Wednesday, November 11, 2020

How Much Does Small Business Marketing Cost?

Do you ever feel like your head’s spinning when it’s time to sit down and focus on marketing?

We have so many options these days for small business marketing that it can be overwhelming to choose which methods to prioritize.

Before you can even begin to figure out where to allocate how much of your marketing budget, you have to understand:

  • Why and what you want to market
  • Who you want to reach
  • And how to reach people in the most effective way possible

To top it off, you need to do it better than other businesses out there (your competition).

Today, we’re showing you exactly how to create a marketing budget for your small business. How much it costs, in the end, will very much depend on YOU: your needs, your goals, and your available resources.

The Purpose of Marketing for Your Small Business

The purpose of marketing is to get the word out about your products or services – in a way that draws in the right people and gets them interested enough to buy what you sell.

As the U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) says, “marketing isn’t an expense – it’s an investment.” And like everyone else always says, you get what you pay for. Pay for the best software, tools, strategy, plan, and the right players to implement it all, and your business will thrive.

On the flip side, if you don’t invest in marketing and set up the right systems to get in front of the right people with the right messaging, your business will fall flat.

Here’s why marketing is a wise investment for your small business:

It Gets Your Name Out There

Brand name recognition can help you drive (a lot) more traffic to your website. 82% of searchers on Google click on brands they’re already familiar with. Keep people happy, and keep getting in front of them, and you’ll build a brilliant reputation for yourself over time.

It Shows the World What You Have to Offer

How will you make sales if no one understands what you’re selling in the first place? It starts with marketing – AKA getting the word out to the right people.

It Gets You in Front of People Who Want What You Have

You’re not supposed to market to everyone. That’s the best way to waste your entire marketing budget. Instead, you should establish a unique niche and target a specific group of people looking for exactly what you offer. Quality over quantity, my friend.

How to Determine Your Small Business Marketing Budget

You can figure out how much you need to allocate toward marketing by examining these fundamental elements.

1. Your Customers

Who’s going to pay for your services or buy your products? Create buyer personas so you have a detailed profile of the kinds of people who fit the bill. Pay attention to demographics, location, brands they love, online channels they use, and any unique traits.

2. Gross Revenue

Business 2 Community says that small businesses spend around 7-12% of their gross revenue on marketing. Ding ding ding! It’s the answer you’ve all been waiting for, folks.

Now, keep in mind that many small businesses don’t spend enough money on marketing. Others spend too much but don’t have the right strategies or marketing plan to spend their money wisely. Marketing budgets are all too often wasted. Such a pity.

3. Your Competitors

Before you can develop an accurate budget, you also need to research competitors and current marketing trends. What are other marketers in your industry doing that’s working? Are specific software, tools, and technology bringing similar businesses success? What channels and strategies help them build brand awareness, bring in traffic and leads, and make sales?

Campaign Monitor surveyed over 1,000 small business owners. Here’s what they found:

  • Social media is the most common platform for building brand awareness.
  • The best opportunity for gaining new customers is social media marketing.
  • 78% of small businesses plan to increase spending on digital marketing moving forward.
  • The biggest goal – and challenge – is acquiring new customers.
  • The most-used channels are email marketing and Facebook (although many participants also reported that Facebook isn’t working for them).
  • Email marketing is the #1 platform for scoring the highest return on investment.

Keep these trends in mind as you form your marketing plan and budget.

4. Your Priorities

Figure out how much each channel, platform, strategy, and subscription will cost. Here are some areas to consider including in your budget and marketing plan. Think about who you need to hire for each task, the software and tools you’ll need, and the time to go into each job.

  • Advertising (on social and search engines)
  • Social media marketing
  • Email marketing
  • Content marketing
  • Search engine optimization (SEO)
  • Content management system (CMS)
  • Content relationship management (CRM)
  • Website hosting, design, development, maintenance
  • Design
  • Printing

Leave Your Small Business Marketing to the Pros

Marketing can be overwhelming, even for the most proficient marketers on the planet. Not only does it require a lot of time, energy, and strategy, but it’s always changing! Just when you think you’ve owned Instagram marketing or outsmarted Google’s latest algorithm, it changes. Back to the drawing board we go.

If you’d like to hand off the marketing madness to people who live and breathe the stuff, let us know. We’d love to get to know you and your business and develop a marketing plan that knocks your socks off.

Book a consult with us. First one’s on the house!

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Wednesday, November 4, 2020

How Much Does a Marketing Plan for a Small Business Cost?

If you caught our last article on small business marketing, you learned why marketing is an investment – not an expense.

Good marketing impacts EVERYTHING: if people find you, how others view your business, and whether customers buy your stuff and tell all their friends.

With any smart investment, you need to know where you’re headed (goals) and how to get there (strategy). Strategies and goals are the two main components of a solid marketing plan.

A marketing plan is like a business roadmap, showing you what you need to do to get people to give you their money.

You may be thinking, “That sounds great and all, but where the heck do I start? And how much will I have to fork over to get it done?”

We’ll answer these all-important questions in just a moment. Let’s start with why you need a plan in the first place and what that plan should include.

What’s a Small Business Marketing Plan?

This is a road map that explains what actions your business should take to get from where you are now to where you want to be. It should outline your vision and goals, the strategies to reach those goals, and the budget you need to make it happen.

A marketing plan will also describe where to spend how much of your marketing budget. It can be updated annually (or more frequently) as you learn what works for your business and what’s not so hot in your industry.

Without a plan, you’ll be flying blind. Your marketing department could end up wasting a whole lot of time and money on efforts that don’t produce any real results.

What Should My Marketing Plan Include?

Here are some sections that companies routinely include in their marketing plans.

1. Company Overview

Really get to know your company for this section – warts and all. What products and services do you offer? Who are your primary customers? What are your business’s strengths and weaknesses?

Take a good look at financial reports, departmental budgets, and your company history to understand how money is being allocated and if it’s being used effectively.

Interview someone on the sales team for more insight into customer behavior for feedback on what products and services are resonating with people.

Include a summary of your company culture in this section as well.

2. SWOT Analysis

Write down your company’s strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats to assess where your business stands in the marketplace and possibilities for growth.

3. Target Audience

Who already loves what you’re selling? Create profiles of your ideal customers to use as the basis for your marketing. Where do they spend time online? What channels do they often use? What’re their buying habits? How old are they, and what are their greatest desires and fears?

4. Marketing Goals

What are your marketing and sales objectives that you want to accomplish throughout the upcoming term? Set quantifiable goals and summarize how you plan to reach each one. Do you want to grow your sales by a certain percentage? Are you planning on getting most of your leads through email marketing or Facebook? Or are you prioritizing SEO this year and focusing on website traffic?

5. Competition

Who are your top competitors? Make sure you research what marketing techniques are working for them and what tools and strategies they’re implementing. You can learn a lot from other successful businesses in your industry.

6. Unique Selling Proposition (USP)

What makes you different from everyone else? Your USP can give you an advantage over your competition. Is it your customer service? Do you offer the best prices? Are your products or services leaps and bounds better than the competition’s?

7. Channels & Strategies

Based on your target audience, choose what channels and strategies you’d like to implement in the coming year for marketing. Popular inbound marketing platforms and tactics include:

  • Blog
  • Social media
  • Search engines
  • Website
  • Email
  • Branding
  • Advertising
  • Video

8. Budget

How much are you planning on spending on marketing in general? Small businesses generally allocate 7% to 12% of their gross revenue to marketing.

How Much Will My Marketing Plan Cost?

That depends. You knew this was coming. For us to give you a definitive answer, we’d need to sit down and chat with you about your goals and business and stuff. Which we’d love to do – whenever you’re up for it.

The cost will depend on two main factors:

  • Type of marketing plan: Will your project include content marketing, social media marketing, website design, paid marketing, or some kind of combo?
  • Your partner: Are you going to work with an agency or a freelancer? If you choose an agency, size and prestige can make a massive difference in the cost.

You can expect to pay anywhere in the ballpark of $5,000 to $40,000 for a solid marketing plan.

Ready to Craft Your Small Business Marketing Plan?

We can help! Partnering with a marketing whiz with the skills to help you accomplish your goals while working within your budget is essential. We’d love to hop on a call with you to answer all of your pressing questions. And YOU can see if WE fit the bill – literally.

If you’d like to give us a shot, we’re ready to discuss your goals and vision to create a marketing plan that checks all the right boxes. Book a consult with us today!

 

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