We’ve been doing this long enough to know that most marketing advice sounds the same. “Know your audience.” “Create compelling content.” Thanks, very helpful.
Here’s what actually moves the needle for the small and mid-size businesses we work with:
Figure out who you’re actually talking to
Not “women 25-45 who like coffee.” That’s a demographic, not a person. We mean: what does your best customer care about? What made them pick you over the other options? Talk to your actual customers. Read your reviews. The answers are usually more specific and more useful than whatever a persona template tells you.
Stop making content for the sake of content
Posting three times a week on Instagram because someone said you should isn’t a strategy. One good post that actually shows what you do is worth more than a week of stock photos with motivational quotes. If you don’t have something worth saying, it’s okay to not post.
Pick your platforms and commit
You don’t need to be on every social platform. If your customers are on Instagram, be great on Instagram. If they find you through Google, invest in your website and SEO. Spreading yourself thin across six platforms means you’re mediocre on all of them.
Actually look at your numbers
Most businesses set up Google Analytics and never look at it again. Even checking once a month can tell you what pages people actually visit, where they drop off, and what’s driving traffic. You don’t need a data science degree — just look at the trends and adjust.
Email still works
It’s not glamorous, but email consistently outperforms social media for conversions. A short, useful email to people who actually want to hear from you beats shouting into the social media void every time. Keep it brief, keep it relevant, don’t email people every day.
Be honest about what’s not working
This is the hard one. If something isn’t generating leads or sales after a reasonable amount of time, stop doing it. Marketing budgets aren’t infinite. Put the money where you’re seeing results and cut what’s not pulling its weight.
None of this is revolutionary. But the businesses that actually do these things consistently are the ones that grow. The ones that chase every new trend and spread themselves thin are the ones that stay stuck.

