A marketing budget is an estimate of projected costs to market your products or services. A typical marketing budget will take into account all marketing costs e.g. marketing communications, salaries for marketing managers, cost of office space etc. However much of the budget is concerned with marketing communications e.g. public relations, website, advertising, etc
Types of Budgets
There are many types of budgets that are utilised for financial resource management.
In youth work, annual, program and operational budgets are used most frequently.
Annual Budgets
An annual budget is a budget that is developed for a year long period of time. An annual
budget is often the organisation's yearly budget that they would publish in summary form in
their annual report or business statements. Depending on the organisation, an annual budget
could operate according to the financial year (eg 1 July 2000 - 30 June 2001) or the calendar
year
(eg 15 January 2000 - 31 December 2001).
Program Budget
A program budget highlights the income and expenditure that is incurred for the development
and implementation of a specific program.
Operational Budget
An operational budget can also be called an organisational budget. This type of budget
highlights the income earned and expenditure that is incurred by an organisation.
Operational budgets may be broken into areas/ departments so that these
areas/departments have their own budget allocation to operate within.
This budget allocation will be used to determine the commitment to each area or department
can make and the level of resources available.
Helpful Pre-budgeting Research
- 1. Industry and Market Research
- 2. Competitor Analysis/SWOT
- 3. Internal marketing performance records e.g. marketing metrics, marketing controls.
- 4. Marketing Audit.
Keys to Creating a Marketing Budget
Start With A Marketing Strategy
Before you calculate your marketing budget, align your marketing goals with your company's strategic goals and vision for growth. If you plan to grow by 20%, but only want to invest enough in marketing to get new business cards for everyone in your company, you're probably going to be disappointed with the results of your investment!
It's important to develop a written marketing strategy that your executive team, sales team, and marketing team are onboard with. You need everyone to be driving their activities in the same direction.
Set Your Marketing Budget
Once you've aligned your company goals with your marketing goals, you'll need to identify your marketing budget so you can develop a detailed marketing plan that supports your strategy. Basically, you’ll choose from three options:
Lean Plan: 1 - 2% of your top-line revenue. In essence, you’re committing to engaging and retaining current customers with simple tools and strategies. This is ideal for companies that are looking to maintain their market position and don't have ambitious growth goals.
Target Plan: 3 - 4% of your top-line revenue. The goal here is to attract new prospects and retain current customers with advanced tools and strategies. This is ideal for companies that are looking to increase their market share and have moderate growth goals (10 - 15% annual growth).
Stretch Plan: 5% or more of your top-line revenue. Your target is to accelerate your results by applying more resources that are focused on driving leads, conversion, and sales. To do this, you’ll use complex marketing strategies and cutting-edge tools. This option is ideal for companies who have ambitious plans to grow and increase their market share (20% or more annual growth).
Allocate Your Marketing Budge
Armed with your goals and a budget, you can now get into the nitty-gritty of developing a tactical plan to transform your marketing dreams into reality! The complexity of your plan will depend on the marketing budget you’ve identified, but you should also consider including tactical plans related to:
- SEO and paid advertising
- Social media
- Content offers, blogging, and email marketing
- Lead conversion and nurturing
- Traditional advertising
Determine how much of your marketing budget should be allocated to each aspect of your plan. The chart below is based on a recent survey by Forrester Research. It displays the percentage of B2B companies' marketing budgets that was allocated to each area of their marketing plans. You may decide to spend more or less based on what your direct competitors are spending, your industry, and your specific goals.
Implement A Marketing Budget Plan
Once you've developed a plan that supports your company's goals, you need to implement it. And to guarantee a successful implementation, you need a team of qualified marketers, designers, and technical experts. You’ve got a few options for creating such a team:
In-House Marketing Team
To execute a complex marketing plan, you need a team of people who possess skills in copywriting, coding, design, social media, paid search, and SEO. Unfortunately, there’s no single person who can effectively do all those activities.
Large corporations will often hire an in-house team, but specialists can be expensive. Benefits, training, and equipment alone could easily cost up to $500K per year. For most smaller businesses, this isn't an option.
Freelance Team
Freelance employees can be a good choice for individual projects. Skilled marketing freelancers can help fill in the gaps that your marketing director can’t supply, and they can be a lifesaver in a pinch.
But when you're trying to bring a long-term, complex marketing plan to completion, you're likely to experience a series of stops and starts on the project. Because they work on-demand for several clients at a time, they may not be as available as you need them to be. You may need to hire extra people to cover all the roles to execute your plan. In addition, there’s the coordination and communication time you’ll need to manage all the freelancers. And when a freelancer moves on, they take all the knowledge of your project with them, forcing you to start over from scratch.
Virtual Marketing Team
Contracting a marketing agency has several benefits:
- Services of top-notch marketing experts without incurring the costs of hiring, training, and managing several in-house employees
- Accountability from a team that wants to succeed and prove the value of its marketing services
- Predictable costs because your marketing expenses are based on a monthly retainer fee
Hiring a virtual marketing team typically involves an investment of $60K - $150K per year, which is significantly less than the cost of an in-house marketing department. However, your team is off-site, which means communication can be a little slower at times and you may need to work via teleconferencing. Also, because marketing teams have several clients, you won’t have a claim on their time every minute of the business day.
Hybrid Team
The best solution might be a hybrid of a small in-house marketing team that's dedicated to one or two key tasks, supplemented by an agency team that rounds out your marketing efforts. And the agency can usually provide training and best practices guidance to your staff, freeing you from this responsibility. Be sure that everyone is clear on their roles and responsibilities, agrees on metrics, and is committed to a shared vision for success. This can be a very effective approach to implementing a solid marketing plan!
How to properly use budget?
You can use your budget every month:
- At the beginning of the month, make a plan for how you will spend your money that month. Write what you think you will earn and spend.
- Write down what you spend. Try to do this every day.
- At the end of the month, see if you spent what you planned.
- Use the information to help you plan the next month’s budget.
Now with all of that let us end it with a quote fitting for the topic