Budgets aren't sexy, but they are one of the major prerequisites of high-performing marketing organizations.

And the trick to developing a best-in-class marketing budget is, first, to form a new conceptualization of what marketing is; then, to know the correct budget type for your growth stage; and, finally, to understand the power of stretch budgets.

If you can master those three keys, you'll create a best-in-class marketing budget—and be well on your way to marketing success.

1. The best marketing budgets start with new ideas about what Marketing is

It's no surprise that high-performing marketers average 14 marketing tools, double that of underperformers, according to the State of Marketing 2017 report by Salesforce. Moreover, high-performing marketing organizations plan to increase their spending on tools and technology in the coming year, the report also found.

So, those high-performers have not only larger budgets already but also plans to grow those budgets significantly still.

Best-in-class marketing budgets don't just happen; the highest levels of the business support them. We have all tried to ask for more money—only to be told "no." High-performers don't have that issue, because their executives have a better understanding of what it takes to be a high-performing marketing organizing.

In short, they understand marketing and best-in-class marketing budgets aren't what they used to be.

And without the adoption of current ideas about marketing—without a new conceptualization of marketing—your organization will be stuck with an old budget from a different marketing era.

Accordingly, executives must first by into these four tenets of modern marketing:

  1. Marketing is no longer a siloed department.
  2. The new consumer is not like the old.
  3. Marketing has an enormously larger role and scope.
  4. Technology is the only way to scale modern marketing efforts.

If your executive team can give you full support on those four ideas, and not just that they need more marketing, then you have change at getting a best-in-class marketing budget. If they cannot, they will expect you to be a magician, not a marketer.

Make sure you know the difference between those differing expectations, so you know when it's time to leave!

2. The best marketing budgets match your growth stage

Once the executive team has bought into the new understanding of marketing, it's time to begin setting your actual budget.

The biggest factor determining your best-in-class budget is your business's growth stage: Companies that are stable and looking only to maintain their position in a market should have a budget that's very different from the budgets of those that are looking for very fast growth.

If all you need to do is maintain branding, a budget of 2% (based on gross revenue) is a decent budget at the low end of the spectrum; at the high end, you may see up to 6% for very progressive companies in the same stage of growth.

Traditionally, Marketing's average budget was just 2% of gross revenue; now, however, the average-growth budget is between 7% and 12% of gross revenue.

Enter your email address to continue reading

Three Keys to Best-in-Class Marketing Budgets

Don't worry...it's free!

Already a member? Sign in now.

Sign in with your preferred account, below.

Did you like this article?
Know someone who would enjoy it too? Share with your friends, free of charge, no sign up required! Simply share this link, and they will get instant access…
  • Copy Link

  • Email

  • Twitter

  • Facebook

  • Pinterest

  • Linkedin


ABOUT THE AUTHOR

image of Mathew Sweezey

Mathew Sweezey is principal of marketing insights at Salesforce.com, a global leader in CRM software. He is also the author of Marketing Automation for Dummies.

LinkedIn: Mathew Sweezey

Twitter: @msweezey