Site icon Chiropractic Economics

How to develop a content marketing budget and measure ROI

Your content marketing budget depends on a few things such as goals, clients, your competitors ...

Your content marketing budget depends on a few things such as goals, clients, your competitors …

Content marketing is an important part of your chiropractic practice, as through it you can introduce yourself to your community, build your brand, bring in new business, and expand your practice. In order to get the most from content marketing, your first task is to create a content marketing budget.

A budget not only helps you stay within your spending boundaries, but it also tells you where your money is going — and how well it is doing. Setting a marketing goal without funding is like mountaineering without a map — you may or may not accomplish the climb, but knowing the terrain in advance makes it more likely.

Content marketing budget factors

Your budget will change from year to year, or even from month to month. It is important to know how much you want to spend, and to be able to adjust your spending as you see returns on investments (ROI) change from one form of content to another.

Your content marketing budget depends on a few things:

Some of the costs of content marketing include:

Labor: There are many hats to wear in content marketing. You will need someone to ideate, write, edit, and post content on websites, blogs, social media, newsletters, and other forms of communication.

Some businesses contract with a content marketing agency that can do everything in-house or act as a general contractor that puts together a team of experts in every area. You can assign someone in-house to manage content marketing, but keep in mind this is a time-consuming position that could interfere with an employee’s already-scheduled duties. A content manager will oversee a marketing strategy, freelance writers and editors, link building, SEO, graphics, and more.

Promotion: Your content needs to be promoted through advertisements, sponsored content, posts, or through influencers (someone who uses social media and other platforms to advertise your product in a conversational way).

Equipment: Although your practice has technology set up for your business, you may need a few extras for your marketing goals:

Calculating ROI

There are four basic steps to measure content return on investment, or ROI:

  1. Do the math. How much have you spent on labor, equipment, and promotion?
  2. Do the math again. If you are using equipment, software, or other costs for other purposes, calculate how much of the cost is actually directed to content marketing.
  3. Determine your accomplished goals — such as new clients, pageviews, or exposure — that resulted from specific content. This could be an article, a post, a tweet, or an email.
  4. Find out your exact return on investment. Your return minus your investment, divided by the number you get when you multiply the investment by 100, is your percentage of your return on investment. This is the equation: ROI = ( return – investment ) / investment x 100 (for percentage). If you invest $1,000 of your content marketing budget on a post that generates $20,000 worth of business, your ROI is 19%.

Remember, your content marketing budget will change annually, and it should. Invest in a good marketing team that can manage all aspects of content, and with the help of a content marketing map, soon your ROI will reach the summit you have in your sights.

 

Sources:

 

https://www.and-marketing.com/measure-content-marketing-roi/

https://prosandcontent.knotch.com/posts/content-marketing-budget

https://jtn.agency/2017/08/23/simple-4-step-process-calculate-return-investment-content-marketing/

https://wordable.io/content-marketing-budget-2/

https://www.webfx.com/blog/marketing/how-to-budget-for-content-marketing/

Exit mobile version