Marketing careers are popular, giving you the chance to work in expanding digital and social media roles but you'll need to have good marketing experience to help you get a job

Job options

Jobs directly related to your degree include:

Jobs where your degree would be useful include:

Remember that many employers accept applications from graduates with any degree subject, so don't restrict your thinking to the jobs listed here.

Work experience

The marketing sector is popular and so can be very competitive. Therefore, any skills and contacts you build up outside your studies can give you a real advantage.

If your course involves a work placement or internship, use it to make contacts in marketing departments and develop your practical marketing skills. Showing initiative at this stage could really pay off in the future.

You can develop good communication and project management skills through organising society or department events, writing newsletters, managing budgets and standing on committees. This will all show you have the right skills for a marketing-related job. You can also help your application by showing how you developed organisation and time-management skills through combining studies, social life and part-time work.

Your interests can also offer a way into a marketing career - for example, if you're passionate about sport, the environment or music, one of these could become your specialist area.

Consider marketing or publicity roles in dedicated organisations. For instance, charities, sports or arts organisations may value your drive and commitment to the area even if you don't have marketing experience.

Search marketing work placements and internships.

Typical employers

Specialist marketing, advertising and PR agencies are not the only major employers of marketing graduates.

You can find roles within all industry sectors as all organisations have some form of marketing element within them. The size and amount of opportunities can vary but roles exist in a variety of places from financial and consumer companies through to not-for-profit organisations like charities and local government.

Many companies are expanding into marketing in digital and social media channels alongside the more traditional marketing methods.

Find information on employers in marketing, advertising and PR and other job sectors.

Skills for your CV

A marketing degree helps you develop the ability to anticipate customer demand, identify target markets and communicate effectively with them. You explore areas such as customer behaviour and psychology, business management, human resources and culture, as well as how consumers' use of IT and digital media impacts on marketing.

You also develop an essential range of transferable business skills, including:

  • the ability to express yourself clearly, both verbally and in writing
  • advanced planning and strategic thinking
  • research, analysis and presentation skills
  • the ability to use your own initiative and think creatively.

Graduates from some courses will be eligible for exemptions from some modules of professional qualifications provided by the Chartered Institute of Marketing (CIM).

Further study

Postgraduate courses in marketing tend to fall under the remit of business schools and will usually focus on a more theoretical understanding of marketing, such as customer psychology, strategy and branding, as well as covering areas such as international marketing and digital marketing. Although these types of qualifications can be helpful for graduates in non-business subjects, they're not essential.

You may also want to consider management degree courses that include marketing as part of a wider curriculum. Think about your future career aspirations and whether a particular postgraduate course can help with entry to the role.

A range of vocational certificates and diplomas in marketing are provided by The Chartered Institute of Marketing (CIM). They range from foundation through to senior level and can be taken while you’re working in a marketing role.

For more information on further study and to find a course that interests you, see Masters degrees and search for postgraduate courses in marketing.

What do marketing graduates do?

The top three jobs reported include sales, marketing and related associate professionals (44%), business, research and administrative professionals (6%) and media professionals (6%).

DestinationPercentage
Employed79.6
Further study4.1
Working and studying7.1
Unemployed5.4
Other3.8
Graduate destinations for marketing
Type of workPercentage
Marketing, PR and sales57.4
Retail, catering and customer service11.9
Business, HR and finance10
Clerical, secretarial and administrative7.4
Other13.3
Types of work entered in the UK

For a detailed breakdown of what marketing graduates are doing after graduation, see What do graduates do?

Graduate destinations data from the Higher Education Statistics Agency.

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