- Home
- About us
- Services & sectors
- Service areas
- Accounting and audit
- Bookkeeping
- Business advisory
- Business start-up support service
- Business tax planning and compliance
- Company secretarial
- Corporate finance
- Corporate recovery
- Financial planning
- IT support
- Inheritence tax and capital gains tax
- Management accounts
- Payroll
- Pension and retirement planning
- Personal tax planning and compliance
- Self assessment
- Tax mitigation
- Trusts and executorships
- VAT
- Sector expertise
- Service areas
- What our clients say
- Contact
- Business news
- Resources
How much to spend on marketing?
Small businesses often do not know how much to spend on marketing. Decisions on expenditure are made on a 'whatever we can afford at the moment' basis, which among other things means that the marketing budget is the first to be squeezed when times are hard.
Instead of this 'finger in the air' method, your annual marketing budget should be based on:
- Last year's budget - perhaps with a small increase
- What you think your competitors are spending
- A percentage of sales (last year's or next year's)
Ideally, your annual expenditure on marketing should reflect the sales growth you want to achieve in the coming year. It may sound odd, but you don't always want to grow at the fastest rate possible. For example, there is no point in setting a growth target and a corresponding budget if you cannot meet the extra demand.
Typical growth targets and the corresponding marketing budget as a percentage of sales are:
Steady growth - a budget of 2%-3% of sales
Rapid growth - 5%-10% of sales
Resources
- Business
- Autumn Statement 2010
- Budget archive
- Business start-up
- Limited companies
- Business finance
- Partnerships
- Your customers
- Your employees
- Sales and marketing
- Assess your competitors
- Growing the top line with a marketing audit
- Brand awareness: making your mark
- Advertising: complying with the rules
- Direct marketing
- How much to spend on marketing?
- Selling benefits not features
- SWOT analysis - look before you market
- The value of a marketing plan
- Distance Selling Regulations: an introduction
- IT and e-business
- Business regulations
- Business and the environment
- Selling your business
- Personal
- Tax
- Links
- Calculators

