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Guide

How to Create a Marketing Budget That Actually Gets Followed

A step-by-step process for building a marketing budget grounded in revenue targets, channel benchmarks, and real-world allocation data. Covers fixed vs. variable costs, benchmarks by company stage, and when to reallocate mid-year.

Last updated: March 2026 · Reading time: 14 min

Overview

The budget that actually gets followed

To create a marketing budget, start with your annual revenue target, work backward to the spend required to hit it, then allocate across channels based on historical performance and industry benchmarks. Gartner’s 2026 CMO Spend Survey puts average marketing budgets at 7.7% of company revenue, though this ranges from 5% for mature enterprises to 20%+ for high-growth startups. The budget itself is the easy part. The hard part is building a structure that your team actually follows and that adapts when the market shifts. Most marketing budgets fail not because the numbers are wrong, but because they’re static. They get built in Q4, approved in January, and ignored by March. A working budget needs built-in reallocation triggers, monthly variance tracking, and clear ownership of every line item.

“The best marketing budget I’ve ever seen was three tabs in a spreadsheet. Revenue target, channel allocation with monthly actuals, and a reallocation log. That’s it. The 40-page budget decks are theater. The three-tab version is what the team actually opens every Monday.”

Hardik Shah, Founder of ScaleGrowth.Digital

What’s in this guide

  1. How do you size your marketing budget from revenue?
  2. What do marketing budget benchmarks look like by company stage?
  3. How should you allocate budget across channels?
  4. What’s the difference between fixed and variable marketing costs?
  5. How do you track budget vs. actual spending?
  6. When should you reallocate your marketing budget?
  7. Pro tips from managing 7-figure marketing budgets
  8. What are the most common marketing budget mistakes?
  9. FAQ

How do you size your marketing budget from revenue?

Revenue-based budgeting means setting your marketing budget as a percentage of either current revenue or projected revenue. This is the most common approach because it ties marketing investment directly to business outcomes and scales naturally as the company grows. According to Gartner’s 2026 data, the average sits at 7.7% of revenue, but that number hides enormous variation by industry, growth stage, and competitive pressure.
Revenue-based marketing budget: A budgeting method where marketing spend is calculated as a fixed percentage of actual or projected annual revenue, then distributed across channels and time periods.
Here’s the straightforward formula: Marketing Budget = Annual Revenue Target x Budget Percentage A company targeting $10M in revenue at 10% allocation has a $1M marketing budget. From there, the work is in the allocation, not the total. The percentage you choose depends on three factors: your growth ambition (holding market share vs. aggressive acquisition), your industry’s competitive intensity, and your current customer acquisition efficiency. A SaaS company burning through venture capital will spend 15-25% of ARR on marketing. A 30-year-old manufacturing firm holding steady might spend 3-5%. If you’re a startup without meaningful revenue history, use your funding runway instead. The standard guidance from Y Combinator and similar accelerators is to allocate 15-25% of your total runway to customer acquisition, which includes both marketing and sales.

What do marketing budget benchmarks look like by company stage?

Marketing budget benchmarks vary dramatically by company stage, and using the wrong benchmark is one of the fastest ways to either underspend into irrelevance or overspend into a cash crisis. Data from HubSpot’s 2026 marketing report and Gartner’s annual CMO survey provide clear ranges by stage.
Company Stage Revenue Range Marketing as % of Revenue Primary Focus
Pre-product-market fit < $1M 30-60% Awareness, message testing, early acquisition
Early growth $1M-$10M 15-25% Channel discovery, scaling what works
Scaling $10M-$100M 8-15% Efficiency, multi-channel orchestration
Mature $100M+ 5-7% Brand, retention, market defense
These ranges come with an important caveat: B2C companies consistently spend more than B2B at every stage. HubSpot’s 2026 data shows B2C companies allocate 9-12% of revenue to marketing, while B2B companies stay in the 8-11% range. The gap narrows at maturity but never fully closes because consumer brands face higher competitive pressure for attention. Industry also matters. According to Deloitte’s 2025 CMO Survey, technology companies allocate 11-15% of revenue to marketing, healthcare averages 6-8%, financial services runs 5-9%, and education sits at 10-14%. Don’t benchmark a healthcare company against a SaaS startup. You’ll either scare leadership with the number or starve the team of resources. One trend worth noting for 2026: 69% of marketers expect their budgets to increase this year (HubSpot, 2026), with the sharpest gains going to AI tools, SEO, and community building. If your budget is flat while competitors are increasing, you’re effectively cutting spend relative to the market.

How should you allocate budget across channels?

Channel allocation is where most marketing budgets go wrong. Teams either spread money evenly across every channel (the “peanut butter” approach) or dump everything into one channel they’re comfortable with. Neither works. Your allocation should reflect where your customers actually discover and convert, weighted by the cost of acquisition in each channel. Here’s a baseline allocation framework for a B2B company with a $500K annual marketing budget:
Channel % of Budget Annual Amount Primary Metric
Paid Search (Google Ads) 25% $125,000 Cost per qualified lead
SEO + Content 20% $100,000 Organic traffic, lead pipeline
Paid Social (Meta, LinkedIn) 15% $75,000 CPL, engagement rate
Events + Webinars 10% $50,000 Pipeline influenced
Email + Marketing Automation 10% $50,000 Conversion rate, LTV
Brand + Creative 10% $50,000 Brand lift, recall
MarTech Stack 10% $50,000 Team productivity
For B2C companies, shift 5-10% from events and email toward paid social and influencer marketing. In 2026, 78% of marketers are increasing influencer spend and 69% are increasing community-building budgets (Neil Patel, 2026). The critical rule: never allocate more than 30% of your budget to any single channel. If Google Ads accounts for half your leads and you put 50% of budget there, a single algorithm change or cost increase can crater your quarter. Diversification isn’t just smart; it’s risk management. Also, separate your technology costs from your media spend. Too many teams lump HubSpot, Semrush, and their analytics stack into “marketing” without realizing that 15-30% of their “marketing budget” isn’t actually reaching customers. Track tool spend as a separate line item so you know the real amount going to demand generation.

What’s the difference between fixed and variable marketing costs?

Fixed marketing costs stay the same regardless of output or results. Variable costs scale with activity. Understanding this split is critical because it determines how much flexibility you actually have when you need to adjust spending. Most marketing teams discover they have less flexibility than they assumed because 40-55% of their budget is locked into fixed commitments.
Fixed marketing costs: Recurring expenses that don’t change with campaign volume, such as salaries, software subscriptions, and annual contracts.
Cost Type Examples Typical % of Budget Flexibility
Fixed – Personnel Salaries, benefits, contractors on retainer 35-45% Low (annual commitment)
Fixed – Technology CRM, analytics, SEO tools, automation 10-15% Low (annual contracts)
Variable – Media Google Ads, Meta Ads, LinkedIn Ads 25-35% High (adjust daily)
Variable – Content Freelance writers, design, video production 10-15% Medium (project-based)
Variable – Events Sponsorships, trade shows, webinars 5-10% Medium (quarterly planning)
The healthy ratio is 40-50% fixed and 50-60% variable. If your fixed costs exceed 60%, you’ve lost the ability to respond to opportunities or cut costs during a downturn. If they’re below 30%, you probably don’t have the team or tools to execute consistently. One common trap: treating agency retainers as variable when they’re actually fixed. A $15,000/month retainer with a 90-day cancellation clause is a fixed cost for budget planning purposes. So is a $50,000 conference sponsorship booked six months in advance. Be honest about what’s truly flexible and what isn’t.

How do you track budget vs. actual spending?

Budget tracking means comparing planned spend against actual spend at regular intervals, then understanding why the variance exists and whether it matters. Without tracking, a budget is just a wishful document. With weekly or monthly tracking, it becomes a decision-making tool. Set up a simple tracking structure with four columns per channel per month:
  • Planned spend: What you budgeted for this channel this month
  • Actual spend: What you actually spent (pulled from ad platforms, invoices, tool subscriptions)
  • Variance: The difference, expressed as both a dollar amount and percentage
  • Variance explanation: A one-sentence note on why (e.g., “Paused LinkedIn campaigns due to low lead quality”)
Review cadence matters more than the spreadsheet format. Here’s what works:
  • Weekly: Quick check on paid media pacing. Are you on track to spend your monthly ad budget, or are you over/under-pacing?
  • Monthly: Full budget review across all channels. Compare actual to plan. Flag any channel with >15% variance.
  • Quarterly: Strategic review. Evaluate channel performance vs. cost. Make reallocation decisions for the next quarter.
The 15% variance threshold is a practical rule of thumb. Anything under 15% is normal fluctuation. Anything over 15% needs an explanation and a decision: is this intentional (you doubled down on a winning campaign) or accidental (someone forgot to pause an underperforming ad set)? If you’re using a marketing budget template, look for one that auto-calculates variance and flags overspend. The goal is to spend 5 minutes per week on tracking, not 5 hours. The template we use at ScaleGrowth.Digital has conditional formatting that turns cells red at 15% overspend and yellow at 10%, so the review is visual and fast.

When should you reallocate your marketing budget?

Reallocate your marketing budget when a channel consistently underperforms its target CPA for 4-6 weeks, when a new channel shows strong early results that justify scaling, or when external conditions change (competitor exits, market shift, platform policy change). The key word is “consistently.” Don’t reallocate based on one bad week. Here are five specific triggers that should prompt a budget reallocation conversation:
  1. CPA exceeds target by 30%+ for 4 consecutive weeks. If your Google Ads target CPA is $50 and you’ve been averaging $65+ for a month, that’s not a blip. Reduce spend and investigate: is it a competitive issue, a landing page problem, or a market shift?
  2. A channel hits diminishing returns. You’ll see this as a flatline in conversions despite increasing spend. If doubling your Facebook budget from $10K to $20K/month only increased conversions by 15%, you’ve hit the ceiling for that audience at that creative quality.
  3. A new test channel outperforms expectations. If you piloted TikTok ads with $2,000/month and the CPA came in 40% below your average, that deserves a larger allocation in the next quarter.
  4. A major platform change disrupts performance. Algorithm updates, policy changes (like iOS privacy changes), or new ad formats can shift the economics of a channel overnight. When Google launched AI Overviews, organic CTR dropped for many informational queries, requiring some teams to shift SEO content strategy or increase paid spend.
  5. Business priorities shift. If the company pivots from acquisition to retention mid-year, the budget should follow. More spend on email and customer marketing, less on top-of-funnel paid acquisition.
Keep a reallocation log. Every time you move money between channels, document the date, the amount moved, the reason, and the expected impact. This log becomes invaluable at year-end when you’re building next year’s budget and need to explain what worked and what didn’t.

Pro tips from managing 7-figure marketing budgets

These insights come from building and managing marketing budgets across 30+ client engagements at ScaleGrowth.Digital, ranging from $50K/year startups to $2M+/year enterprises.
  • Build a 10% unallocated reserve. Don’t assign every dollar in January. Hold back 10% as a “test and opportunity” fund. When a new channel shows promise in Q2, you have budget to scale it without cutting something else. This reserve is the difference between reactive and proactive marketing.
  • Negotiate annual contracts in Q4. SaaS tools, agency retainers, and conference sponsorships are all negotiable in October-November when vendors are closing their fiscal year. We’ve seen clients save 15-25% on annual tool costs by consolidating and negotiating during this window.
  • Separate “learning budget” from “performance budget.” Your performance budget funds channels with proven ROI. Your learning budget funds experiments. Keep them separate in tracking so a failed experiment doesn’t make your entire marketing program look unprofitable.
  • Model three scenarios. Build your budget in base, upside, and downside versions. The base is your plan. The upside shows what you’d do with 20% more. The downside shows where you’d cut first if revenue misses by 15%. Having these ready prevents panic cuts that destroy long-term channels like SEO.
  • Anchor your budget to pipeline, not vanity metrics. Every dollar in your budget should trace back to either pipeline generation, pipeline acceleration, or brand equity. If a line item can’t be connected to one of those three, question whether it belongs.

What are the most common marketing budget mistakes?

After reviewing hundreds of marketing budgets across industries, these five mistakes show up repeatedly. Each one is fixable, but only if you know to look for it.
  1. Budgeting based on last year plus 10%. This is the laziest and most common approach. It assumes last year’s allocation was correct and that the market hasn’t changed. It almost certainly has. Start from your revenue target and work backward, not from last year’s spreadsheet forward.
  2. Ignoring the cost of internal time. If three people spend 40% of their time on content marketing, that’s a cost. A marketing team with $200K in salaries dedicated to content creation plus $50K in freelance costs has $130K in content spending, not $50K. Undercounting internal costs makes channels look cheaper than they are.
  3. Treating SEO as free. Organic traffic has no per-click cost, but SEO is not free. Content production, technical optimization, link building, and tools all cost money. Companies that “cut the SEO budget” because organic traffic is “free” lose that traffic 6-12 months later when competitors outinvest them.
  4. No contingency for platform changes. Every year, at least one major platform makes a change that disrupts marketing economics. iOS 14.5 gutted Facebook Ads targeting. Google AI Overviews changed organic CTR. If your budget has zero flexibility for these shifts, you’re planning to fail.
  5. Cutting brand spend first in a downturn. Brand investment is the first line item executives cut because the ROI is hardest to measure. But companies that maintain brand spend during recessions recover faster and gain market share from competitors who went dark. Ehrenberg-Bass research has shown this consistently across 60+ years of data.
Related

Related Resources

Marketing Budget Template

Free multi-tab spreadsheet with annual budget, monthly channel tracking, budget vs. actual, and ROI calculations. Get Template →

Marketing Plan Template

Complete marketing plan framework covering goals, channels, budget, timeline, and KPIs. Get Template →

Yearly Projections Template

Traffic, lead, and revenue projection models with best/base/worst scenarios. Get Template →

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

How much should a small business spend on marketing?

Small businesses should allocate 7-12% of gross revenue to marketing, according to the U.S. Small Business Administration. Newer businesses or those in competitive markets should target the higher end (10-12%), while established businesses with strong word-of-mouth can operate at 5-7%. The key is matching spend to growth ambition, not just industry averages.

What percentage of a marketing budget should go to digital?

In 2026, most companies allocate 55-75% of their marketing budget to digital channels. B2B companies tend toward 60-75% digital because their buyers research online. B2C companies with physical retail presence may keep 30-40% in traditional channels. The trend is clearly toward digital, but the right split depends on where your specific audience converts.

How often should you review your marketing budget?

Review paid media pacing weekly (5 minutes), do a full budget-to-actual comparison monthly (30 minutes), and conduct a strategic reallocation review quarterly (2-3 hours). Annual budget planning should start in Q3 for the following year. The companies that get the best ROI review monthly and reallocate quarterly rather than setting and forgetting.

Should you increase marketing spend during a recession?

Research from Ehrenberg-Bass Institute and McGraw-Hill shows companies that maintain or increase marketing spend during recessions gain market share and recover faster. The logic: competitors cut spend, so ad costs drop and share of voice is cheaper to win. If cash flow allows it, maintaining spend during a downturn is one of the highest-ROI strategic decisions a company can make.

What’s the difference between a marketing budget and a marketing plan?

A marketing plan defines your strategy: goals, target audience, channels, messaging, and timeline. A marketing budget assigns dollar amounts to each element of that plan. The plan answers “what are we doing and why.” The budget answers “how much are we spending on each thing.” You need both, and the budget should be built after the plan, not before it.

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