+74%
Revenue Growth as Interim MM
£1k–3k
Day Rate Interim MM
An interim marketing manager makes sense when there is a clear leadership task to complete, a defined time horizon, and no internal capacity or appetite to fill the role permanently. That sounds straightforward — but in practice, 7 out of 10 companies either bring in interim management too late or in situations where a consultant or a permanent hire would have been the better call.
Key Takeaways
- — An interim marketing manager makes sense in five situations: a leadership vacancy, a growth phase without internal capacity, a company transaction, a turnaround, or a clearly defined project under 18 months.
- — Day rates for experienced interim marketing managers run €1,200–€3,500 (roughly £1,000–£3,000), putting a typical 6–12 month engagement at €80,000–€250,000 total — often cheaper than a permanent CMO once employment costs and bad-fit risk are counted.
- — As interim marketing lead, Simon Förstemann delivered +74% revenue growth in 16 months on a reduced budget — the investment in external leadership returned a multiple of its cost.
- — Interim management only works with a clear brief, a real mandate, and visible CEO backing; without all three, any format — interim, consultant, or permanent hire — underperforms.
+74%
Revenue Growth · 16 Months · Same Budget
Simon Förstemann achieved this result as an interim marketing lead. Reduced budget, clear strategy, consistent execution. No luck, no niche market effect, no one-off factor.
What an Interim Marketing Manager Actually Does
An interim marketing manager temporarily takes on operational leadership of the marketing function. That means making decisions, managing teams, owning budgets, and translating strategy into measurable results. This is not an external consultant delivering a slide deck. An interim manager does the work.
In practice, the line blurs. An experienced interim manager always brings strategic thinking to the table. An experienced marketing consultant like Simon Förstemann often accompanies execution as well. What matters is not the job title — it is the outcome.
Key principle
Interim management delivers results when there is a clear brief, full backing from leadership, and a defined end date. Remove any one of those three and the engagement will underperform.
The Five Situations Where Interim Management Is the Right Call
01
Leadership Vacancy The CMO or Head of Marketing has left. The role will be filled, but the recruitment process takes three to nine months. Marketing cannot run on autopilot during that window — campaigns stall, teams lose direction, and momentum dies.
02
Growth Phase Without Internal Capacity The business is scaling fast. The existing marketing team is hitting its ceiling. Hiring at senior level takes time and costs more than the budget allows. An interim marketing manager can start immediately and deliver from week one.
03
Company Transaction Before an acquisition, sale, or merger, marketing must be aligned with the new direction. A neutral interim manager with no internal loyalties is the right person for the job — credible to both sides, unencumbered by existing politics.
04
Turnaround Situation Marketing is burning budget without results. An external pair of eyes without operational blind spots spots the problem fast and can fix it without navigating internal sensitivities that insiders cannot avoid.
05
Clearly Defined Project A product launch, a market entry, building a marketing team from scratch. When the brief is specific and has a finish line, interim management is more efficient than a permanent hire who needs a long-term role to justify the commitment.
When Interim Management Is the Wrong Choice
Interim management is not a universal fix. It does not make sense when:
- The real problem is strategic and cannot be solved by operational leadership alone
- There is no clear brief and the interim manager is expected to figure out what is actually needed
- The company wants a cheap pair of hands, not an experienced decision-maker
- Internal buy-in is missing and the interim manager will have to fight for every decision without leadership backing
Critical requirement
An interim marketing manager needs full and visible backing from the CEO or managing director. Without a clear mandate, there is no impact. Bringing in an interim manager and then blocking them internally is an expensive way to achieve nothing.
What an Interim Marketing Manager Costs
Day rates for experienced interim marketing managers range from €1,200 to €3,500 (roughly £1,000 to £3,000) depending on experience, sector, and scope. For a typical engagement of 6 to 12 months, total costs land between €80,000 and €250,000.
That sounds significant. Compared to a permanent CMO hire — including salary, employer contributions, onboarding time, and the very real risk of a bad fit that takes another year to unwind — it looks considerably more reasonable. A good interim manager pays for themselves through results, not through their day rate.
In Simon Förstemann's most-cited interim engagement, a reduced marketing budget produced 74% revenue growth across 16 months. The investment in external leadership returned a multiple of its cost.
Simon Förstemann — growth strategist
With 14 years of experience, 6 ventures built, and a Red Dot Award for brand work, Simon Förstemann has served as interim CMO and growth lead for SMEs and scale-ups across multiple sectors. His approach: strategy that gets executed, not presented.
How to Find the Right Interim Marketing Manager
The criteria that actually matter during selection:
- Proven results in comparable situations — not CVs and reference lists, but documented outcomes in similar contexts
- Industry knowledge or a fast learning curve — no interim manager can spend three months getting up to speed; the value is in hitting the ground running
- Cultural fit — someone the internal team will not accept cannot lead, regardless of their track record
- A clear, agreed mandate — both parties must know exactly what the interim manager is responsible for and where their authority ends
- An exit plan from day one — a good interim manager plans their own departure from the first week and prepares the organisation to operate without them
Interim Manager vs Permanent Hire vs Consultant: How to Decide
The decision depends on three variables: time horizon, task profile, and the level of internal knowledge already present.
- Permanent hire is right when the role is ongoing and the company wants to build internal expertise over the long term
- Interim marketing manager is right when the task is clearly defined, time-limited, and operationally demanding
- Marketing consultant is right when the challenge is strategic, execution happens internally, and outside expertise is needed on a project basis
In practice, many SMEs and scale-ups combine all three: a consultant develops the strategy, an interim manager executes it, and a permanent hire takes over ongoing leadership once the foundations are in place. That is often the most intelligent sequence.
Quotable
Interim management works when the brief is clear, the mandate is real, and the organisation is ready to act on what the interim manager delivers. Without those conditions, any format — interim, consultant, or permanent hire — will underperform.
Frequently Asked Questions
When does an interim marketing manager make sense?
An interim marketing manager makes sense during a leadership vacancy, before or after a company transaction, in a growth phase without internal capacity, or for a clearly scoped project under 18 months. These are situations where speed, neutrality, and senior-level execution matter more than continuity.
What does an interim marketing manager cost?
Day rates typically range from €1,200 to €3,500 (approximately £1,000–£3,000), putting a 6–12 month engagement at €80,000 to €250,000 in total. Relative to a permanent CMO hire with full employment costs and the risk of a mismatch, this is often the more cost-effective route — particularly when results are delivered.
What is the difference between an interim marketing manager and a marketing consultant?
An interim manager takes operational leadership inside the organisation — decisions, teams, budgets. A consultant works externally and provides strategic input. In practice the two overlap significantly: experienced interim managers advise on strategy, and experienced consultants like Simon Förstemann support execution. What matters is outcomes, not labels.
How do I find the right interim marketing manager for my SME?
Prioritise documented results in comparable situations over impressive CVs. Verify that the candidate can get up to speed in weeks, not months. Confirm cultural fit before contracts are signed. Agree on a precise mandate and a defined exit plan before work begins. These four steps prevent the most common interim management failures.
When is interim management the wrong choice?
When the underlying problem is strategic and requires external thinking rather than internal execution. When there is no clear brief. When the company wants a budget-conscious pair of hands rather than an experienced decision-maker. And when leadership will not visibly back the interim manager's decisions — the most common reason engagements fail.
Interim vs permanent hire vs consultant: which is right for my business?
Hire permanently for ongoing roles where internal expertise matters long-term. Use an interim marketing manager for time-limited, operationally demanding projects. Engage a consultant for strategic challenges where execution stays in-house. Many businesses combine all three in sequence — and that is often the smartest approach for SMEs in growth phases.
Initial Consultation
Interim Marketing Management or Strategic Consulting?
Simon Förstemann helps you identify which format fits your situation. In 30 minutes, we work through whether interim management, consulting, or a combination is the right next step — honestly, without a sales agenda.
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30 minutes · free · no obligation · directly with Simon
About the author
Simon Förstemann
Growth strategist & marketing advisor with 14 years of experience. 6 ventures founded, 3 exits, Red Dot Award and German Design Award winner. Works 1:1 with decision-makers — no agency, no workshops that lead nowhere.
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