The Case for “Fun Money” in Your Marketing Budget
Ilene Rosenthal
C-Suite Marketing Executive helping CEOs and Marketing teams avoid waste and risk in marketing investment. [Fractional CMO]
Here’s a question we don’t ask ourselves enough: What happens when this year’s marketing allocation actually works??
Of course, we know what happens. Better brand awareness. More customers. Increased sales. Company growth.?
But what does it mean for next year’s budget??
Well, the obvious move is that you take next year’s budget and allocate it for most of the stuff that worked. This makes sense—you want more of everything referenced above, so you need the funds to keep that engine running.
I’m more curious about budgeting for the “stick your neck out” kind of stuff. The never-been-done, creative strategies you might test next year with one eye firmly on the future. The long plays—the ones that might not get reported as part of your weekly KPIs, but those that represent ambitious opportunities down the road.?
The “fun money.”?
Now, I’m not advocating that we think about marketing budgets through the context of personal finances. There’s a big difference between splurging on an expensive dinner or weekend getaway and allocating a certain percentage of your organization’s marketing dollars to efforts that may or may not bear fruit. There’s nothing “fun” about taking risks on new strategies—especially when you’re on a tight budget.
But, when you have the funds, and you plan for it, it gets easier to make those decisions guilt-free. Should I allocate it where it works to ensure more of a good thing? Or, do I go outside my comfort zone to try something different?
Before I talk through some strategies for making those decisions, I want to acknowledge the anxiety of determining marketing strategy—and spending—in general. The world is changing faster than we can gain our footing. We’re running so fast to keep our engines humming—our lead generation funnels, content creation, PR strategies, and digital platforms—that we forget the basics.?
I know I’m guilty of this. Part of this is because I’m not a “back to basics” person. You’ll never be able to pry my newest-generation iPhone out of my hands and replace it with a flip phone , even if those new versions Samsung’s rolled out in recent months have admittedly piqued my interest. But, just as the humble flip phone is making a comeback, I’m advocating that getting back to basics is actually the best way to plan to spend those opportunistic marketing dollars.
I’m talking, my friends, about using a good, old-fashioned SWOT analysis to take some of the stress off a big shift to the unknown in order to make those determinations.?
Step #1: SWOT your marketing budget opportunities?
Let’s say you’ve allocated 75% of your marketing budget to proven activities that will keep your engines going and continue to give you the results you want, which leaves 25% for the bright and shiny.?
Here’s how you might start to think about allocating that spend through a SWOT analysis.
Strengths
When your investment has powered success, there are ways to reinforce what you’ve already achieved. But we might also take a deep breath and step out into a set of testable scenarios you’ve always wondered about. In all cases, the learning you’ll yield from leveraging your strengths will serve you for future strategy. For example:
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Weaknesses
Here you’re looking to prevent anything that might disrupt your marketing from performing at its highest level. Some elements might be:
Opportunities?
Opportunities are often connected to big swings of the P&L. Strong financial performance can support brand activity that has a longer timeframe to yield revenue; lean times often call for out-of-the-box experimentation. Here are a few considerations if you find yourself with some opportunistic cash:?
Note: Be sure your “give back” aligns with your brand values and actions. Your customers are smart, and they’ll see through a gratuitous association with a cause or nonprofit organization.?
Threats
While strengths in our business fuel our tolerance for uncertainty, pressurized conditions put us on the defensive. Hidden within may be opportunities to allocate resources to creative defense measures, such as:
Step #2: Calculate your most “future-focused” opportunities
Budgets are a reflection of business strategies across all elements of a business—product development, technology, human resources, marketing, you name it. To drive true growth, we need our marketing strategies to be directed at only the most important things—and our budgets need to mirror that.?
In essence, budgets become our fuel for that growth—if they’re forward-thinking and mapped to ambitions that drive the business forward. Otherwise, they’re just a bunch of numbers.?
As you think through all of these actions you could take with your marketing dollars, make sure you’re thinking: how future-focused are each of these opportunities?
Take that last SWOT example I shared—the competitor going public. As you’re planning your defense, are you fighting back with additional advertising to support your brand—a more measurable, immediate, potentially short-term lift—or an entire refresh and relaunch of your brand identity: a bigger, more foundational, sustaining, and long-term lift??
I’m not saying the most future-focused opportunity will always be the best answer, but I do think that getting into the habit of assessing our opportunistic marketing spend through this lens is a good one.
Because in the end, this isn’t “fun money” in the way we typically think about it in our personal lives—spending it on our wants instead of our needs. Marketing fun money gives us the chance to test, explore, and expand, but whether it’s bright and shiny or traditional and effective, we all want it to do the same thing—drive growth and meet business objectives.?
Next Up: Personal Branding: A Risk, Or Your Company's Competitive Advantage
Communications as Business Advisor Activist * Founder, Raise the Tide? * Advisor to Fortune 500 Communications & PR Teams * Communications Leader Coach *
1 年Great assessment Illene. One thing I caution companies against is going toward that shiny object just because it's shiny. Hearing "we need to be on Tik Tok" (or related) is something we often hear in the Communications world. My response is always "why? to achieve what?" I'm 100 percent IN for trying new things, as long as they are aligned with business goals and not simply because "everyone is doing it."
Helping nonprofit execs diversify revenue & scale gen-ops dollars so they can invest in infrastructure to grow.
1 年Yes! Couldn't agree more! You once told me "sometimes you've just gotta try things!"