Portfolio Examples · Marketing Manager Portfolio
Marketing Portfolio Example: A Real Growth, Lifecycle and Brand Portfolio for 2026
This page is a working example of a real marketing manager portfolio website — built on the same Gradient template a paying Seera client would publish. The layout, animations, and styling are byte-for-byte identical to what you would get if you published a marketing portfolio on Seera tonight. The only difference is the data: instead of a real marketer's campaigns, this example uses a fictional but realistic profile (Nadia Al-Mansoori, a senior growth marketer at a Dubai-based consumer SaaS company with prior stops in Berlin and London).
What you can take from this marketing portfolio example: the section structure, how to present a paid-acquisition case study with experimental rigour, what depth a lifecycle case study should have, and how a senior growth marketer differs in framing from a brand-side marketer.
View the Live Marketing Portfolio →
The marketing portfolio at a glance
| Marketer | Nadia Al-Mansoori (fictional, modeled on a working pattern) |
| Specialty | Growth marketing · paid acquisition · lifecycle · brand |
| Industry | Consumer SaaS, fintech, e-commerce |
| Location | Dubai, UAE — open to remote (EMEA) |
| Years working | 7 years |
| Portfolio template | Gradient — emerald and cyan, vibrant modern |
| Sections shown | Hero · About · Stack · 4 Case Studies · Experience · Education · Testimonials · Contact |
Why this layout works for a marketing portfolio
The Gradient template paired with an emerald-cyan palette is a deliberate choice for a growth marketing portfolio. Three things about why it works:
- Vibrant gradient signals modern, data-driven work. A growth marketer's portfolio fighting for attention against agency-style decks needs a visual signal of confidence and energy.
- Strong typography for case-study depth. Marketing case studies are text-heavy — experiment design, sample sizes, results — and need typography that reads at length.
- Image-led project cards for campaign assets. The Gradient template handles screenshots of dashboards, ad creative, and email mocks naturally.
Section-by-section breakdown of the marketing portfolio
1. Hero — role, focus, and current availability
The hero reads "Senior Growth Marketing Manager · B2C SaaS" — specific enough that a hiring manager scoping a senior role knows immediately whether to keep reading.
2. About — operating style, not biography
The about section is two short paragraphs. The first explains the operating style (case studies with measurable before-and-afters); the second positions the practice (selective project list, not a long credit dump). Crucially, it shows current availability above the fold.
3. Tools and methods — grouped by use case
For any marketing portfolio, this section answers two practical questions: do they use the tools my team uses, and do they understand the operational layer underneath. The example breaks the stack into Specialties, Analytics & Experimentation, Lifecycle & CRM Stack, and Practice & Cross-Functional. The Practice grouping is what separates a senior IC from someone who has only run channels.
4. Case studies — depth over breadth, with measured results
The case-study section is the strongest part of any marketing portfolio. The example here shows four projects across deliberately different categories:
- A lifecycle redesign at a consumer SaaS (+14% week-4 retention, p<0.01)
- A cross-border paid social strategy at a fintech (-31% blended CAC, hold-out tested)
- A brand awareness campaign in the Saudi market (+11pt unaided awareness, YouGov tracker)
- An internal experimentation framework (adopted by three sister teams)
A marketing portfolio of four "ran a campaign" entries shows you can run campaigns. A portfolio of four different kinds of work — lifecycle, paid social, brand awareness, operational tooling — shows a marketer with range that maps to senior roles.
5. Work history — companies, roles, headline results
Each role on this marketing portfolio leads with the most concrete thing the marketer did there: CAC reduced, retention lifted, frameworks built, juniors mentored.
6. Testimonials — from CEOs, VPs, and cross-functional partners
Three testimonials in this marketing portfolio: a CEO (the current Khareeta head), a former VP Growth (Solaris Bank), and a former Head of Brand (cross-functional partner at Khareeta).
7. Contact — one email, one clear next step
The contact section is intentionally simple: an email and a clear note on availability. Hiring managers will email; the friction of a form is pure loss.
What this marketing portfolio gets right (and what to copy)
- Measured results, every time. Each case study has a specific, checkable result with sample size and significance.
- Honest writeups, not just wins. The about section explicitly mentions "an honest writeup of what worked and what did not" — credibility-building.
- Cross-functional case studies. The brand-awareness case study explicitly mentions working with a Riyadh agency on creative — signals collaboration.
- Operational entry on the portfolio. The experimentation-framework case study shows operational maturity, not just channel execution.
- Range of categories. Lifecycle, paid social, brand, operations — signals what the marketer can be hired for.
How to build a marketing portfolio like this for yourself
- Upload your CV or marketing bio to Seera. The AI extracts your campaigns, roles, and stack.
- Pick the Gradient template (or browse the other 15 templates — Pulse for animated data-vibe, Aurora for premium glass, Glass for B2B enterprise).
- Replace the four sample case studies with three to five of your own — at minimum one paid project, one lifecycle, one brand or operational.
- Write proper case-study writeups. Each project needs experiment design, sample size, result, and "what I would do differently."
- Get three named testimonials — a CEO or VP, a peer, and a cross-functional partner.
- Connect your custom domain on Pro.
nadiaalmansoori.comsignals seriousness in a way a builder subdomain never will.
Frequently asked questions about marketing portfolios
What does a good marketing portfolio look like in 2026?
A strong marketing portfolio leads with case studies that have measurable before-and-afters — six to ten campaigns and programs with the experiment design, the budget, the result, and an honest writeup. Avoid: long lists of channels managed, vanity metrics without context.
What sections should a marketing portfolio include?
Six core sections: (1) Hero — name, role, focus, and current availability; (2) About — operating style; (3) Case studies — four to six with measured results; (4) Tools and methods; (5) Work history; (6) Testimonials and education.
What case studies should a marketing manager include?
Aim for one paid acquisition (with hold-out test), one lifecycle or CRM (with retention impact), one brand campaign (with awareness data), and one operational project (a framework or model). Junior marketers should lead with two campaigns where they personally owned the experiment design.
Which template style works best for a marketing portfolio?
The Gradient template (vibrant emerald and cyan) is a strong fit. Marketers leaning B2B may prefer Pulse (animated data-vibe) or Aurora (premium glass).
How do I write a marketing portfolio bio?
Answer four questions: what you do, the company type, the operating style, and current availability. Avoid: "passionate about marketing", "data-driven storyteller", "growth hacker".
How important is showing measurable results?
It is the single most important signal — hiring managers want to know what changed because of you. The portfolio should make every result checkable: sample size, hold-out, significance.