“How much should I be spending on digital marketing?” is one of the most common questions we get — and most answers online are written for big corporates. Here’s a grounded view for a small American business.
There’s no single magic number
Marketing spend depends on your margins, your goals and how fast you want to grow. A common rule of thumb is that small businesses invest a small percentage of revenue into marketing — more if you’re actively growing, less if you’re ticking over. But a percentage alone is a blunt tool.
Think in terms of return, not just cost
The better question isn’t “what’s the going rate?” — it’s “what is a new customer worth to me, and how much can I spend to win one?” A garage where the average customer returns for years can afford to invest more to acquire that customer than a one-off, low-value sale. Know your numbers first.
Rough ranges to expect
To give you a sense of the landscape:
- A professional WordPress website: typically a few thousand dollars as a project.
- SEO or social retainers: usually a few hundred to a few thousand dollars a month, depending on scope.
- Paid ads: budget is separate from management fees and should be set by what a lead is worth to you.
- Ongoing marketing overall: scale it to the return it generates, and grow the budget as it proves itself.
These are starting points, not gospel — your own numbers should drive the decision.
Where small budgets should go first
If your budget is tight, sequence matters more than size. In most cases the best-returning order is: a fast, conversion-ready website first; then local SEO and your Google profile; then content; then paid ads to accelerate once the foundations work. Spending on ads while pointing them at a weak website is the most common way to waste money.
The smaller your budget, the more it matters that every dollar goes to the right thing — which is exactly what a proper plan is for.
Want to know where you stand? Get a free, no-nonsense visibility audit — we’ll show you exactly where you rank and the three fixes that would help most.
Figures are indicative of the American market and will vary by sector, location and provider.