Why Every Small Business Needs a Marketing Strategy

Mar 11, 2025

If your marketing plan is basically “post on Instagram when I remember” or “just keep doing what I’ve always done,” you’re not alone. So many small business owners are out here trying to juggle everything, and let’s be real, marketing often ends up being a rushed afterthought.

But here’s the thing—your marketing doesn’t need to be a giant strategy doc with color-coded tabs and a five-year plan. Honestly? It can be super simple. Just a clear idea of what you’re doing, why you’re doing it, and where you’re showing up. That alone can make things feel way less chaotic.

When you have that kind of clarity, everything gets easier; from what to post to where to spend your time. So let’s talk about why having a real strategy (even a simple one) makes such a big difference.

Why “Just Wing It” Doesn’t Work

Here’s the thing: when you don’t have a plan, marketing becomes a guessing game. One week you’re posting reels every day, the next you’re ghosting your audience because you’re burnt out or totally out of ideas. Been there.

A solid marketing strategy, even a simple one, gives you direction. It helps you stop spinning your wheels and start making decisions that actually support your goals. Instead of asking, “What should I post today?” or “Should I try that new trend everyone’s doing?”, you have a plan that already answers those questions.

It also saves you time. You’re not reinventing the wheel every week or constantly second-guessing yourself. You can show up consistently without burning out in the process.

And maybe most importantly? A strategy gives you permission to say no to things that don’t align with your goals. Just because everyone else is on TikTok doesn’t mean you need to be there.

What a Simple Strategy Actually Looks Like

Let’s clear something up: a marketing strategy doesn’t need to be a complicated, corporate-looking document. It doesn’t need charts, color codes, or a five-phase funnel plan. Honestly, it can live in a Google Doc or a few notes scribbled in your planner.

A simple strategy should answer a few key questions:

  • What are you trying to achieve?
  • Who are you trying to reach?
  • Where are you going to show up?
  • How often can you realistically show up there?

Once you’ve got that figured out, start by prioritizing two main marketing channels. Just two that make sense for your business, your bandwidth, and your goals right now. That doesn’t mean you can’t add more later—this just helps you focus your energy while you build consistency.

Here are a few examples of what that might look like:

  • Email + Instagram: A weekly newsletter and 1–2 posts per week to stay top-of-mind.
  • Blog + Pinterest: Two blog posts per month and fresh pins driving traffic back to your site.
  • Email + Google Ads: A solid nurture sequence paired with paid search for lead generation.

This isn’t about being everywhere. It’s about choosing where to focus your energy so you’re not spread too thin. When you’re consistent in a couple of places, your efforts go a lot further—and you can always expand from there when you’re ready.

Remember: consistency beats complexity every time.

Give It at Least 30 Days

Okay, real talk—marketing takes time. You can’t tell if something is working after one post, one email, or even one week. We live in a world that loves instant results, but strategy is about playing the long game.

That’s why I always suggest sticking with your plan for at least 30 days before making any big changes. Give yourself time to actually see what’s working. Are people opening your emails? Clicking your links? Showing up in your DMs? These patterns don’t reveal themselves overnight.

The key here is consistency. If you post once and disappear, of course it’s not going to feel like it’s working. But if you show up regularly for a month, you start to build trust, momentum, and clarity—because you’re actually collecting information you can use.

Marketing is part strategy, part experiment. But you have to let the experiment run before you can tweak the formula.

How to Start Building Your Own Strategy

So, where do you begin? Don’t worry—I’m not sending you off to build a 12-month content calendar. The goal here is to start small and get clear on the basics.

Here’s what I recommend:

  1. Get clear on your goals.
    What do you actually want your marketing to do right now? Bring in new clients? Build trust with your audience? Drive more traffic to your site? Of course, in business, we want to do all of those things—but each goal often requires a different approach. To keep things simple and strategic, try choosing just one main focus to start with. Once you gain some traction and feel more confident, you can layer in other goals.
  2. Think about who you’re talking to.
    You don’t need to write a 10-page ideal client profile, but it helps to have a clear picture of the kind of person you’re trying to reach. What do they care about? What problems are they trying to solve? What language do they use? And where do they hang out online? When you know your audience, your content becomes way more effective—and honestly, easier to create.
  3. Choose two marketing channels to focus on.
    Not forever—just for now. Pick platforms that make sense for your audience and feel manageable for you. Whether that’s email and Instagram, or blogging and Pinterest, what matters is that you can show up consistently. You’re not trying to do it all—you’re trying to do a few things well.
  4. Create a simple plan for what you’ll share.
    You don’t need a rigid content calendar (unless that helps you), but having a few content themes or categories can make a big difference. Think of it like a menu you can pull from each week. For example: behind-the-scenes, client stories, FAQs, tips, product features. Rotate through your go-tos and make tweaks as needed.
  5. Stick with it for 30 days, then check in.
    You don’t need instant results—you need real data and lived experience. After 30 days, look back: What felt easy? What took too much time? What got engagement or sparked conversations? Use that info to refine your approach and keep building.

You don’t need to have everything figured out from day one. You just need to start with a plan that supports you—your goals, your voice, and your time.

You Don’t Need to Do It All—You Just Need a Plan

Marketing gets a lot less overwhelming when you stop trying to do everything and start focusing on the things that actually move the needle. Your strategy doesn’t have to be complicated. It just needs to make sense for you, your goals, and the season of business you’re in.

Start simple. Give it time. And most importantly—give yourself grace as you figure it out.

Curious what working together could look like? Check out my services here, or reach out and let’s chat—I’d love to hear what you’re working on.

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