Why Your Business Needs a Marketing Strategy
Do I really need a marketing strategy, or can I just keep doing what's working?
Yes, you need a strategy, even when things are going well. A marketing strategy is what keeps your business visible, competitive, and growing before the slow season hits or the algorithm shifts on you. Without one, even a thriving business is one bad month away from scrambling.
This episode originally aired as part of my 300-episode milestone month, revisiting conversations that are still just as relevant today. Prefer to read? Keep going.
You're showing up. You're posting on social media, maybe running a few ads, updating your website here and there. You're doing the things.
So why does it feel like nothing is actually moving?
Here is what I see over and over again with service-based businesses: they are busy with marketing, but they are not strategic about it. There is a difference, and it matters more than most business owners realize.
This episode comes from a milestone moment for me. We recently passed 300 podcast episodes, and during June, I am revisiting some of the conversations that have stayed relevant. This one tops the list, because the problem it addresses has not changed. Too many businesses are trying random tactics without a real plan behind them.
Let me show you what I mean, and more importantly, what to do instead.
The Real Reason Your Marketing Isn't Getting Results
You're Reacting Instead of Planning
Most businesses only think about marketing when something goes wrong. Sales slow down. Leads dry up. Then it's all hands on deck, throw something at the wall, and hope it sticks.
That is called reactive marketing, and it is expensive. Not just in dollars, but in the time and energy you burn trying to fix something that a plan could have prevented.
I see this pattern across all sizes of businesses, not just startups. Medium-sized businesses, nonprofits, and established service providers all fall into it. When things get slow, they scramble. When things are busy, they cost. And then the cycle repeats.
Here is what to do right now: Write down the last three marketing things you did. Ask yourself honestly: were those decisions made from a plan, or from a moment of panic? That answer tells you a lot about where you are.
You Don't Know Who You're Actually Talking To
One of the first questions I ask every client when they come to me is: " What are you trying to achieve? The second question is: who are you trying to reach?
You would be surprised how often those two questions stop people in their tracks.
Without a strategy, businesses often end up marketing to everyone, which means they are connecting with no one. The message gets watered down. The content feels generic. And the right people scroll right past it because nothing about it speaks directly to them.
Knowing your audience is not a one-time exercise. It is an ongoing part of your strategy. When you know who you are talking to, you know what to say, where to say it, and how to say it in a way that actually lands.
Here is what to do right now: Describe your ideal client in three sentences. Be specific. If your description could apply to almost anyone, that is your first strategy problem to solve.
You're Spending Money Without a Foundation
One of my favorite real-world examples from this episode comes from a client who came to me ready to run digital ads. She had a budget, she had a goal, and she was ready to go.
But when I dug a little deeper, I found that her website had broken links, her social media was inconsistent, and there was no clear strategy connecting any of it. If we had launched ads right then, she would have been paying to send people to a leaky bucket.
So we slowed down first. We built the foundation: a clear strategy, a consistent online presence, and a website that was actually ready to convert. Then we launched the campaign. And this time, it worked, because everything was set up to support it.
Marketing spend without a foundation is not just ineffective. It is a fast way to lose confidence in marketing altogether.
Here is what to do right now: Before you put money into ads or promotion, ask yourself: if someone lands on my website or social media today because of that ad, would they know what I do, who I help, and what to do next? If the answer is no, that is where your investment needs to go first.
You Have No Way to Know What's Working
A strategy is not just a plan you make once and file away. It is a living document that tells you what you are doing, why you are doing it, and how you will know if it is getting results.
When there is no strategy, there is no baseline. No benchmark. No way to tell if last month's social posts actually moved the needle or if your email open rate means anything. You end up making decisions based on gut feelings instead of actual data.
This is how businesses stay stuck. They keep doing what feels right without ever confirming whether it is right.
Tracking does not have to be complicated. But it does have to be intentional. A strategy gives you something to measure against.
Here is what to do right now: Pick one marketing activity you are currently doing. Identify one number that would tell you if it is working. Revenue, leads, website visits, and booked calls. Whatever makes sense for your business. If you cannot name the number, you are not tracking it.
Where Do You Start?
You made it through the whole post. That already tells me something: you are not looking for shortcuts. You are looking for a real answer.
Here is a quick recap of what we covered:
Reactive marketing costs more than proactive planning, in time, money, and energy
Knowing your audience is not optional; it is the foundation of every marketing decision you make
A strong marketing foundation has to come before you spend money on ads or promotion
You cannot improve what you are not measuring, so tracking has to be part of your strategy from day one
You do not have to figure all of this out at once. Start with one piece. Get clear on one goal. Identify one audience. Fix one foundation issue. Strategy is not built in a single session. It is built one decision at a time.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need a marketing strategy if my business is already doing well?
Yes. A strategy is not just for businesses that are struggling. It is what helps thriving businesses stay visible, stay competitive, and keep growing when the market shifts or a slow season hits. Success without a plan is harder to repeat than success with one.
How much does it cost to work with a marketing strategist?
The better question is: how much is it costing you not to have one? Ineffective marketing campaigns, wasted ad spend, and time poured into tactics that don't connect are all real costs. A strategist helps you stop spending on what isn't working and start investing in what will.
What is the difference between marketing tactics and a marketing strategy?
Tactics are the individual things you do: posting on social media, running an ad, sending an email. Strategy is the plan that determines which tactics to use, when to use them, who they are aimed at, and how they connect to your business goals. Tactics without strategy are just activity. Strategy turns that activity into results.
If any part of this post made you stop and think, "I don't actually have that," you are not behind. You are just ready. Let's figure out together where to start. Schedule a free 15-minute call at kristinastubblefield.com/book-a-call, and we'll talk through what your business actually needs right now.

