Is marketing an expense or an investment?

Why You Should View Marketing as an Investment, Not an Expense

If you view your marketing campaign as an expense rather than an investment, you’re likely denying your business the incredible ROI that it has to offer.

Businesses who benefit from major marketing returns continually fund their campaigns because they view it as one of the essential components driving growth and success. In fact, it’s common practice for extremely successful businesses to continue investing in what helps them thrive, regardless of limited finances or the state of the economy. This includes training and development, technology, physical location, employment and, of course, marketing, advertising, promotions and branding. Nonetheless, some businesses still look at marketing as an expense, rather than an investment. It’s an easy misconception to start off with, but it can lead to self-sabotage.

Are you looking at things the wrong way?

Typically when you see something as an expense, its necessity comes into question and then cutting back soon follows. Strangely enough, companies tend to do this not only when times are tough but when business is flourishing as well. This is a mistake. When a sapling becomes a tree it doesn’t stop relying on the sunlight, soil and water that helped it reach that point. A business that looks at marketing as a stop-and-go practice and sets it aside as soon as sales are up is like a tree surviving in a drought. It can live off of the last rainfall for a while, but not forever.

If you want to enjoy the same solid ROI from a marketing plan that other successful businesses do and develop a marketing campaign that truly helps you grow your brand and increase revenue, you need to retrain how you look at marketing where your budget is concerned. This is not an expense; it’s a sound and necessary investment in the most important element of your business – your brand.

Change your perspective.

As a business, your brand is your most valuable asset, and you can either neglect it or nurture it. Neglect it and though your business might survive, your potential for growth will be lost. Nurture it however, and you can open the door to the nearly unprecedented growth that is attainable in this day and age. According to Millward Brown’s BrandZ Top 100 Valuable Global Brands for 2006 to 2015, brand value increased over the last decade by 126% to a staggering $3.3 trillion. This comes despite the economic crisis that beset the first half of the last 10 years. Even a small business owner with an equally modest marketing campaign can see the value of continuing to invest in his or her own brand when facing this awe-inspiring statistic.

Businesses who view marketing as an investment embrace their branding strategies as one necessary part of a whole unit. It is the legs to the body of a company that help it get from point A to point B and beyond. Don’t cripple them with a misguided perspective.

Guest Post By: Kimberly Erskine

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