Are Your 2026 Marketing Targets Matched By Your Budget?
As an agency, we sit in an interesting place.
We hear the ambitious growth targets.
We see the real numbers coming through the platforms.
And we often sit in the middle when the two do not quite match.
This blog is not a lecture about “spend more”.
It is a practical guide to help you check whether your marketing budget is truly aligned with the growth you want, and what to do if there is a gap.
Our aim is to give you a framework you can use with your team as you plan for 2026.
Step 1: Start With Your Target, Then Work Backwards
Most businesses start with “what can we afford to spend” and work forwards. We encourage clients to flip that and start with the outcome.
Here is the simple version of the exercise we walk through together:
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Define your revenue goal for 2026
What number would make the year a success for the business? -
Translate that into customers
Take your average revenue per customer or per order and work out how many customers that revenue requires. -
Translate customers into leads or enquiries
If one in four leads becomes a customer, you know you need four times as many leads as customers.
This might be form fills, demo requests, quote requests, online purchases, sign ups or something else. -
Translate leads into traffic or reach
Using your current conversion rates, map out how much traffic, reach or engagement you need at the top of your funnel to create those leads.
Once you have those numbers, you can begin to ask a more grounded question:
Based on our historic performance, what level of budget and channel mix would realistically generate those volumes?
If the numbers show that your current planned budget is unlikely to support the targets, that is not a failure. It is simply useful information that helps you make clearer decisions.
At this point you can:
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Revisit the target
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Revisit the budget
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Or revisit the funnel and conversion rates you are working with
And we can help you model those scenarios.
Step 2: See Marketing As A Lever, Not Just A Cost
When performance softens or another cost in the business increases, it is very common for marketing to be the first area under pressure.
Sometimes that is the right decision. For example, if we can see that a particular channel has been consistently unprofitable, our recommendation will often be to cut or reduce it and reinvest elsewhere.
Where we try to support clients is in making a distinction between:
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Restructuring spend within marketing
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Reducing or freezing marketing to compensate for other business pressures
Restructuring spend is often healthy. It might look like:
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Turning off or reducing investment in underperforming campaigns
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Shifting budget into higher return activity
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Simplifying your channel mix so you can focus on what actually moves the needle
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Investing in testing new creative or audiences where there is clear potential
Reducing or freezing marketing to cover other challenges is a different decision.
In that scenario, the engine that creates demand is being slowed down at the exact moment the business needs more of it.
Our role is not to tell you that you must never cut. It is to make sure the implications for pipeline, leads and revenue are visible when those decisions are being discussed.
Step 3: Focus On Consistency Over Spikes
We often describe marketing to clients as more like training than like a one-off event.
A burst of activity can be useful, especially around launches or key moments. However, sustainable growth usually comes from consistent visibility and ongoing optimisation, not stop-start campaigns.
When businesses drop in and out of the market:
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Warm audiences cool down
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Brand recall fades
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Competitors become the brands people see and remember instead
This does not mean you need to be “always on” everywhere. It means choosing the channels that are right for your business and staying present there in a consistent, manageable way.
As an agency, this is one of the places we can add a lot of value:
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Helping you prioritise the platforms that are most likely to support your goals
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Designing a program of activity that your budget can sustain across the year
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Building testing and learning into the plan, so performance improves over time instead of relying on one big push
Step 4: Pressure Test Your 2026 Budget
If you are setting targets and budgets now, here is a simple framework you can use internally. It is very similar to the process we run in strategy sessions.
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Write your 2026 revenue target at the top of a page.
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Work through the funnel:
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How many customers does that represent?
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How many leads or enquiries do you need to create that number of customers?
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How much traffic, reach or engagement does that imply at the top of your funnel?
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Add rough cost estimates by channel.
Use your existing data where you have it:-
Typical cost per lead
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Cost per click
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Cost per acquisition
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Compare your calculated budget with your planned budget.
If they are reasonably close, great. You can start to refine at a more detailed level.
If there is a wide gap, that does not mean your plan is impossible. It means there is a conversation to be had around one or more of these levers:
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Targets
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Budget
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Pricing and average order value
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Funnel and conversion rate improvements
This is often where we come in: helping you stress test the numbers and showing what different scenarios could look like in practice.
Step 5: Move Away From “We Will Invest When We Can”
Many businesses find themselves in a pattern that sounds like this:
“We will invest more in marketing once things pick up.”
The challenge is that “things picking up” is often the result of marketing, not something that happens before it.
We try to help clients move from that reactive pattern to a more intentional one:
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Decide the growth you want.
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Decide what level of marketing investment you are comfortable committing to support that.
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Then work with us to allocate that budget in the smartest possible way, reviewing and adjusting regularly.
This does not guarantee that every single campaign is a success. What it does is create a more stable foundation for learning and improvement, instead of trying to restart from zero every time.
How We Can Support You
If you are looking at 2026 and wondering whether your current marketing plan truly matches your ambition, we can help you:
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Audit your existing data to understand realistic costs and conversion rates
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Map your revenue targets to the volumes needed at each stage of the funnel
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Build a channel and budget strategy that fits both your goals and your constraints
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Put a testing roadmap in place so your spend becomes more efficient over time
The intention is not to tell you to spend for the sake of it.
It is to give you clarity, so the decisions you make around budget are informed by numbers, not guesswork.
If that sounds useful, this is the perfect time of year to step back and realign targets, budgets and expectations before January arrives.