2016 SMALL BUSINESS MARKETING TRENDS REPORT
[Pages:14]2016 SMALL BUSINESS MARKETING TRENDS REPORT
A LEADPAGES & INFUSIONSOFT RESEARCH PROJECT
Today's small businesses have more marketing options than ever before. In the land of digital marketing tools alone, analytics are ever more powerful, automation is ever farther-reaching, and targeting is ever more precise.
With that power has come increasing complexity. According to , from 2014 to 2015 the number of marketing technology companies almost doubled, from 947 to 1,876. Together, Infusionsoft and LeadPages serve tens of thousands of small and medium-sized businesses with software that makes their marketing easier and more effective. We wondered: Are small businesses taking advantage of this expanding field of platforms, tools, and opportunities? Or are they sticking to a few tried and true strategies? Most importantly: What will successful small business marketing look like in 2016?
To find out, we surveyed a panel of more than 1,000 small business owners from across the U.S. The results paint a rich picture of the state of small business marketing in 2016. In this report, we'll examine: ? Goals and Priorities: What are small business owners hoping to achieve with their marketing
in 2016? ? Challenges: What are small business owners struggling with and seeking to improve in 2016? ? Tactics: What tools and techniques are small business owners trying out (and succeeding
with) as they move toward their marketing goals? ? Opportunities: What advantages can small business owners seize in 2016 that will help them
reach their goals and get ahead of their competition? ? Trends and Predictions: Finally, we'll share the trends we predict will come to the forefront of
small business marketing in 2016.
1 2016 Small Business Marketing Trends Report |
METHODOLOGY
In December 2015, Infusionsoft and LeadPages surveyed a panel of 1,026 self-identified small business owners from across the U.S. via an online questionnaire they accessed with a mobile device. Respondents were not necessarily customers of Infusionsoft or LeadPages, and the survey did not identify us as sponsors. We asked these small business owners a slate of 10 questions (shown with their answers in charts throughout this report). While not all respondents answered all questions, we received at least 1,000 responses for each question.
Summary of Data
TOP INSIGHTS ? Small business marketing can be a lonely job: Nearly half (47 percent) of small business owners handle marketing efforts on their own. ? Digital marketing is far from universal in the small business world: Nearly one in five small business owners do not plan to use digital marketing at all in 2016. ? Tracking the return on their marketing investment is a major struggle for small business owners. Nearly half of those surveyed said they don't know whether they're marketing effectively--and 14 percent know they aren't. ? Following up with leads and customers is also a tough task. Twenty-one percent of small business owners don't store contact information anywhere, while only 24 percent use customer relationship management (CRM) software and 20 percent use an email marketing service provider. Forty-five percent don't maintain an email list that prospective customers can opt into. ? Most small businesses are still using a fairly unsophisticated digital marketing stack. Forty-one percent use only one or two software applications in their marketing, and another 26 percent use three or four.
2 2016 Small Business Marketing Trends Report |
? About half of small businesses plan to invest more in their websites in 2016, and half plan to increase their web advertising budgets. But that doesn't mean that analog marketing tactics are dead: About a quarter of small business owners plan to spend more on print ads or direct mail, and 14 percent will spend more on telemarketing or in-person marketing.
? Fifty-eight percent of small business owners are using social media in their marketing, but less than half are creating any other kind of content to help them get leads and sales.
? In 2016, most small businesses using digital marketing will aim to drive sales, build brand awareness, or simply convey information. This heavy focus on the top and bottom of the funnel suggests that many small business owners may be missing opportunities to improve other parts of their customer acquisition and retention process.
Digital marketing goals and priorities
GOALS
0 Driving sales
Building brand awareness or conveying information
Collecting leads
Retaining customers
Running promotions
I won't be using digital marketing in 2016
Gaining efficiency with marketing automation
10
20
30
40
50
60
51.3%
48.4%
34.1%
30.0%
27.5%
21.8% 15.7%
Fig. 1
If you are planning to use digital marketing in your business in 2016, what will be your primary goals?
In 2016, small businesses say they'll look to digital marketing primarily to meet goals at the top and the bottom of the customer-acquisition funnel. Fifty-one percent of respondents named "driving sales" as a top goal for their digital marketing, while nearly as many (48 percent) chose "building brand awareness or conveying information."
All other options lagged significantly behind--including even "collecting leads," the next most popular option with 34 percent of respondents naming it as a top goal.
Keeping in mind that about one fifth of respondents planned to do any digital marketing in 2016, it's perhaps not surprising that the least popular goal was "gaining efficiency with marketing automation" (16 percent). Before they can become efficient, small business owners need to simply get started.
3 2016 Small Business Marketing Trends Report |
PRIORITIES
To understand what small business owners planned to prioritize--instead of just what they hoped to achieve--we asked which marketing channels they were expecting to budget more for in 2016:
0 My website
Digital advertising & social media
Email marketing
Print advertising & direct mail
Landing pages or purpose-specific web pages
None of the above
Telemarketing & in-person marketing
10
20
30
40
50
60
Fig. 2
51.0%
In 2016, which
marketing channels (if
any) do you expect to
51.1%
budget more for?
25.4%
23.4%
21.9% 19.2%
13.6%
Given the number of businesses who named building brand awareness or simply conveying information as a top marketing goal, it makes sense that 51 percent of small business owners planned to spend more money improving their websites in 2016.
An equal number are getting more sophisticated and increasing their budget for web advertising, such as searchbased and social media advertising. No other marketing channel was as big a priority as these two, but substantial numbers of small business owners are continuing to increase spend on both digital and analog platforms.
Digital marketing challenges: Not enough leads, not enough time
The greatest digital marketing challenges for small business owners revolve around leads: attracting interest in the first place, then turning web traffic into leads and ultimately customers.
In our survey, these answers nearly tied as respondents' biggest digital marketing challenges for 2016:
? Turning leads into customers (20 percent) ? Generating web traffic (18 percent) ? Finding the time and resources for digital marketing (18 percent) ? Turning web traffic into leads (17 percent)
4 2016 Small Business Marketing Trends Report |
19.6%
Turning leads into customers
17.9%
Generating web traffic
17.9%
Finding time/resources for digital marketing
17.4%
Turning web traffic into leads
Fig. 3
Of the following options, what is the biggest challenge you'll face in your digital marketing in 2016?
17.3%
9.9%
I won't be using digital marketing in 2016
Retaining customers long-term
The small business owner's struggle with leads may be related to his commonly used marketing strategies. The majority of respondents said they don't use channels that could help generate and convert leads--including digital advertising, social media, email marketing, and content marketing (see "Marketing tactics" section). And many aren't using email tools to follow up with leads, like email marketing software or an email list that prospective customers can opt into.
Overall, digital marketing tactics remain underutilized--and misunderstood--amongst many small business owners. Given the lack of attention to measurable marketing tactics, it's perhaps not surprising that nearly half of respondents said they don't know if their marketing efforts are effective.
48.5%
37.6%
Fig. 4
Are your marketing efforts effective?
Yes No I Don't Know
13.9%
Marketing tactics: Websites are the focal point
Marketing is an in-house endeavor for the majority of small business owners, according to our survey. Nearly one in two owners also serve as head of marketing, while nearly a quarter of respondents reported that an employee oversees marketing efforts.
5 2016 Small Business Marketing Trends Report |
6.5%
6.0%
17.3%
46.8%
23.5%
Fig. 5
Who does your marketing?
I do Someone on my team does
We do some in house and contract the rest I don't know We pay a contractor, agency or third party
For small business owners, the company website is the bread and butter of the marketing strategy. Nearly threequarters of respondents use their websites as a marketing channel, with about half planning to spend more on the website in 2016.
But less than half of small business owners reported using all other digital channels for marketing--including social media, digital advertising, email marketing, and landing pages. Most aren't employing non-digital tactics, either: Less than one-third of respondents use print advertising and direct mail or telemarketing and in-person marketing.
0 My website
Digital advertising & social media
Email marketing
Print advertising & direct mail
Landing pages or purpose-specific web pages
Telemarketing & in-person marketing
None of the above
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
Fig. 6
71.6%
What kind of marketing
channels do you use?
43.3%
40.1%
29.9%
26.4%
22.0% 13.3%
Most small business owners also don't create content that can help their companies acquire customers (aside from posting on social media platforms, as 58 percent of respondents do). Less than half use content marketing tactics like emailing content or publishing blog posts or articles.
6 2016 Small Business Marketing Trends Report |
100
90
80
70
60
57.8%
50
40
30
20
10
0 We post on social media
42.6%
We send emails
36.4%
27.8%
22.6%
19.9%
16.0%
We publish blog posts or articles
We create other kinds of content
We don't create content in order to get
customers
We send direct mail
We offer downloadable
content on web pages
Fig. 7
What kind of content does your company create to help get customers?
Our survey also asked small business owners about two cornerstones of the sales and marketing process: contact management and email marketing. To store contact information for leads and follow up with them, more small business owners use an email service like Gmail or Outlook than any other system. Such services can limit a small business owner's ability to conduct robust email marketing campaigns--which suggests why 45 percent of respondents don't have an email list that prospective customers can opt into.
0
My email service (like Gmail or Outlook)
Customer relationship management (CRM) tool
We don't keep track of this kind of information
An email marketing service (like MailChimp)
I use a different kind of system
10
20
30
24.0% 20.6% 19.4% 16.4%
40
50
42.4%
Fig. 8
What do you use to store contact information for your leads and customers and follow up with them?
8.7% 45.4%
45.9%
Fig. 9
Do you have an email list that prospective customers can opt into?
Yes
No
I Don't Know
7 2016 Small Business Marketing Trends Report |
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