I was on a call the other day with a founder who told me, with a mix of pride and exhaustion, "I wear a lot of hats."
We’ve all heard it. In the startup and small business world, it’s treated like a badge of honor. It implies you’re scrappy, agile, and capable. But when I hear "I wear a lot of hats," I don't hear heroism. I hear a bottleneck.
I hear someone who is the CEO, the CFO, and the CMO all at once. And usually, that means they are doing three jobs poorly instead of one job well. Let's be real, no once can be everything all at once.
Here is the unsexy truth about the "DIY" approach to marketing and growth.
Most small businesses are stuck in a loop. I call it the "horrible catch-22".
You need more sales to fund a real marketing budget.
But you can't generate those sales without effective marketing.
So, you try to bridge the gap yourself. You write blog posts at midnight. You try to manage a CRM between sales calls. You "DIY it all" because you don't have the resources to hire a dedicated team.
The result? Inconsistent, sporadic marketing efforts. You post on LinkedIn for a week, get busy with delivery, and then go silent for a month. You build a landing page, but the "contact" form dumps leads into a spreadsheet that nobody checks.
You aren't building a funnel; you're building a leaky bucket.
The other problem with the "Many Hats" theory is that digital marketing has become stupidly complex and channel-specific dependencies .
Ten years ago, maybe you could wing it. Today? Effective marketing requires navigating audience-building techniques, email privacy regulations, and complex content strategies.
Startups often face a significant skill gap here. You might be a visionary product founder, but that doesn't mean you know how to set up HubSpot workflows to automate lead nurturing. And you shouldn't have to.
When business owners try to force it, they end up with "messy information" and data silos instead of insights. They spend hours on manual data entry that could have been automated. It’s a waste of the one resource you can't get back: your time.
You Don't Need a CMO. You Need a Roadmap.
We provide the external expertise to break that "catch-22" so you can invest in growth without overstretching your internal capacity.
If you are tired of the "hustle" and want to build something sustainable—where your marketing supports your sales rather than competing with it —let's talk.
You keep the CEO hat. We'll handle the growth strategy.