Let’s talk about your marketing budget. Or that thing you might currently call “whatever’s left over after everything else.”
Here’s the truth: marketing isn’t an expense, it’s an investment. And like any good investment, it needs proper planning.
The Revenue Rule: Your Starting Point
Most thriving businesses allocate 5-10% of their total revenue to marketing.
- Established businesses in steady markets? 5-7% keeps you visible.
- Growing businesses chasing targets? 7-10% gives you fuel to accelerate.
- New businesses building from scratch? 10-20% initially to make noise.
Yes, that last number might make you wince. But marketing is how customers discover you exist.
Set Clear Marketing Goals
Before you commit a single pound, get crystal clear on your goals. “More sales” doesn’t count.
Try these instead:
- Increase website traffic by 40% in six months
- Launch two new products reaching 50,000 potential customers
- Achieve 25% brand awareness in a new market by year-end
- Boost customer retention by 15% through email marketing
Specific goals help you calculate what you need to spend and measure whether it’s working.
Check Your Competition
Look at your competitors’ marketing efforts:
- Are they running ads constantly or barely visible online?
- What’s their content strategy like?
- How are they positioning themselves?
If your competitors are investing heavily and you’re playing it safe, you’re bringing a butter knife to a sword fight.
That doesn’t mean spending more automatically wins. It means being strategic about where you compete.
Industry Budget Benchmarks
Here’s what businesses typically invest:
- Retail & E-commerce: 7-12%
- B2B Services: 5-8%
- Healthcare & Professional Services: 3-7%
- Technology & SaaS: 10-20%
- Hospitality & Tourism: 5-10%
These are guidelines, not gospel. Your specific needs may vary.
What Should Your Marketing Budget Cover?
Digital Marketing (40-60% of budget)
- Paid advertising (Google, social media)
- SEO and content creation
- Email marketing platforms
- Website maintenance
Brand & Creative (15-25%)
- Graphic design and video production
- Photography and copywriting
Marketing Tools (10-20%)
- CRM systems
- Analytics platforms
- Social media management tools
Traditional Marketing (varies)
- Print advertising
- Events and trade shows
- PR and media relations
Agency or Team Costs
- Retainer fees or project costs
Key Factors That Affect Your Budget
Your perfect marketing budget depends on:
Your Growth Stage: Launching, growing, or maintaining? Each phase demands different investment.
Your Sales Cycle: Long sales cycles need brand building. Quick purchases? Focus on performance marketing.
Your Profit Margins: Higher margins allow more spending per customer acquisition.
Your Market Position: Challenger brands need to shout louder than established leaders.
Seasonal Factors: If you make 60% of revenue in December, your marketing calendar should reflect that.
Making Your Budget Work Harder
You don’t need a massive budget to make an impact. You need smart allocation:
- Start with what works: Audit last year’s efforts. Double down on what delivered results.
- Test before you invest: Pilot campaigns with smaller budgets first.
- Track everything: If you can’t measure it, you can’t improve it.
- Build flexibility: Reserve 10-15% for opportunities and experiments.
- Think long-term: Balance quick wins with sustained efforts that compound over time.
When to Spend More
Sometimes you need to increase your marketing budget:
- Launching a new business or product
- Entering a new market
- Competing against a market threat
- Seizing a time-sensitive opportunity
When You Can Spend Less
You might reduce marketing spend when:
- You’ve got incredible word-of-mouth going
- Your retention rates are sky-high
- You’re in a niche market with low competition
- You’re capacity-constrained
The Bottom Line
Your marketing budget should feel like a stretch, but not a panic. Start with the percentages we’ve discussed, adjust for your circumstances, and commit for at least six months.
Marketing isn’t a tap you turn on and off. It’s like growing a garden—consistent care yields the best results.
Not sure where to start? That’s what we’re here for.
Ready to make your marketing budget deliver results? Get in touch for a no-obligation strategy session.