What strong executive assistant candidates have in common in marketing and advertising

Use this page to calibrate strong executive assistant candidates specifically for marketing and advertising companies.

10 Hires / accepted offers in marketing and advertising
1,598 Applications reviewed
24 Requirement-fit signal rows

What "strong in marketing and advertising" means

What we mean by a strong executive assistant candidate in marketing and advertising

Strong in this marketing and advertising context means the executive assistant candidate can prove both the role workflow and the industry handoff.

Based on 10 strong outcomes in marketing and advertising and 1,598 applications reviewed.

The short version

The pattern in marketing and advertising, in one screen

What the candidates who were hired or reached final review in marketing and advertising tend to have in common, before you read the detail. Treat it as a pattern to look for, not a guarantee.

Best fit

Use the page when scope is repeatable

Executive Assistant In Marketing and Advertising searches work best when the weekly ownership is clear before sourcing starts.

Data depth

10 matching requests

The guide uses aggregate request volume so hiring managers can judge whether the pattern is deep enough to act on.

Screening risk

Do not screen on keywords alone

The strongest screens push candidates toward work samples, examples, and structured follow-up questions.

When to pause

Pause when the sample is thin

If the role, industry, country, or outcome bucket is too small, treat the data as directional instead of decisive.

Profile patterns

What the marketing and advertising profiles have in common

The useful marketing and advertising executive assistant profile combines relevant experience, clear communication, and a rate band that matches the work.

Middle desired-rate band among the candidates who were hired or reached final review in marketing and advertising: $1,300-$2,300 per month. This is a context band, not a target to anchor on.

Countries

CountryHired candidatesShare of known data
Kenya530%
South Africa522%

Years of experience

Years of experienceHired candidatesShare of known data
3-5 years536%
6-9 years529%

Desired rate band

Desired monthly rate bandHired candidatesShare of known data
$1,300-$1,800534%
$1,801-$2,300525%

marketing and advertising skills & tools

Skills and tools that recur in marketing and advertising

marketing and advertising skills matter when they show up in how the executive assistant candidate explains examples and decisions.

Tools to look for

ToolHired candidatesShare of known data
Google Workspace1052%
Slack644%
Notion536%

Skills to probe in interviews

SkillHired candidatesShare of known data
Calendar and inbox ownership1058%
Follow-up tracking749%
Documentation540%
Cross-functional coordination531%

marketing and advertising vs all executive assistants

What is elevated for marketing and advertising

The comparison shows what is more pronounced in marketing and advertising than in the general executive assistant pool.

Each row pairs the value among the candidates who were hired or reached final review in marketing and advertising with the baseline across all executive assistant candidates. A mint chip marks a signal that is more pronounced in this industry.

Signal marketing and advertising All executive assistants Delta
Top tool Google Workspace Slack +12 pts
Desired-rate band $1,300-$2,300 $1,200-$2,100 Higher

Where candidates fall out

Where marketing and advertising candidates drop out of the process

Executive Assistant candidates tend to fall out when they describe the role generically and cannot connect it to marketing and advertising.

Generic industry answer
38%
Weak workflow proof
31%

How to use this

How to use this when you screen for marketing and advertising

Start from the requirement you actually wrote down, then screen each candidate's examples against it. Use the marketing and advertising buckets above to shape what you look for, and lean on the comparison to decide which signals deserve extra weight for this industry.

Reference point: the median screening score for applications marked hired in this marketing and advertising cluster was 82. Use it as a sanity check on your own shortlist, not as a cutoff.

FAQ

Common questions about strong executive assistant candidates in marketing and advertising

How should I use this executive assistant candidate quality in marketing and advertising guide?

Use it as a planning benchmark, then verify fit through your actual role scope, budget, and interview process.

What data is this based on?

It uses aggregate Sagan hiring requests, candidate applications, and hiring outcomes. Private candidate and company details are not shown.

How should I adjust this for my company?

Start with the repeated patterns, then edit the workflow, tools, manager review cadence, and success measures to match your team.

What should I check before acting on this guidance?

Confirm the weekly workflow, required tools, communication standard, seniority level, and whether the candidate pool matches the role you need.

How often should this benchmark be refreshed?

Refresh it when new hiring-request volume changes the role scope, rate range, country mix, or interview evidence behind the benchmark.

Methodology

This industry candidate-quality analysis uses aggregate Sagan hiring-request, candidate-application, and hire data for remote roles. Company names, candidate names, resumes, emails, and raw private job descriptions are not shown.

Source: 2026 remote hiring report.

Use the data before you post the job

For US companies hiring remote talent, start with scope, budget, and screening evidence before you write the public job post.

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