience in your industry or an adjacent one
  • Ability to explain the strategy behind each result
  • Evidence of testing, iteration, and learning — not just wins.

Step 4: Ask the right interview questions

Generic questions get generic answers. These six questions cut through the noise and reveal how a candidate actually thinks:

  • “What metrics would you prioritize for a brand like mine in the first 90 days?
  • “Walk me through a campaign that failed. What did you do differently next time?”
  • “How do you stay current with algorithm changes and platform updates?”
  • “Which tools do you use for analytics and reporting — and why those specifically?”
  • “How would you describe our brand voice after reviewing our existing content?”
  • “How do you structure your reporting cadence and what does a typical update look like?”

Step 5: Know your red flags

The digital marketing world has its fair share of snake oil. These are the warning signs that should make you pause — or walk away entirely:

  • Promises guaranteed #1 Google rankings or overnight results
  • Vague case studies with no verifiable data
  • Doesn’t ask about your target audience or competitive landscape
  • Can’t explain their strategy in plain language
  • Uses black-hat SEO tactics (link farms, keyword stuffing)
  • One-size-fits-all packages with no customisation.

The golden rule: start with a trial project

Before signing a long-term contract, commission a small, paid test project. A competitor audit, a content brief, a single ad campaign. It reveals more about a person’s thinking, communication style, and work ethic than any interview ever will.

The right digital marketer won’t just know the tools — they’ll understand your business well enough to ask questions you hadn’t thought to ask yourself. That curiosity, combined with proven results, is what you’re actually hiring for.