Tuesday, February 14, 2017

How Much Should Small Businesses Spend on Digital Marketing in 2017?



    A few decades ago, marketing and advertising meant putting up bill boards and buying radio or TV placement ads. A company’s marketing budget was dedicated to producing these awesome posters, pamphlets and jingles. Fast-forward a couple of years and a lot -- if not all -- has changed. Now, this marketing budget, regardless of size, should be focused on social, search, email and mobile.

    The statistics are proof of this shift in marketing budget: for nearly half a decade, investments in traditional advertising have consistently dropped by single digit percentages each year. Digital marketing spending, by comparison, has consistently grown by double digit increments year after year. So, how much should small businesses spend on digital marketing in 2017? This article provides information that can guide you through setting up your marketing budget and where to invest those marketing dollars.

    Statistics of digital marketing budget


    Email, social, display ads, mobile and search are all growing in 2017. Digital is now at $75,000 a year, or 35% percent of all marketing spend on average for companies. Companies are shifting more and more money to digital because of it’s perceive R.O.I., and the ability to spend less for more return.


    “Digital marketing is vital for SMBs and our survey numbers bear that out,” said Simon Grabowski, GetResponse CEO and founder. “Marketers are investing accordingly, given the substantial return on investment delivered through web-based campaigns.” According to GetResponse, 70 percent of small to medium sized businesses said they will increase their digital/web-based marketing budgets this year. Furthermore, SMB marketing statistics available from 2016 indicate that 62 percent of small businesses are investing 4 percent or more of their revenue in marketing.

    BrightLocal conducted an insightful piece of research into the attitudes toward and usage of Digital Marketing by SMBs. Key findings include:

    The average SMB spends $400/month on marketing.
    SMBs spend on average 46 percent of their marketing budget on digital marketing.
    78 percent of SMBs think that mobile marketing is an important channel for their business.

    Budget allocation for digital marketing channels


    According to GetResponse, social, mobile and email are at the forefront of digital marketing spending this year. More specifically, 59 percent of SMBs said marketing on social networks, such as Facebook, LinkedIn and Twitter will be the primary spending focus. The next channel projected to drive digital marketing spend in 2017 is mobile marketing (50 percent) -- either app or web-based -- followed by email marketing (42 percent). The other important digital channels include, video production, search marketing, content creation, data analysis and website maintenance. A report from Forrester Research, on the other hand, estimates that search engine marketing will capture the largest share of online spend.

    Overall, the chart below from 2016 shows strong increases in digital channel investment. Of the five digital marketing strategies represented, each expected to see at least a 42 percent increase in investment.

    Conclusion


    How much should you spend on digital marketing this year? What is the right allocation for digital marketing spend of total marketing budgets and on what channels should it be spent? These are important questions to tackle in 2017. When making decisions for your business, consider these takeaways:

    Marketing budgets are increasing overall
    Marketing spend is shifting from traditional advertising channels to digital channels
    Social, mobile, email and search marketing represent the lion’s share of the digital marketing budget
    Total marketing budgets are between 4 percent and 12 percent of total revenue
    Smaller companies spend more on marketing as a percentage of their total revenue
    B2Cs and online companies spend more on marketing compared to B2Bs

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