SEC 1
Demand generation is the function that creates qualified revenue pipeline. It is not lead collection or brand awareness. It is the link between marketing activity and commercial outcomes. A strong demand generation hire owns the programmes that turn interest into sales opportunities. They focus on MQL to SQL conversion, pipeline quality and the cost of creating that pipeline.
Demand generation works across content, paid media and sales. It ensures activity reaches the right buyers and converts into revenue. What the role looks like depends on company stage. Early stage businesses need hands on operators. Growth stage companies need leaders who can scale programmes and own the pipeline number. Enterprise organisations need senior operators who can manage complexity and report at board level.
SEC 2
Every B2B organisation reaches a point where demand generation becomes a priority, but the right hire depends entirely on where the business sits in its growth journey. The strongest outcomes come from matching seniority to maturity, not defaulting to the most impressive job title.
Early stage B2B
Small teams, limited infrastructure and a need for immediate pipeline creation require a hands‑on operator. At this stage, the right hire is usually a Demand Generation Manager who can build campaigns, run channels and execute without heavy support. The most common mistake founders make is hiring a strategic leader too early. Without the foundations in place, a senior hire becomes dependent on agencies or internal resources that do not yet exist.
Growth stage B2B
Once the sales team is established and pipeline pressure increases, the remit shifts from pure execution to ownership. This is where a Head of Demand Generation becomes the right call. The role expands to managing agencies or junior hires, building repeatable programmes and reporting directly on revenue contribution. This level of hire is responsible for turning activity into predictable pipeline, not just running campaigns.
Established and enterprise B2B
Complex buying cycles, multiple segments and larger budgets require senior leadership. At this stage, a Director or VP of Demand Generation is appropriate. This hire builds the function, aligns demand generation directly to commercial targets and operates at board level. They manage significant investment, shape the go to market strategy and ensure demand generation is integrated across regions and business units.
Every B2B organisation has a different starting point. Sector, sales motion and team maturity all influence what the right hire looks like. Armstrong Lloyd helps clients define the brief before going to market, ensuring the search is aligned to the commercial reality, not the job title.
SEC 3
Average base salaries for demand generation roles in the UK technology sector (2025/26):
Executive: £49,952
Manager: £58,130
Senior Manager: £72,167
Head of: £78,714
Director: £128,126
These figures are taken from Armstrong Lloyd’s 2025/26 Marketing in Technology Salary and Diversity Report and represent average base salaries only.
Demand generation continues to command a premium in the technology sector. The pressure to create predictable pipeline, operate across multiple channels and report directly on revenue contribution means demand gen roles sit at the upper end of the market. In broader B2B sectors such as professional services, manufacturing, fintech and logistics, manager level salaries typically fall between £50k and £85k depending on company size, sector and remit. This reflects Armstrong Lloyd placement data rather than a full survey dataset.
Base salary is only one part of the package. The Armstrong Lloyd survey shows that flexible working and bonus structure are the two benefits demand generation professionals value most. Competitive offers need to reflect the full package, not lead on base salary alone.
For a complete view across all marketing disciplines and seniority levels, readers can access the full 2025/26 Salary and Diversity Report. It provides the wider market context that supports accurate workforce planning and competitive hiring.
SEC 4
Hiring demand generation talent is challenging because the true talent pool is far smaller than the market suggests. Genuine full funnel operators are a minority within the broader marketing population. Many candidates presenting as demand generation specialists are channel executors or generalists who have rebranded their experience. The Armstrong Lloyd survey shows demand generation had the highest role mobility of any marketing discipline in 2025, with 53 percent changing roles. This creates opportunity, but it also creates noise and inconsistency in the market.
Most mis hires happen before the search even begins. Companies often conflate demand generation with digital marketing, performance marketing or lead generation. Each requires a different profile, level of seniority and commercial skill set. A CEO hiring their first demand generation leader may not know what good looks like until they have made a costly mistake. Armstrong Lloyd’s value begins at the brief stage, ensuring the role is defined correctly before going to market.
The strongest candidates are rarely active. The survey shows 73 percent of demand generation professionals report being happy or very happy in their roles, the highest satisfaction of any discipline in the report. These individuals are not browsing job boards. They require targeted headhunting, a strong value proposition and a clear commercial narrative. This is where specialist network access becomes commercially critical.
Package structure adds another layer of complexity. Demand generation professionals place high value on flexible working and bonus structure alongside base salary. A hiring manager who leads only on base risks losing strong candidates to better balanced offers. Armstrong Lloyd helps clients build the full package proposition, not just the job specification, ensuring the offer aligns with what the market values most.
SEC 5
Hiring demand generation talent requires a clear understanding of the skills that drive commercial impact. Titles can be misleading, so the assessment needs to focus on capability, not job labels.
Commercial foundations
The strongest demand generation professionals can demonstrate direct contribution to revenue pipeline. They can explain how their work influenced MQL to SQL conversion, how they managed multi channel campaigns and how they used CRM and marketing automation platforms to drive performance. A candidate who cannot speak to revenue impact in interview is a red flag regardless of how strong their CV appears.
Skills by seniority
At manager level, the priority is hands on execution. This includes paid media, email, content syndication and a working knowledge of attribution. These candidates should be able to build campaigns, optimise channels and report on performance without heavy support.
At Head of or Director level, the profile shifts. Senior operators must be able to align marketing and sales, co own the pipeline number and report to the board in commercial language. They need to manage agencies or internal teams, build repeatable programmes and translate activity into predictable revenue outcomes. These are different skill sets and should be assessed differently.
Data and analytical capability
The analytical layer is often the hardest to find and the most frequently undersold in job descriptions. Strong demand generation hires can build and own a reporting dashboard, work with attribution models and translate activity into commercial outcomes. Asking candidates to walk through how they have reported performance to a senior stakeholder is one of the most effective ways to separate genuine operators from strong interviewees.
Green flags vs red flags
Green flags:
Speaks confidently about pipeline contribution, not just lead volume
Has experience of long or complex B2B sales cycles
Can explain how demand generation and sales worked together
Demonstrates understanding of attribution and reporting
Red flags:
Measures success primarily in impressions or MQLs
Has only worked in short sales cycle environments
Cannot explain their attribution methodology
Struggles to connect activity to commercial outcomes
SEC 6
Armstrong Lloyd has supported B2B organisations in building demand generation capability as part of wider marketing team growth. One example is a payments software company that needed to scale its marketing function to match rapid commercial expansion. The brief included hiring a demand generation specialist alongside content, product marketing and leadership roles.
The demand generation hire was critical to creating predictable pipeline for a sales team that was already scaling. Armstrong Lloyd worked with the client to define the remit, shape the profile and position the opportunity in a competitive market. The result was a high performing team built around clear commercial ownership and aligned to the company’s growth targets.
You can read the full case study, including the wider team build and outcomes, on the Armstrong Lloyd website. It provides further examples of how specialist hiring shapes commercial performance across B2B organisations.