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SOPs & Playbooks

Every marketing process documented, repeatable, and executable without you in the room. The difference between a business and a job is whether what you know is written down.

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Why Marketing Without SOPs Is a Liability

Every time a team member walks out the door, they take something more valuable than their laptop. They take institutional knowledge - the workarounds, the vendor contacts, the muscle memory of how your marketing actually runs. Without documented processes, that knowledge disappears with them, and your team spends the next three months reinventing wheels that were already built.

The pattern is consistent across companies of every size. Without SOPs, output is inconsistent. The blog post looks different depending on who wrote it this week. The lead follow-up timeline varies by rep. The campaign launch checklist lives in someone's head, which means it also gets missed when that person is on vacation. Onboarding a new hire takes four months instead of four weeks because everything has to be taught through shadowing and tribal osmosis.

With SOPs in place, the opposite becomes true. Output becomes predictable because the process is defined. New hires ramp faster because there is a written curriculum. Quality stays high even when the A-team is unavailable because the standard is codified, not assumed. The business becomes less dependent on any single individual, including the founder.

The irony is that most marketers are too busy executing to document, and that busyness is precisely what keeps them trapped. When every task requires full attention and memory, there is no bandwidth to build the systems that would free that bandwidth. SOPs break that cycle - but only if someone prioritizes building them.

Marketing operations without documented processes are also a hiring liability. When you bring on a new team member into an undocumented environment, you are not onboarding them - you are auditioning their ability to reverse-engineer how your marketing works through trial and error. The best candidates have options, and ambiguous environments with no written guidance are the fastest way to lose good people early.

What a Marketing SOP Actually Contains

A useful SOP is not a policy document. It is not a statement of intent or a list of values. It is a step-by-step instruction set that any competent person can follow to produce the correct output, regardless of whether they have done it before. Every SOP Mark builds for clients contains the same core components.

Title and owner. The SOP needs a clear name that matches how the team refers to the process, and a designated owner whose job it is to keep the document current. Without an owner, SOPs go stale and become liabilities rather than assets.

Trigger. What event or condition initiates this process? Is it a calendar date, an inbound lead, a deal stage change, a content approval? The trigger defines when to use the SOP and prevents it from being skipped because nobody was sure if it applied.

Step-by-step instructions. Numbered, specific, and written at a level of detail where a new hire could follow them without asking for help. Where the process involves a tool or platform, screenshots or screen recordings dramatically improve clarity and reduce errors.

Tools used. Every platform, software, or account involved in the process should be listed, with notes on where to find login credentials, who has admin access, and any known gotchas or access requirements.

Success criteria. How does the person executing the process know they did it correctly? Success criteria might be a dashboard metric, a confirmation email, a completed checklist, or a specific output format. Without this, "done" means different things to different people.

Exception handling. What happens when something goes wrong? What is the fallback if the tool is down, if the approver is unavailable, if a contact bounces? Documenting exceptions proactively eliminates panicked improvisation during high-stakes moments.

Review cadence. SOPs must be living documents. Every SOP should have a scheduled review date - quarterly is the standard for active processes - to ensure the instructions still match reality as tools, teams, and strategies evolve.

The 10 Marketing SOPs Every Company Needs

While every business has unique processes worth documenting, there are ten marketing SOPs that apply to virtually every company running a marketing function. These are the processes that cause the most errors, create the most inconsistency, and slow down growth the most when they exist only in someone's head.

  1. Content publishing checklist. This covers blog posts, social media, and email - the specific steps from draft to published, including image sizing, SEO fields, link checks, UTM tagging, and distribution steps. One missed step in content publishing (a broken link, a missing meta description, an untagged URL) costs compounding value over time.
  2. Paid media campaign launch checklist. Every paid campaign - whether Google Ads, Meta, LinkedIn, or otherwise - should follow a documented pre-launch checklist that covers pixel verification, audience setup, budget caps, conversion tracking, and creative approval. Mistakes here cost real money immediately.
  3. Lead follow-up protocol. Speed-to-lead is one of the most studied metrics in sales, and the research is unambiguous: response within five minutes dramatically increases conversion. The lead follow-up SOP defines who follows up, how, on what channel, within what timeframe, and what happens when there is no response at 24 hours, 48 hours, and 7 days.
  4. Monthly reporting process. What data gets pulled, from which tools, on what schedule, compiled into which format, reviewed by whom. Consistent reporting without a documented process means numbers get pulled differently each month, making trend analysis unreliable.
  5. New campaign brief template and approval process. Before any campaign launches, a brief should define the objective, target audience, messaging, budget, success metrics, and timeline. The approval process defines who needs to sign off and by when, preventing campaigns from launching without adequate review.
  6. CRM data entry standards. Garbage in, garbage out. The CRM is only as useful as the data inside it, and without documented entry standards, contact records become inconsistent within months. This SOP covers field naming conventions, required fields, lead source tagging, and data cleanup protocols.
  7. Email list hygiene process. Deliverability depends on list health. This SOP covers suppression list management, bounce handling, unsubscribe processing, re-engagement sequence triggers, and the cadence for removing unengaged contacts from active sends.
  8. SEO content brief and optimization checklist. Every piece of SEO-targeted content should be created against a documented brief that includes target keyword, search intent, recommended word count, internal linking requirements, and on-page optimization checklist. Without this, content quality varies dramatically by author.
  9. Social media posting and scheduling process. From content creation through approval through scheduling through community management. This covers which platforms get which content format, posting frequency by channel, hashtag strategy, and the process for responding to comments and messages.
  10. Vendor and agency management SOP. How new vendors get onboarded, how briefs are submitted, how invoices get approved, how performance is reviewed, and how contracts get renewed or terminated. Vendor relationships without documented processes create informal dependencies that are expensive to unwind.

The Difference Between a Playbook and an SOP

The terms SOP and playbook are often used interchangeably, but they serve different purposes. Understanding when to use each format is part of building a documentation system that actually gets used.

An SOP (Standard Operating Procedure) is specific, narrow, and task-focused. It covers a single repeatable process from beginning to end. "How to publish a blog post" is an SOP. "How to launch a paid campaign" is an SOP. It assumes the decision to do the thing has already been made, and provides instructions for doing it correctly.

A Playbook is broader and more strategic. It covers a category of situations rather than a single task. A "Product Launch Playbook" contains multiple SOPs plus strategy context, decision frameworks, messaging guidelines, escalation paths, and contingency plans. It answers not just "how do we do this" but "how do we think about doing this."

Playbooks are most valuable for high-stakes, recurring situations that require judgment as well as execution. Good playbooks to build first include: the product launch playbook, the demand generation playbook, the PR and communications playbook, the account-based marketing playbook, and the quarterly planning playbook.

The rule of thumb is straightforward. If the process is mechanical and consistent every time, write an SOP. If the process requires judgment, involves multiple teams, or has meaningful strategic variation depending on context, write a playbook that contains SOPs plus the strategic wrapper that guides decision-making.

How to Build SOPs Without Taking 6 Months

The most common failure mode in SOP-building is the perfection trap. Teams decide to document everything, assign a project manager, schedule a series of workshops, and then produce nothing for six months because no one has time to do documentation in addition to their regular work. By the time the initiative loses momentum, it is quietly deprioritized and the whole effort is abandoned.

The alternative approach is faster, more pragmatic, and actually results in SOPs being used. Start with the processes that cause the most errors or consume the most time. Not the most important processes in theory - the processes that are actually breaking things or slowing people down right now. Those are the ones where documented process will have the fastest impact.

Record first, document second. Before writing a word in a document, have the person who owns the process record a Loom video walking through it in real time. This takes ten minutes and captures 90% of the knowledge needed. The written SOP can then be drafted from the recording, which is dramatically faster than trying to write from scratch.

Apply the 80% rule. A good-enough SOP that gets used is worth infinitely more than a perfect SOP that never gets finished. An SOP does not need to cover every edge case and exception on day one. Get the core steps documented, publish it, use it, and iterate from real-world feedback. The first version is not the final version.

Build SOPs as you do the work. The best time to document a process is the second or third time you execute it - when the steps are fresh but you have already identified the non-obvious steps that a first-timer would miss. Waiting until you have bandwidth to document after the fact means it never gets done.

The quarterly SOP audit is the maintenance mechanism that keeps documentation valuable. Once a quarter, review which SOPs exist, which have not been touched in over six months, and which processes are being done inconsistently despite having an SOP. Update, archive, or rebuild as needed. A 30-minute quarterly review prevents a documentation system from becoming a graveyard of outdated instructions.

SOPs as an Asset in Fundraising and M&A

Documented processes are not just an operational tool - they are a financial asset. When a company raises capital or goes through an acquisition, the due diligence process evaluates not just revenue and growth, but operational sustainability. The question investors and acquirers are fundamentally asking is: can this business continue to run if the founder or key executives step away?

SOPs are direct evidence of operational maturity. A company that can produce a comprehensive operations manual - marketing SOPs, sales playbooks, customer success documentation - signals to investors that the business has been built to run, not just to produce. That signal translates directly into valuation multiples.

Businesses with documented, repeatable processes consistently command higher acquisition multiples than businesses of comparable revenue that rely on tribal knowledge. Buyers are purchasing a system, not just a revenue stream. If the system only works because specific people carry it in their heads, the risk premium applied to that acquisition goes up substantially.

The due diligence checklist for marketing specifically asks for channel-level revenue attribution, campaign documentation, team structure and role clarity, vendor contracts, and evidence of repeatable demand generation. Companies that have SOPs and playbooks in place can answer these questions quickly, which accelerates the deal timeline and demonstrates preparedness. Companies that cannot are forced to construct these documents under pressure during due diligence, which signals operational immaturity at exactly the wrong moment.

"If your business depends on you remembering how to do everything, you don't own a business - you own a job."

6x More likely to hit growth targets with documented processes
40-60% Reduction in new hire ramp time with SOPs in place
2-3x Higher acquisition multiples for businesses with documented playbooks

Frequently Asked Questions

How long does it take to build a full set of marketing SOPs?
For a company with an active marketing function, a complete first pass of the 10 core SOPs typically takes 4-6 weeks when approached systematically. The record-first method accelerates this significantly. Mark's engagement typically produces the initial SOP library within the first 30 days, with refinement happening through the first quarter of use.
What format should SOPs be in - Google Docs, Notion, or something else?
The format matters less than accessibility and consistency. SOPs should live wherever your team already spends time. If the team lives in Notion, Notion is the right format. Google Docs, Confluence, and dedicated SOP tools like Trainual or Process Street all work. The wrong answer is having SOPs in five different formats across three different tools, which is how they stop being used.
Do SOPs kill creativity and make marketing feel bureaucratic?
SOPs define the repeatable operational layer - the mechanics of execution. They do not dictate strategy, creative direction, or campaign ideas. In fact, when the execution layer is documented and reliable, the team has more mental bandwidth for the creative and strategic work that actually drives differentiation. SOPs do not replace judgment; they protect judgment for the decisions that require it.
Who should own SOP maintenance?
Each SOP should have a designated owner - typically the team lead or practitioner who executes the process most often. A marketing operations lead or Chief of Staff is often responsible for the overall documentation system. The quarterly audit should be owned by whoever is accountable for marketing operations quality - often the CMO or Head of Marketing.
Can SOPs help during periods of rapid growth or hiring?
SOPs are most valuable precisely during high-growth periods. When a company hires rapidly, the risk of knowledge dilution and inconsistent execution increases with each new team member. A documented SOP library becomes the onboarding infrastructure that allows new hires to become productive quickly without pulling senior team members away from their primary responsibilities.

Ready to Document Your Marketing Operation?

Mark Gabrielli builds SOP libraries and playbooks that make your marketing repeatable, scalable, and transferable. Stop losing knowledge every time someone leaves.

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