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Building Your 2018 B2B Marketing Budget

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Building Your 2018 B2B Marketing Budget

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Published by Joel Goldstein, on December 7, 2017
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It all begins with the budget, and that’s where the confusion starts as well. Every CEO asks, how much should I spend on marketing? And every marketing VP asks, where will I get the most impact?

But it’s deeper than that, of course. Beyond benchmarking against other B2B companies, there are critical questions you need to resolve in order for your marketing program to achieve something strategic, rather than merely consist of a variety of disconnected tactics.

– What’s working in branding and lead generation for you today?

– What’s your cost/quote, cost/sample request or cost/SQL (Sales Qualified Lead)? And how can we reduce that?

– How long does it take to move a prospect through your sales funnel, and how can we accelerate that?

It’s beyond just pushing out more emails or white papers. When building your budget for 2018, it’s time to get more sophisticated, more strategic and more focused on the metrics that matter ‘€“ revenue, opportunities and quote generation, not just lead generation.

Most of our clients sell to engineers, or have some degree of technical content. For companies like that, it’s common to see 5% of revenue set aside for marketing (see our ebook for the source on this). So if we consider a $25 million manufacturer, how would they spend a $1.250 million marketing budget? You might start with the framework in the budget worksheet shown here:

ggc_2018budgetchart.jpg

There’s certainly room for quite a bit of debate and discussion on that structure, and those are good conversations to have between marketing and sales teams to ensure they’re all on the same page. So after you’ve come to some consensus, it’s time to convert this activity into an ROI projection. That’s a basic formula, that you might build in this manner:

Graph 2.jpg

It’s different for every marketer, of course, and the formulas may be different in your company. For instance, your close rate on SQLs to sales might be higher or lower, or your average sale value might be lower. All that affects the lead flow your pipeline needs, and determines the level of marketing spend.

Making that connection to the CEO’s growth goal and marketing spend is critical, but few companies truly make that linkage. Here’s an example: the CEO sets a 25% growth goal, which might require 100 new $100,000 customers. If your close rate is 10:1, then you need 1000 qualified leads to enter the funnel this year to hit that number. And if your cost for generating that lead is $500, then your marketing budget will need to be $500,000.

Understanding what each of those ratio and cost numbers are for your business will ensure that your CEO and marketing budgets are aligned.

We’ve provided a variety of other recommendations on building your budget, based on a variety of research from leading b-to-b analysts and technology companies. Get your copy here, and make 2018 the year you build a budget for IMPACT!

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About the Author:

Joel Goldstein, President

Joel Goldstein, a proud graduate of Kent State University, is the president of Goldstein Group Communications, the agency he founded in 1992. While the agency has evolved during the years from its initial roots as a PR agency to become a full-service lead generation and branding firm, GGC has remained consistent in its focus on serving B2B companies that have some degree of technical or engineered content. Joel drives the agency’s strategy with a particular emphasis on incorporating new technology tools to drive improved performance, a focus on “Measurably Better Results” that has formed the foundation of the agency since its early days.

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