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Role Framework

Seven roles. Ten competencies. One framework.

A Factor's Role Framework defines seven distinct digital marketing roles, each mapped to ten universal competency domains with role-specific importance weightings. Each role is a structural specification, not a job title.

Faculty

The people behind A Factor

Practitioners and builders — not observers. Every faculty member has held the role they teach.

VK

Vikram Khanna

Head of Performance Marketing

Swiggy
RM

Riya Mehrotra

Director — Brand Strategy

Mamaearth
AN

Arjun Nair

VP — Growth & Analytics

Razorpay
PG

Priyanka Ghosh

Head of Content

Zomato
What it is

A shared definition of professional competence.

The digital marketing industry has no shared definition of what its roles actually require. Job descriptions are written ad hoc, mixing strategic responsibilities with tactical tasks. The result is confusion — for professionals who do not know what to build toward, for employers who cannot articulate what they need, and for educators who do not know what to teach.

A Factor's Role Framework addresses this structural gap. It defines seven distinct digital marketing roles — not as job titles, but as professional identities with specific, measurable competency requirements.

The role is the organising principle.

Each role represents a distinct professional identity with specific competency requirements. These are defined positions with measurable readiness criteria — the foundation on which every A Factor programme, assessment, and learning path is built.

7 roles 10 domains Role-specific weighting
The seven roles

The seven digital marketing roles.

Each role represents a distinct professional identity with specific competency requirements. These are defined positions with measurable readiness criteria.

01

Performance Marketing Specialist

Drives measurable acquisition and revenue through paid channels with data-driven optimisation.

Analytical Ability Domain Competence Execution
02

SEO Specialist

Builds organic visibility through technical, content, and authority strategies.

Domain Competence Analytical Ability Strategic Thinking
03

Social Media Manager

Builds brand presence, community engagement, and audience growth across social platforms.

Communication Domain Competence Collaboration
04

Content Strategist

Plans, creates, and governs content that serves business objectives and audience needs.

Communication Strategic Thinking Analytical Ability
05

Automation / CRM Specialist

Designs automated journeys and manages customer relationships at scale.

Domain Competence Analytical Ability Execution
06

Digital Marketing Manager

Orchestrates cross-channel strategy, team coordination, and marketing performance.

Strategic Thinking Leadership Collaboration
07

Marketing Lead / Head

Sets vision, builds teams, manages budgets, and aligns marketing with growth. The senior leadership role that defines marketing direction and translates business strategy into marketing capability.

Leadership Strategic Thinking Ownership
Why roles, not tools

Competence over proficiency.

The prevailing model in digital marketing education is organised around tools: courses on Google Ads, Meta, or HubSpot. Each teaches the interface and the clicks. And each becomes partially obsolete the moment the tool updates.

Tools change every year. Google Ads redesigns its structure. Meta revises options. Competencies remain structurally stable. A professional trained in the competencies that underlie tool use — analytical thinking, channel strategy, budget optimisation — can adapt to any interface change. A Factor trains professionals, not tool operators.

The structural stable foundation.

When a tool changes, the professional adapts — because their competence is in the thinking, not the clicking. The role definitions in this framework describe what is stable across tools, platforms, and the next decade of inevitable change.

This is what every A Factor programme builds: the role-shaped competence that survives the next interface update.

Tool-agnostic Stable Future-proof
How competencies map to roles

All ten domains apply. The weightings differ.

Every role draws on the same ten competency domains defined in the Competency Model — but the degree of emphasis differs substantially. Each role carries a distinct weighting pattern derived from systematic analysis of professional practice.

Performance Marketing

Lives in data.

Heaviest weightings fall on analytical rigour and execution discipline.

Primary domains

Analytical & Problem-Solving Ability · Domain & Technical Competence · Execution & Operational Discipline

Supporting domains

Strategic Thinking · Learning Agility

Content Strategist

Communicates with strategy.

Needs strong communication, guided by strategic intent and analytical rigour.

Primary domains

Communication Skills · Strategic Thinking · Analytical & Problem-Solving Ability

Supporting domains

Collaboration · Domain & Technical Competence

Digital Marketing Manager

Orchestrates everything.

Heaviest weightings in strategy, leadership, and stakeholder management.

Primary domains

Strategic Thinking · Leadership · Collaboration & Stakeholder Management

Supporting domains

Analytical Ability · Ownership & Accountability

See all ten competency domains
How role readiness is measured

The diagnostic, not the certificate.

A Factor's answer is the Role Readiness Assessment — a diagnostic instrument that measures professional judgement, not recall. Every item measures how a professional thinks, decides, and prioritises — the strategic dimensions of the role.

01

Diagnostic baseline

Used before a programme begins to map current capability and identify the precise development gaps that the programme must address.

02

Outcome measurement

Re-administered after programme completion to measure genuine competency development and verify role readiness levels against the framework.

Seven roles

Roles are structural specifications, not labels.

The Role Framework defines what each role does, what competencies it requires, and what readiness looks like. The role is the contract between the learner and the work.

Find the programme that builds your role readiness.

Every programme is built on this framework — mapped to a role, structured around competency domains, and designed for capability.

Take the Role Readiness Assessment