The future is fractional: why North American brands must rethink talent in the creative economy 

Author Michael Ondocin
August 6, 2025

Let’s be honest. The way we build marketing and creative teams is outdated. Not because the talent isn’t out there – it is. In fact, it’s thriving. But the traditional model of full-time, in-house teams lacks the functionality and flexibility to keep up with the speed, complexity, and disruption of today’s market. 

Across North America, from New York to Toronto, business leaders are waking up to a new era. One where the best ideas don’t always come from within your four walls. They come from the edges. From the freelancers, the fractional CMOs, the creative agency veterans turned entrepreneurs, and the influencers-turned-strategists who’ve chosen freedom over hierarchy and impact over permanence. 

This isn’t about cost-cutting. It’s about building competitive advantage. 

The rise of the fractional workforce

The pandemic didn’t create the freelance economy. It accelerated it.  According to a report from McKinsey & Company, more than a third of the U.S. workforce freelances in some capacity. And among marketing and creative professionals, that number is even higher. Why? Because top talent wants flexibility, autonomy, and the ability to work on initiatives that matter. 

Fractional and freelance specialists aren’t just gig workers. They’re seasoned strategists, brand architects, UX visionaries, and content creators who’ve opted out of the 9-to-5 to focus on what they do best. They bring deep expertise, fresh perspective, and a hunger to prove their value fast. 

They are the backbone of the creator economy. And they’re redefining what it means to build a brand in the creative industry. 

Why this matters for marketing leaders 

Marketing today is a battlefield. You’re fighting for attention in a world of infinite noise. You’re expected to deliver personalization at scale, build brand love, drive performance, and do it all yesterday. 

You can’t do that with a static team. 

Fractional and freelance talent gives you elasticity. Need a TikTok strategist for a product launch? A brand designer for a rebrand sprint? A data-savvy growth marketer to decode the algorithm behind your e-commerce funnel? You can scale up or down based on need, not headcount. 

This isn’t about replacing your core team. It’s about augmenting it. Think of your in-house team as the nucleus, your culture carriers and brand stewards. Around them, you build a flexible orbit of specialists who can be deployed with precision. 

The strategic advantage 

The companies that embrace this model aren’t just more efficient. They’re more innovative. 

Why? Because outside talent brings outside thinking. They’re not bogged down by internal politics or legacy systems. They ask the questions that lead to smart breakthroughs. They challenge assumptions. They move fast. 

And let’s not forget diversity. When you tap into a global talent pool, you’re not just getting different skill sets. You’re getting different lived experiences, cultural perspectives, and creative lenses. That’s rocket fuel for brand strategy. 

This is especially true in social media, where trends shift daily and demographic nuances matter. A freelance strategist in New York might bring a different lens than a creative director in Toronto. That’s the power of a distributed ecosystem. 

How to do it right 

To truly unlock the power of fractional talent, North American companies need to shift their mindset and their operating model. This isn’t just a human resources issue. It’s a business model transformation. 

Here’s how: 

  1. Start with strategy, not staffing 
    Don’t hire a freelancer just to fill a gap. Start with your business objectives. What are you trying to achieve? Then identify the capabilities you need to get there. That’s where fractional talent comes in. 
  1. Build a trusted bench 
    Treat freelancers like partners, not vendors. Invest time in finding the right people. Vet them not just for skills, but for values and chemistry. Build long-term relationships so you can plug them in quickly when the need arises. 
  1. Create seamless integration 
    The biggest barrier to freelance success? Poor onboarding. Give them access to the tools, context, and people they need to hit the ground running. Make them feel like part of the team, even if it’s just for a sprint. 
  1. Measure impact, not hours 
    Freelancers thrive on outcomes. Set clear goals, give them autonomy, and judge success based on results, not how many meetings they attend. 
  1. Champion a culture of openness 
    If your internal team sees freelancers as a threat, the model won’t work. Create a culture where external talent is seen as an asset. A way to learn, grow, and do better work together. 

Real-world wins

 Some of the most iconic campaigns of the last decade were powered by freelance and fractional talent. That viral Super Bowl spot? The UX overhaul that doubled conversions? The brand refresh that reignited customer love? Chances are, there was a freelancer behind the scenes. 

Even Fortune 500s are getting in on the action. Companies like Nike, Airbnb, and Shopify have built internal freelance marketplaces to tap into vetted pools of creative and marketing talent on demand. It’s not a trend. It’s a transformation. 

Start-ups are especially well-positioned to lead this charge. With lean teams and bold ambitions, they’re already wired for agility. Many are building their brand strategy around fractional partnerships from day one. 

And it’s not just the CMO driving this shift. The Vice President of Marketing, the Head of Digital, even the c-suite are recognizing the value of tapping into creative talent that can deliver a creative product without the overhead of traditional structures. 

The human side of the equation 

This isn’t just a business strategy. It’s a human one. 

By embracing freelance and fractional talent, we’re creating a more inclusive, equitable, and empowering future of work. One where people can design careers on their own terms. One where talent isn’t limited by geography, background, or circumstance. 

Remote work has unlocked access to innovators and creators who were previously out of reach. It’s also allowed companies to prioritize wellness, sustainability, and human creativity in new ways. 

This is the kind of future the c-suite should be championing. Not just because it’s efficient. But because it’s right. 

Final thought 

The future of marketing isn’t about having the biggest team. It’s about having the right team at the right time for the right challenge. 

Fractional and freelance specialists are no longer a nice-to-have. They’re a strategic imperative. The companies that get this will move faster, think bigger, and build brands that truly resonate. 

So, ask yourself. Are you building a team for yesterday’s world, or tomorrow’s? 

And if you’re still unsure, just scroll through LinkedIn. The case studies are everywhere. 

How Carter Murray can help you find great freelance and fractional marketing talent in North America 

The demand for marketing professionals in North America is growing. Whether you’re filling a gap in your team or looking for niche expertise, let us help you. Submit a job description and a member of our team will be in touch.  

Alternatively, if you are looking for a new opportunity, check out our latest marketing jobs

 

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