The Account Coordinator (AC) role was created as part of a deliberate restructure of Asymmetric's account management function. This article captures the competencies, experience signals, and situational benchmarks used to evaluate candidates for the role.
Asymmetric is splitting its legacy Account Manager role into two distinct functions:
The AC is explicitly not expected to be a specialist. The role is designed to keep a human, responsive face on the agency while routing substantive work to the appropriate internal expert.
See [1] for how clients are segmented and assigned.
The primary qualification. Candidates should demonstrate comfort with:
- 2–3 client-facing meetings per day (Zoom)
- Day-to-day email triage and responsiveness
- Presenting deliverables (reports, strategy updates, ad performance)
- Building rapport over time, including quarterly in-person visits to Madison-area clients
Strong signal: Prior experience as a digital account manager with direct client ownership, monthly or bi-weekly meeting cadence, and internal escalation responsibility.
The AC must quickly assess incoming requests and route them appropriately:
| Request Type | Expected Handling |
|---|---|
| Simple / < 5 min (e.g., ad snapshot) | AC handles directly |
| Complex / > 5 min | Routes to relevant specialist |
| Hot issue (e.g., typo in sent email) | Escalates to Strategist (Karly) or Owner (Mark) |
Candidates should articulate a clear mental model for this — not just "I escalate when needed" but a sense of urgency tiers and proactive acknowledgment.
A key situational competency. The benchmark scenario used in interviews:
A client requests a landing page by Friday. It's Tuesday. The team can't deliver in time. How do you handle it?
Strong response pattern: Set realistic expectations proactively and early; communicate clearly without over-promising; frame the team's capacity with empathy rather than defensiveness.
The AC will manage multiple mid- and third-tier clients simultaneously. Interview scenario:
Within an hour, you receive emails from several different clients. How do you prioritize?
Strong response pattern: Prioritize by client tier and request urgency; immediately acknowledge all requests with an ETA even if resolution is pending; avoid letting anything go dark.
The AC will sometimes face questions they can't answer in the moment. Interview scenario:
A client asks a detailed analytics question you weren't prepared for. What do you do?
Strong response pattern: Honest acknowledgment; commit to following up with a specialist; deliver a complete answer after the call. Candidates who try to bluff or over-answer are a red flag.
Key signal: Candidates who are self-directed learners with tool-agnostic confidence ("I jump in and figure it out") tend to ramp faster than those who need formal training on every platform.
Asymmetric runs a distributed team and actively works to build connection remotely:
- Encourages personal sharing in team channels (photos, weekend updates)
- Monthly "Sip & Sinks" — virtual social events (Jeopardy, pet show-and-tell, etc.)
Candidates who are self-described "client pleasers" with high responsiveness instincts tend to fit well, provided they also understand the importance of OKR-aligned work (not just doing whatever clients ask).