Let’s be honest—marketing can feel overwhelming, confusing, and sometimes downright frustrating.
You’re running a business, serving clients, and trying to keep all the plates spinning. And somewhere in there, you’re supposed to be consistently marketing yourself, staying visible, generating leads, and building your brand.
No pressure, right?
If you’ve ever found yourself Googling things like “how often should I post on social media?” at 11pm, or wondering if you’re the only one who feels like everyone else has marketing figured out—you’re not alone. Not even close.
I’ve spent 25 years in marketing, and I’ve heard every question, every concern, and every “am I doing this wrong?” moment. I’ve worked with hundreds of business owners just like you—experienced professionals who’ve started their own businesses (often as a second act), who are brilliant at what they do, but feel lost in the marketing maze.
Here’s what I know: You don’t need more generic advice or complicated frameworks. You need honest, practical answers to your actual questions.
That’s what this guide is.
Inside, you’ll find answers to over 100 real questions that business owners ask me—from strategy and planning to the nitty-gritty of social media, email marketing, SEO, paid ads, and even how to deal with the mindset blocks that keep you from showing up consistently.
This isn’t textbook theory. It’s real-world, down-to-earth guidance from someone who’s been in the trenches. No jargon. No patronising “just do this one simple thing” nonsense. No bro-marketing hype.
Just clear, honest answers that respect your intelligence and your time.
Use this guide however works for you:
You don’t have to have it all figured out. You don’t have to do everything. You just need to take the next right step—and hopefully, this guide helps you see what that step is.
Let’s get into it.
A marketing strategy is your game plan for attracting and keeping customers. It’s not a fancy document gathering dust—it’s your answer to: “Who am I trying to reach, what do they need, and how will I show up to help them?”
Do you need one? If you want to grow your business consistently rather than lurching from one random tactic to another—yes. But it doesn’t need to be complicated. A solid strategy can fit on two pages.
Want help check Marketing Strategy for Entrepreneurs Over 40: No TikTok required
Look at the numbers that actually matter to your business goals:
If you’re busy but not profitable, something’s not working. If you’re getting enquiries but from the wrong people, your targeting needs adjusting. Track the metrics that tie directly to revenue, not just vanity numbers like followers.
Strategy is the “what” and “why”—your overall approach and the reasoning behind it. Tactics are the “how”—the specific actions you take.
Think of it this way:
Strategy guides your decisions. Tactics execute them. You need both, but strategy comes first—otherwise you’re just randomly posting on social media because someone said you should.
I recommend quarterly reviews for your strategy. That’s frequent enough to spot what’s working (or not) without constantly changing direction.
Do a deeper annual review where you look at the bigger picture: Has your ideal client changed? Are you targeting the right pain points? Should you shift focus to different channels?
That said, if something’s clearly not working after 3-6 months of consistent effort, don’t wait for your quarterly review—adjust sooner. Just make sure you’ve given it a proper chance first.
The top ones I see:
Start simple. You don’t need a 50-page document.
Here’s your minimum viable strategy:
Write this down. Review it monthly. That’s already better than most businesses.
Then, block out realistic time for marketing—even if it’s just 3-5 hours a week. Consistency beats perfection every time.
Absolutely. What works when you’re starting out won’t work when you’re scaling.
Early stage (0-2 years): You’re probably doing lots of one-to-one networking, maybe speaking at events, building relationships. Your marketing is quite manual and personal.
Growth stage (2-5 years): You need systems that work while you sleep—email sequences, content marketing, maybe some paid ads. You’re moving from “I know everyone in my network” to “I need ways to reach people I don’t know yet.”
Scaling stage (5+ years): You’re potentially building a team, refining your positioning, possibly niching down further or expanding your offer.
Review your strategy as your business evolves. What got you here won’t necessarily get you there.
Work backwards from your business goal.
If your goal is to generate £100K in revenue this year:
Everything in your marketing strategy should ladder up to your revenue goals. If an activity doesn’t contribute to getting you clients (even indirectly), question why you’re doing it.
The textbook answer is 5-10% of your revenue, but that’s not always realistic when you’re starting out or bootstrapping.
Here’s what I actually see working:
If you’re just starting: Invest time more than money. Maybe £50-100/month for essential tools (email marketing, social media scheduler). Your “budget” is your time.
Once you’re generating consistent revenue: Aim for 5-10% of revenue. So if you’re making £50K, that’s £2,500-5,000 annually (£200-400/month).
When you’re scaling: You might increase to 10-15% temporarily to fuel growth.
Remember: “marketing budget” includes tools, ads, content creation, outsourcing help, training—anything that helps you attract and keep customers.
Ask yourself three questions:
Then pick ONE primary channel and ONE supporting channel. Master those before adding more.
For most service-based businesses, I’d suggest:
Don’t try to do everything. Do two things brilliantly.
Not necessarily different strategies, but potentially different messaging and tactics.
Your overarching strategy (who you serve, your positioning, your values) stays consistent. But:
Think of it as one strategy with different routes to purchase depending on what someone’s buying.
Track these:
Stop obsessing over these:
Focus on metrics that tie to money. Everything else is interesting but not essential.
First, they probably aren’t as omnipresent as they appear—you’re just noticing them because they’re in your space.
Second, your strategy shouldn’t be about matching competitors move-for-move. It should be about:
Study competitors for ideas, but don’t let them dictate your strategy. There’s room for everyone when you’re clear on who you serve and why.
Yes! Plenty of businesses thrive without social media.
Alternatives include:
Social media can be powerful, but it’s not mandatory. If it drains you or your audience isn’t there, invest your energy elsewhere.
Minimum: One month ahead Ideal: Three months ahead Strategic: Annual themes with quarterly plans
Here’s what this looks like practically:
Planning too far ahead (6+ months of detailed content) often leads to plans you never follow because circumstances change. Planning too little (this week only) keeps you in constant reaction mode.
Find the sweet spot: quarterly planning with monthly detail.
Business plan = the big picture of your entire business:
Marketing plan = how you’ll attract and retain customers:
Think of it this way: your business plan says “what” you’re building. Your marketing plan says “how” you’ll get customers for it.
The secret: make it realistic, not aspirational.
Start with your capacity:
Then build your calendar:
A calendar with 2 posts a week that you stick to beats 5 posts a week you abandon by week three.
Annual planning is your strategic view:
Quarterly planning is your tactical execution:
Annual planning sets your direction. Quarterly planning keeps you on track and lets you adjust based on results.
It depends on your business stage, but here’s a rough guide:
Minimum (just starting): 5-7 hours/week
Moderate (established, growing): 10-15 hours/week
Optimal (if marketing is your priority): 20+ hours/week This is when you’re treating marketing as a core business function, not a side task.
The key: block this time in your diary like you would client work. Marketing isn’t “if I have time”—it’s how you ensure you have future clients.
Map your year first:
Then plan strategically:
3 months before peak season: Ramp up content, build your list, nurture relationships
During peak season: Focus on conversion—sales emails, special offers, making it easy to buy. Keep marketing simple and efficient.
After peak season: Deliver for clients, gather testimonials, create case studies
During quiet periods: This is your time to batch-create content, plan campaigns, learn new skills, build relationships for the long game
Don’t stop marketing during busy periods—just make it lower-effort.
Plan themes, but leave room for spontaneity.
Why themes work:
How to use themes:
But yes, if something timely or important comes up—absolutely post about it. Themes are a framework, not a straitjacket.
Follow the 80/20 rule:
In practice:
The businesses with the most “spontaneous-looking” content usually have the strongest planning underneath.
Here it is—one page:
Your focus this quarter:
Your weekly commitment:
Your measure of success:
Your budget:
That’s it. Review monthly. Adjust if it’s not working.
Batch-create wherever possible—it’s more efficient and reduces decision fatigue.
What works well batched:
What might work better fresh:
The hybrid approach: batch your planned content, stay flexible for spontaneous posts.
If you’re inconsistent with marketing, batching is your secret weapon. It removes the daily decision of “what should I post today?”
This is the eternal struggle. Here’s what actually works:
Treat marketing like client work:
Work in seasons:
Do less, but consistently:
Repurpose everything:
Outsource the execution, not the strategy:
Remember: No clients today = no business tomorrow. Marketing isn’t optional.
Start with paid ads when:
Don’t start with ads if:
Ads accelerate what’s already working—they don’t fix broken foundations.
Google Ads (Search):
Facebook/Instagram Ads:
LinkedIn Ads:
Choose based on where your audience is and what they’re doing when you need to reach them.
Testing phase: £300-500/month minimum
Once profitable: 10-30% of revenue from ads can be reinvested
Scaling phase: Could be significantly more if your ROI supports it
The real question isn’t “how much should I spend?” but “what return am I getting?”
Start small, test, measure ruthlessly, scale what works.
Yes, but you need to be strategic:
Choose one platform (don’t spread £500 across three platforms)
Focus on one specific audience (narrow targeting = more bang for your buck)
Have a simple funnel:
Use retargeting (ads to people who’ve visited your website—cheaper and higher converting)
Track everything (with limited budget, you can’t afford to waste money on what doesn’t work)
Set expectations: £500/month isn’t going to transform your business overnight, but it can generate leads and build awareness.
Some of the most effective campaigns I’ve seen were on tight budgets because they were forced to be focused and strategic.
It varies wildly by industry, but here are some benchmarks:
E-commerce: 3:1 to 5:1 (£3-5 revenue for every £1 spent) Services/B2B: 5:1 to 10:1 or higher High-ticket offers: Could be 20:1+ but might take longer to see results
Reality check:
Also consider: Customer lifetime value
Track both initial ROAS and lifetime value for a true picture.
Ask yourself:
Where does my audience spend time?
What am I selling?
What’s my budget?
What’s my content strength?
Test one platform properly for 2-3 months before adding others. Most businesses are better served mastering one channel than dabbling in several.
Learn it yourself if:
Hire someone if:
Middle ground: Take a course or get coaching to understand the basics, then hire someone to execute. You’ll be able to assess if they’re doing a good job.
Red flag: Agencies or freelancers who won’t explain what they’re doing or share data. You should always have access to your own ad accounts.
Remarketing (or retargeting) = showing ads to people who’ve already interacted with your business (visited your website, engaged with your content, watched your video).
Why it’s powerful:
Should you use it? Absolutely, if you have website traffic.
How to start:
Often, remarketing is where businesses see their best ROI from paid ads.
Minimum: 2-4 weeks to gather meaningful data
Realistic: 2-3 months to optimise properly
Here’s the timeline:
Week 1-2: Gathering data, algorithm learning
Week 3-4: Initial insights
Month 2: Optimisation phase
Month 3: Should see clear patterns
Exception: If you’re spending money with zero results (no clicks, no engagement) after week 2, something’s fundamentally wrong—investigate immediately.
Most wasted ad spend comes from impatience, poor targeting, or weak conversion funnels—not the ads themselves.
No—in fact, ads can help you build your list.
You don’t need:
You do need:
That said: Having an existing audience helps with remarketing (which is cheaper and converts better), but it’s not a prerequisite for starting ads.
If you have zero audience and zero budget, build organically first. But if you have budget and want to accelerate growth, ads are a valid strategy even from day one—just make sure your foundations are solid.
SEO (Search Engine Optimisation) is making your website show up when people search Google (or other search engines) for things related to what you offer.
Think of it like this: When someone types “marketing consultant Portsmouth” or “how to create a marketing strategy” into Google, SEO is what helps your website appear in those results instead of your competitor’s.
It involves:
The goal: free, qualified traffic from people actively looking for what you offer.
Yes—especially as a local business.
Local SEO can be incredibly powerful because:
What local SEO looks like:
Someone searching “freelance marketing consultant Portsmouth” has high intent—they’re ready to hire someone local. That’s free, qualified traffic you’re missing if you ignore SEO.
On-page SEO = what you do on your own website:
Off-page SEO = what happens outside your website:
Think of it this way:
You control on-page completely. Off-page requires building relationships and creating content others want to reference.
You can DIY if:
Hire an agency if:
Middle ground: Hire a consultant or coach for strategy and learning, then execute yourself or with a VA.
Warning: SEO agencies vary wildly in quality. Get referrals, ask about their process, avoid anyone promising “page 1 in 30 days.”
Quality over quantity, always.
Minimum: 1 substantial piece per month (1,500+ words) Moderate: 2-4 pieces per month Aggressive: Weekly content
What matters more than frequency:
Reality check: One comprehensive, well-optimised article per month will outperform rushed daily posts.
Focus on:
Google rewards depth and usefulness, not just volume.
Keywords = the words and phrases people type into search engines.
Examples:
How to find the right keywords:
Example: “marketing” (too broad, impossible to rank) vs “marketing strategy for service-based businesses” (more specific, achievable)
No. You need to be clear and helpful, not Booker Prize-worthy.
What Google (and humans) actually want:
You don’t need:
What helps:
If you can explain your service to a friend over coffee, you can write SEO content. The “brilliance” is in the knowledge you share, not the writing style.
Very important. They have always been one of Google’s strongest ranking signals, although there is some debate right now as to whether they are still important. In fact with more AI search it appears to be becoming even more important as a trust factor.
I look at it like this. If you have useful relevant content you will get them. DO NOT PAY FOR RANDOM BACKLINKS – this will not help!
Backlinks = other websites linking to your site. Google sees them as “votes of confidence.”
Quality matters more than quantity:
How to get quality backlinks:
What not to do:
SEO is possible without loads of backlinks if you’re in a low-competition niche, but for most topics, backlinks are essential for ranking well.
Maybe, but probably fixable.
What genuinely hurts SEO:
What doesn’t matter as much:
Quick test:
Bottom line: If your site loads reasonably fast, works on mobile, and has useful content, SEO can work. If it’s genuinely terrible (think 2005 aesthetic and doesn’t work on phones), you might need an update—but focus on function over fancy design.
Local SEO = optimising to show up for location-based searches.
Regular SEO: You rank for “marketing consultant” Local SEO: You rank for “marketing consultant Portsmouth” or “marketing consultant near me”
Key differences:
Local SEO focuses on:
Regular SEO focuses on:
Why local SEO is easier:
If you serve clients in a specific geographic area, local SEO should be your priority.
Absolutely yes if you serve local customers or have a physical location.
Why it’s essential:
Even if you’re not location-dependent (like an online consultant), a Google Business Profile can help if you want to rank in a particular area.
What to do:
Tip: Most businesses set this up then forget about it. Active management of your profile gives you a competitive edge.
Organic search = free listings in search results (earned through SEO):
Paid search = ads you pay for in search results (Google Ads):
Which to choose?
Use organic (SEO) if:
Use paid if:
Best approach: Both. Paid ads for immediate results while building SEO for the long term.
Yes, but it’s harder.
Why blogs help SEO:
How to do SEO without a blog:
Reality: Most businesses that rank well for competitive terms have some form of content beyond service pages. It doesn’t have to be called a “blog”—call it resources, insights, guides—whatever fits your brand.
Bottom line: You can rank without a blog if you’re in a low-competition niche or focusing on local SEO, but content marketing (blogging) makes SEO significantly easier.
You’re not alone—this is incredibly common, especially for experienced professionals who’ve spent years being valued for their expertise, not their ability to sell themselves.
Common reasons:
Reframe it:
Start small:
Remember: The discomfort eases with practice. Getting confident with your marketing is essential but every successful business owner felt this way at the start.
First, acknowledge that fear is normal. You’re making yourself vulnerable. That’s uncomfortable.
Why we fear visibility:
Strategies that actually help:
Truth: The fear never completely disappears, but you build tolerance. Most of the awful things you imagine happening… don’t.
Absolutely not. This is a limiting belief, not reality.
Why you’re not too old:
The tech isn’t as complicated as it seems:
Your advantage:
What holds people back isn’t age—it’s:
Start where you are. Learn one thing at a time. Your age is an asset, not a liability.
First, understand: you’re comparing your behind-the-scenes to their highlight reel.
You see:
You don’t see:
Practical strategies:
Reality check: Most “successful” people struggle with the same doubts you do. They’ve just learned to keep going anyway.
Yes. Completely normal.
Why you feel behind:
The truth:
What actually matters:
Let go of:
Focus on:
Reframe: You’re not behind. You’re right where you need to be, taking the next step.
This is the million-pound question. Consistency is where most people fail.
Why we struggle with consistency:
Strategies that actually work:
The secret: Consistency is a practice, not a personality trait. You build it like a muscle.
They don’t. They just don’t show you the struggle.
What you’re seeing:
What you’re not seeing:
Also remember:
It gets easier with practice:
Focus on your own progress:
Give yourself permission: It’s okay for marketing to feel hard. That’s normal. You’re learning a new skill while running a business. That’s not easy—for anyone.
The key: lead with value, not transactions.
What feels pushy:
What doesn’t feel pushy:
Reframe “selling” as “inviting”:
The value-first approach:
Remember:
Make it feel natural:
The guilt-free framework:
You’re not pushy. You’re available to help those who need it.
The perfectionist’s dilemma: Nothing’s ever quite good enough, so nothing gets published.
Reality check:
Why perfectionism holds you back:
The “good enough” framework:
Ask yourself:
If yes to all four—publish it.
Set standards, not perfection:
Strategies that help:
The paradox: Your audience values authenticity more than polish. Slightly rough content that’s genuinely helpful beats perfectly polished fluff every time.
Permission slip: Post it. It’s good enough.
No! Absolutely not.
The multi-platform myth:
Better approach: Go deep on 1-2 platforms
Why focus works:
How to choose your platforms:
Permission: If you hate Instagram, don’t be on Instagram. There are other ways to reach clients.
Reality check: Most successful businesses focus on one primary platform and maybe one secondary. They’re not posting 5x daily across 7 platforms.
Depends on who you serve and what you offer.
LinkedIn:
Instagram:
Facebook:
YouTube:
TikTok:
Twitter/X:
For most service-based businesses serving other businesses: LinkedIn is your best bet.
Good news: You don’t have to share personal stuff to be successful on social media.
What to post instead:
The “personal” you can include without oversharing:
You can be authentic without being personal. Professional authenticity is about honest perspectives, not family photos.
First: Following size matters far less than engagement and relevance.
That said, here’s how to grow organically:
What doesn’t work:
Timeline: Growing organically takes 6-12 months to see real momentum. Be patient.
Ideal world: Both. But if you have to choose…
Start with organic if:
Add paid ads when:
The reality:
Smart approach:
Think of it this way:
Both have a role. Organic is your foundation; paid is your amplifier.
Reach: Number of unique people who saw your content
Impressions: Total number of times your content was displayed
Engagement: Actions people took on your content
Why it matters:
High reach, low engagement:
Lower reach, high engagement:
What to focus on:
Calculate engagement rate: (Total engagements ÷ Reach) × 100
A 3-5% engagement rate is decent; 5-10% is good; 10%+ is excellent.
Bottom line: Don’t obsess over impressions. Focus on whether people care enough to engage.
Great news: You don’t have to be on camera to succeed.
Alternatives to video content:
If you want to dip your toes into video without being on camera:
Remember: Some of the most successful accounts never show the creator’s face. Your knowledge and insights matter more than your appearance.
That said: If you’re avoiding video purely from fear (not preference), gently push yourself. It gets easier with practice, and video does build connection faster. But it’s not mandatory for success.
If you’re B2B or serving professionals: Absolutely yes.
Why LinkedIn is powerful for business:
LinkedIn works especially well for:
What success looks like on LinkedIn:
First, differentiate between constructive criticism and trolling:
Constructive criticism: Disagrees with substance, offers perspective Trolling: Personal attacks, inflammatory, no substance
Handling constructive criticism:
Handling trolls:
Always: report to the platform
Never:
Remember:
Set boundaries:
Perspective: If you’re getting 99 positive/neutral reactions and 1 negative, don’t let the 1 outweigh the 99.
When to worry: If multiple people are giving similar constructive feedback, there might be something to address. But one troll? Ignore and move on.
Repurposing = getting multiple uses from one piece of content.
Why it’s brilliant:
One piece of content can become:
Example: You write a blog post about “5 Marketing Mistakes”
The key: Adapt for each platform
Simple repurposing workflow:
Tools that help:
Permission: You’re not being lazy—you’re being strategic. Your followers on LinkedIn likely don’t see your Instagram, so sharing similar content isn’t redundant.
Comments: Yes, as much as possible.
Why responding matters:
Prioritise:
Set boundaries:
DMs: It depends.
Respond to:
Ignore or brief response:
Boundaries are okay:
Reality check:
The goal: Be responsive without it consuming all your time.
Start simple. A content calendar doesn’t need to be complicated.
Minimum viable calendar:
Step-by-step:
Tools to make it easier:
Pro tips:
The secret: A basic plan you use > an elaborate system you abandon.
AI can genuinely help—but it’s a tool, not a magic solution.
Where AI excels:
Where AI falls short:
The reality:
Bottom line: Yes, AI helps—if you use it strategically and edit heavily. No, it won’t do your marketing for you.
Yes, if you use AI-generated content without editing.
Common AI “tells”:
How to avoid sounding like AI:
Think of AI like a junior writer:
Reality check: People can usually tell when content is pure AI. But AI + your authentic voice = efficient and still sounds human.
Depends on your needs, but here are solid options:
For content creation:
ChatGPT (OpenAI)
Claude (Anthropic)
Jasper
For design:
Canva (AI features)
Midjourney / DALL-E
For video:
Descript (video editing with AI)
Don’t fall for: Every shiny new AI tool. Master 2-3 tools deeply rather than dabble in 20.
The secret: Use AI as a thinking partner, not a content creator.
Effective prompting strategies:
Best practice workflow:
Red flags your content is too AI:
Make it yours: If someone who knows you wouldn’t recognise it as your writing, edit more.
Yes, but with caveats.
How AI speeds up content creation:
The quality question:
AI can maintain quality if:
AI risks quality if:
Realistic time savings:
The trade-off:
Bottom line: AI helps you create more content in less time, but quality depends on how much of yourself you inject into the final product.
Legally and ethically: It’s complicated and evolving.
Current best practices:
You probably don’t need to disclose if:
You should disclose if:
How to disclose (if you choose to):
The real questions:
Perspective:
Pragmatic approach:
Your reputation rests on the quality and accuracy of your content, not whether AI was involved.
AI can be surprisingly helpful for data analysis—even if you’re not a data person.
What AI can help with:
Using AI responsibly matters—for your reputation and your clients.
Key ethical considerations:
Best practices:
Do:
Don’t:
Guiding principle: Use AI as a tool to do better work, not to cut corners or deceive. Your reputation is built on trust—don’t compromise it for efficiency.
I hope you found this FAQ useful. You can find more helpful content on my Blog
Note: For transparency this post was created with AI assistance.
Email is absolutely not dead. In fact, it’s one of the highest-ROI marketing channels.
Why email still works:
What has changed:
Every time someone declares “email is dead,” another business quietly makes thousands from their email list.
Social media is rented land. Your email list is yours.
Want to get started with email marketing?
Short answer: Weekly is the sweet spot for most small businesses.
Longer answer: It depends on you, your business and how much you want to. But
The truth: People unsubscribe because your content isn’t relevant or valuable, not because you email too often.
What actually annoys people:
Test frequency with your audience. Start with fortnightly, gauge reaction, increase to weekly if engagement stays strong.
The best emails follow this structure:
Create something valuable people actually want (lead magnet):
Where to promote it:
Make signup easy:
Grow over time:
What doesn’t work:
Industry benchmarks (roughly):
But context matters:
Your open rate can be higher if:
Lower open rates might mean:
Click rates depend on:
Focus less on benchmarks, more on trends:
A small, engaged list of 100 people with 40% open rates beats a list of 5,000 with 10% open rates.
Newsletter:
Nurture sequence (or automation):
Example nurture sequence:
Use both:
Most businesses should set up a simple welcome sequence first, then add regular newsletters.
What makes people delete without reading:
For most small businesses, these are solid choices:
Mailchimp
Mailerlite
ConvertKit
ActiveCampaign
Flodesk
Choose based on:
Honestly? They all send emails. Pick one and learn it well rather than platform-hopping.
Want more advice on what tools you need for marketing your business – access The Toolbox. Over 100 tools to help you setup, manage and run your business.
Make the value crystal clear:
Create a compelling lead magnet:
Make signup forms visible:
Promote it everywhere:
Remove friction:
Build trust first:
Social proof helps:
Biggest mistake: Expecting people to sign up without a clear, valuable reason to do so.