
UK Marketing Leaders Share What They’ve Learned the Hard Way
When building a high-performing marketing team, one question causes more debate than most: Should you hire for culture fit or technical skills first?
It’s not a theoretical dilemma. It plays out in every hiring decision. Prioritising the wrong thing can lead to tension, underperformance, or even derailed campaigns. We asked several marketing leaders across the UK to share their perspectives. The result is a nuanced view that shows just how situational and personal this decision can be.
The Case for Skills First: Execution is Non-Negotiable
For some leaders, performance is the primary lens through which every candidate should be evaluated.
“Marketing is a performance-driven function. If someone can’t build effective campaigns or adapt when results drop, it impacts growth fast,” says Josiah Roche, Fractional CMO at JRR Marketing.
Roche warns that “culture fit” is often used as a proxy for personal preference rather than business need. One of his biggest hiring missteps was choosing a candidate who aligned with values but couldn’t deliver results.
“They were personable and said all the right things. But their decisions lacked strategic depth. It took months to fix the performance issues that followed.”
In contrast, some of his best hires didn’t interview impressively but had the analytical ability to spot funnel inefficiencies and optimise CAC in weeks. Roche’s takeaway is clear: “Strong execution builds momentum. Culture follows.”
Maurina Venturelli, Head of GTM at OpStart, agrees, particularly in high-growth environments.
“At Sumo Logic, I hired a brilliant demand gen manager who generated 20 percent of our total ARR. Technically, they were exceptional.”
But the cultural cost was high. There was poor collaboration, internal friction, and leadership tension during a critical IPO phase. Her perspective?
“For individual contributors, hire for skills first but set a minimum threshold for cultural alignment. You can coach someone on tone. You can’t teach them attribution models in 30 days.”

The Case for Culture Fit First: The Long Game Wins
Other leaders argue that culture is the bedrock of successful teams, and skills alone can’t compensate for a lack of alignment.
“Culture fit comes first, every time,” says James McNally, Managing Director at SDVH. “Skills can be taught, but attitude and team alignment can’t.”
McNally experienced this first-hand after hiring a technically gifted marketer who couldn’t adapt to the team’s pace or collaborate effectively.
“The campaigns were solid, but communication broke down. We lost time trying to smooth over internal issues that shouldn’t have existed.”
In contrast, a junior hire who lacked experience but embodied curiosity and reliability quickly outperformed expectations.
“Within six months, she was leading campaigns. All because she clicked with the team from day one.”
Sahil Gandhi, CEO and Co-Founder of Blushush Agency, takes a similar view. For him, values and communication style matter more than early technical mastery.
“Even the most skilled marketer won’t thrive where values clash. Culture builds the foundation. Skills help you scale.”
Gandhi points to one hire who didn’t check every technical box but flourished due to strong energy and a collaborative mindset. Within months, they were running high-impact campaigns because they felt safe enough to contribute and challenge ideas early on.
At Brandwatch, Matt Dawson, VP of Growth Marketing, sees culture fit as a predictor of adaptability and long-term success:
“We hired someone from hospitality. Not the obvious fit, but they were fast, curious, and consumer-obsessed. They reshaped our content strategy not because of a perfect resume, but because the culture fit was right.”

The Middle Ground: Context Matters
While the opinions differ, most leaders acknowledge that there’s no one-size-fits-all answer. The best hiring decisions consider role context, business stage, and long-term goals.
Venturelli offers a useful framework:
- For executive roles: Prioritise hard skills, with a baseline for team compatibility
- For senior or leadership hires: Balance both equally, since these individuals shape the culture going forward
Roche also encourages refining how we assess both attributes:
“Don’t let ‘culture fit’ become code for comfort. And don’t assume skills are static. Great people evolve.”
Summary Table
Approach | Pros | Cons |
---|---|---|
Skills First | – Immediate impact on performance – Faster execution in high-growth or technical roles – Builds momentum quickly | – Risk of poor collaboration or team friction – Can cause internal misalignment – Harder to coach on values/attitude |
Culture Fit First | – Stronger long-term team cohesion – Builds trust and adaptability – Encourages collaboration and innovation | – May take longer to ramp up technically – Risk of underperformance if skills are too far behind – Requires more training/investment |
Balanced Approach | – Tailors hiring to context (role, business stage) – Builds teams that perform and thrive – Encourages evolving skillsets and inclusive cultures | – Requires a more nuanced hiring process – Needs better frameworks to assess both attributes effectively |
Final Thoughts: What UK Marketing Leaders Recommend
So, what’s the takeaway for marketing teams trying to scale intelligently?
- Skills bring short-term wins, especially in specialised or high-pressure roles
- Culture fit creates long-term sustainability, by fostering trust, reducing friction, and enabling growth
Most of the leaders we spoke with lean toward culture fit when forced to choose, especially for team-first roles where collaboration and trust are crucial.
As McNally puts it:
“If someone fits the culture and wants to learn, they’ll usually outperform expectations. But if the culture isn’t there, even the most skilled marketer can hold the team back.”
The best teams aren’t just productive. They’re cohesive. And that starts with hiring decisions that go beyond the resume.

Jazz Thomson
Digital Marketing Manager
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