8 Common Ways Small Businesses Waste Money Marketing
By Brian Sutter, entrepreneur.com, Director of Marketing, Wasp Barcode
I hate seeing money lost to wasted marketing. After talking to hundreds of small business owners, I’ve discovered many inadvertently waste much of their budget on misused or ineffective tactics and tools.
Marketing budgets for small companies are already too tight, and you simply don’t have the time or finances for things that don’t work.
To help you cut waste and boost success in 2016, I’ve compiled a list of the eight most common
ways small businesses lose money with bad marketing AND what you can do turn those loses into gains.
Is your business wasting money in any of these areas? If so, it’s time to reassess your marketing plans for the next year and make a few changes.
I hate seeing money lost to wasted marketing. After talking to hundreds of small business owners, I’ve discovered many inadvertently waste much of their budget on misused or ineffective tactics and tools.
Marketing budgets for small companies are already too tight, and you simply don’t have the time or finances for things that don’t work.
To help you cut waste and boost success in 2016, I’ve compiled a list of the eight most common
ways small businesses lose money with bad marketing AND what you can do turn those loses into gains.
1) Using social media to build a following.
Social media is great, but too many small businesses dive in with no better strategy than to “build a following.”
You could get away with this back when Facebook reach
was high, but now many small businesses are realizing they’ve invested a
lot of time and effort in something they now have to pay to use. Thanks
to Facebook’s constantly changing algorithm, only a tiny fraction of
your followers ever see your content in their News Feeds, and small
business owners are having to purchase Facebook ads to get their content
seen.
How can we fix this?
The
ads prices aren’t too bad right now, but more platforms are moving to
pay-for-placement formats, which means you can expect to spend even more
money on advertising if you want your content seen. I recommend using
your current social media investments to build your email list.
Start collecting your followers’ email addresses so you can communicate
with them directly. Use what social media investments you have to
build your email list.
2) Expecting too much too soon and then giving up.
The Small Business Administration
says 30 percent of all start-up small businesses fail within two years,
and that number reaches 50 percent within five years. Many small
businesses start strong, but then, within months, they’ve failed
The problem? Overblown expectations. They wanted results within a few months. Actually, they needed results within a few months. When that didn’t happen, they bailed.
The
solution? Expect a two-year ramp-up period. If that seems impossible,
use careful advertising to get the marketing engine warmed up then
complement that with as much content as you can afford to create and
promote.
3) Not understanding your audience.
If you don’t understand your customers, you might as well donate most of your marketing budget to charity.
Study
the hearts and minds and behaviors of your audience. Do this before you
define strategy, before you buy advertising and before you create
content. Figure out what to say to them, how to say it, and where to say
it.
The whole point of your marketing is to reach your audience. You have to KNOW who they are.
4) Not knowing how you’ve attracted your mega-customers.
Call
them mega-customers. Call them whales. However you say it, you need to
know which marketing tactics and content are bringing in your most
valuable customers. The top 20 percent of your customers probably
account for at least half your revenue.
5) Doing any big one-time ad campaign.
There
are plenty of cool marketing tactics to try. Some of them work great,
but most of them don’t – especially if you’ve only got one shot to make
them work.
Small businesses with limited marketing budgets should not dive into five-figure marketing campaigns that are completely untested for them.
The
solution? Test it first with $1,000 or less. If you can’t get this new
tactic to work at $1,000, it’s not likely to work at $10,000, either.
6) You aren’t tracking your marketing well enough.
You probably have Google Analytics set up, but are you using it? What are you learning from it?
Most
small businesses I talk to don’t have good answers to those questions
because they don’t know how this the tool works. Take some time to learn
via Google’s free online Analytics Academy.
There’s
also a lot of confusion around Google’s pay-per-click advertising
platform, AdWords. I love AdWords, and I find it to be a very effective
marketing tool. However, many small business simply buy ad space without
examining how those ads perform, and that can lead to throwing away a
lot of money.
This can be easily fixed. Start by setting up conversion tracking
for your ad campaigns. The AdWords system allows you see how
effectively your ads lead to customer activity such as phone calls,
website purchases, downloads and more. If you aren’t already tracking
conversions from your Google AdWords clicks, stop reading this article and go do that right now.
7) You’re trying to do too much.
As
small businesses, we’ve got limited resources. We don’t have an entire
floor of marketing staff. We’ve usually got one to three people, max.
You
can’t do it all. You can’t be on every social platform, publish content
everywhere, or try every shiny marketing trick that comes along. Focus
on REALLY knowing your audience and using the social media platforms,
websites and marketing tools THEY like.
8) You haven’t adjusted your marketing strategy in years.
Marketing
evolves fast these days. While I just told you to focus on what works, I
also recommend trying a couple new things every year. Given the way
marketing is evolving, we’ve got to evolve, too.Is your business wasting money in any of these areas? If so, it’s time to reassess your marketing plans for the next year and make a few changes.
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