Published on Staff Pick

The Small Business Guide to Performance Marketing Budgets

Inside this article, you'll discover:

    • Calculate your Customer Lifetime Value (LTV) to understand your ideal Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC).
    • Discover how to 'validate' an ad channel (like Google or Meta) before scaling your budget.
    • Learn to identify if your offer is the real reason ads aren't performing.

Mentioned On*

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TLDR;

  • Stop looking for a magic budget number. Your budget is determined by how much you can afford to pay for a customer, not a number you pull out of thin air.
  • The most important calculation you'll ever make is your Customer Lifetime Value (LTV) to Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC) ratio. This tells you what you can afford to spend. This guide includes a calculator to figure this out.
  • For your first budget, start small (£500-£1,500 a month) and focus entirely on 'validating' one channel. The goal isn't profit, it's getting data to prove your ads can work.
  • Don't spray your budget everywhere. Start with high-intent channels like Google Search if people are looking for what you sell. If not, use highly-targeted Meta (Facebook/Instagram) ads.
  • Your 'offer' is usually why ads fail, not the ads themselves. If you're not solving an urgent, expensive problem for a specific group of people, no amount of ad spend will save you.

I get asked this all the time. "How much should I spend on ads?". And my answer is always the same: you're asking the wrong question. There is no magic number. A £500 budget can be a complete waste of money, and a £50,000 budget can print money. The difference isn't the number, it's the thinking behind it.

Most small businesses treat their marketing budget like a lottery ticket. They throw a few hundred quid at Facebook, cross their fingers, and hope for the best. When it doesn't work, they conclude "ads don't work for my business". That's rubbish. What they mean is "guessing didn't work". The good news is there's a proper way to do this, a framework that takes the guesswork out and turns your ad spend into a predictable system for growth. And it all starts with forgetting about the budget for a minute, and focusing on your numbers instead.

How much can you actually afford to pay for a customer?

This is the only question that matters. Forget your competitors, forget what you read in a blog post. The real question isn't "How low can my Cost Per Lead go?" but "How high a Cost Per Lead can I afford to acquire a truly great customer?". The answer lies in its counterpart: Lifetime Value (LTV). If you don't know this, you're flying blind and you're gonna crash.

Let's break it down into simple terms. You need three bits of info:

  • Average Revenue Per Account (ARPA): What do you make from a typical customer each month?
  • Gross Margin %: After your direct costs of selling (not marketing), what percentage is pure profit? For a service business, this is often high, maybe 80-90%. For an eCom store selling physical goods, it'll be lower.
  • Monthly Churn Rate: What percentage of customers do you lose each month? (If you have one-off sales, you can estimate how many purchases a customer makes a year to work this out).

The calculation is simple: LTV = (ARPA * Gross Margin %) / Monthly Churn Rate

Let's imagine you run a subscription box service in the UK. Your box costs £30 a month. Your cost for the products inside and postage is £10, so your gross margin is £20, or 66%. You've looked at your numbers and you know that on average, you lose about 5% of your subscribers each month. So:

LTV = (£30 * 0.66) / 0.05
LTV = £19.80 / 0.05 = £396

So, every time you get a new subscriber, they are worth nearly £400 in gross margin to your business over their lifetime. This number changes everything. Suddenly, you're not just spending money on ads; you're investing in acquiring an asset worth £396.

A healthy business aims for a 3:1 LTV to Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC) ratio. This means you can afford to spend up to £132 (£396 / 3) to get one new customer. Now you have a target. Your entire advertising strategy now has one simple goal: acquire customers for less than £132. Anything under that is profit. This is the maths that unlocks intelligent growth.

I've built a little calculator for you to play around with your own numbers. This isn't just a toy; it's probably the most important tool on this page. Figure this out before you spend another penny.

Customer Lifetime Value (LTV) £700
Max. Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC) £233
Max. Cost Per Lead (CPL) £23.30

Use this interactive calculator to work out your LTV and what you can afford to spend on ads. Adjust the sliders to see how your own business numbers impact your budget. Results are for illustrative purposes only. For a tailored analysis, please consider scheduling a free consultation.

Right, so where should I spend my first pound?

Once you know what you can afford to spend to get a customer, the next question is where to find them. The biggest mistake small businesses make is spraying a small budget across multiple platforms. Don't do it. You won't get enough data on any of them to make good decisions. You need to pick one, maybe two, and go all in until you prove it works or it doesn't.

The choice is simpler than you think. It comes down to one question: are people actively searching for a solution to the problem you solve?

  • YES, they are searching: Your first stop is Google Ads. Full stop. People are literally typing their problem into a search bar. You just need to show up with the answer. This is the lowest hanging fruit. We're talking keywords like "emergency electrician near me" or "AI implementation service". This is 'high-intent' traffic. They want to buy, now. It can be expensive, but if you know your numbers (your max CAC), you know if you can afford to play. The ultimate question for any local business is often whether Google Ads is worth it, and the answer almost always comes down to your unit economics.

  • NO, they aren't searching: This is for products or services that are new, innovative, or that people don't know they need yet. You can't use Google Search because nobody is looking for you. Here, you have to interrupt them. Your best bet is usually Meta (Facebook & Instagram). The targeting is powerful. You can find your ideal customers based on their interests, behaviours, or by creating 'lookalike' audiences from your existing customer lists. The challenge here is your ad creative and offer have to be incredibly compelling to stop them from scrolling.

Honestly, for most small businesses, the best PPC strategy with a limited budget is to focus all your energy on mastering one of these channels first. I've mapped out the basic decision process below. It's not rocket science.

Core Question:
Are people actively searching for what you sell?
Yes
Start Here:
Google Search Ads
(Capture existing demand)
Or
No
Start Here:
Meta Ads (FB/IG)
(Create new demand)

This simple flowchart shows where to prioritise your initial ad budget. Focus on capturing existing demand on Google first before trying to create new demand on social media platforms.

What can I realistically expect for my money?

This is where it gets real. You have your max affordable CAC, you've picked a platform. Now, what will a click or a lead actually cost? Prices vary wildly, but I can give you some ballpark figures based on the campaigns we've run. These are for developed countries like the UK.

For something like a lead (a form fill, a signup, a phone call), you can expect your cost per click (CPC) to be somewhere between £0.50 and £1.50. Then, your landing page might convert between 10% and 30% of those clicks. So, the maths is: Cost Per Lead = CPC / Conversion Rate. This gives you a massive range, from £1.60 (£0.50 / 30%) on the very low end to £15 (£1.50 / 10%) on the high end.

For eCommerce sales, the numbers are tougher. Your conversion rates are much lower, maybe 2-5%. So your Cost Per Purchase could be anywhere from £10 to £75. Ouch. This is why knowing your numbers is so important. A £75 acquisition cost is a disaster if you're selling £50 t-shirts, but it's a bargain if you have a high order value, like a client we worked with in the maps and navigation niche who saw an 8x return.

To give you some real-world context from our campaigns:

  • B2C Services: We've seen costs all over the place. A home cleaning company got leads for £5 each. A childcare service got signups for around $10. But an HVAC company in a competitive area is paying around $60 per lead. It all comes down to the niche and competition.
  • B2B/SaaS: This is more expensive. On LinkedIn, we managed to get the cost per lead down to $22 for B2B decision makers. For another B2B software client, we got registrations on Meta for just $2.38 each, which is exceptionally good. Another saw 5082 software trials at $7 each. The quality of these leads is what you pay for.
  • eCommerce: We've seen a 1000% Return On Ad Spend for a subscription box, and a 691% return for a women's apparel brand. This is what you should be tracking, not just the cost per sale.

The chart below gives you a rough idea of the ranges you might be looking at. Don't treat these as gospel, treat them as a starting point for your own targets.

B2C Service Lead
£5£60
B2B SaaS Trial
£7£50
B2B Lead (LI)
£20£100+
eCommerce Sale
£10£75+

Illustrative Cost Per Acquisition (CPA) ranges for a small business in the UK. These are wide estimates and your actual costs will depend heavily on your industry, offer, and ad quality.

The 'Test and Validate' Budget: Your First 90 Days

Right, let's put it all together. You're not going to try and conquer the world in your first month. Your only goal for the first 90 days is to prove the model. You need to gather enough data to confidently say "Yes, I can acquire customers through this channel at a profitable cost". That's it.

For this, you need a 'validation budget'. I'd say for most small businesses, this is somewhere between £500 and £1,500 per month. Anything less and you'll struggle to get enough data quickly. Anything more is probably overkill until you know what works.

Here's how to think about this initial period. It's not about ROI. You might even lose money. That's fine. You are buying data and learning. A successful 90 days is not a massive profit, it's a clear answer. This initial phase is the core of any good startup ad spend strategy.

Here’s what you do with that budget:

  1. Pick ONE channel. Based on the flowchart above. Let's say it's Google Ads.
  2. Pick ONE core offer. What is the single most important action you want someone to take? A free trial? A consultation call? Buying your flagship product? Focus everything on that.
  3. Run your ads for at least 30-60 days. Don't panic and turn them off after a week because you haven't got a sale. The algorithm needs time to learn. You need time to gather data.
  4. Analyse the results against your targets. At the end of the period, look at the numbers. What was your actual Cost Per Lead/Sale? How does it compare to the maximum you calculated you could afford? If your max CPL was £25 and you're getting leads for £20, you've got a winner. If you're paying £100, something is seriously wrong.

This process removes emotion and replaces it with maths. You're no longer gambling; you're running a controlled experiment. Even a failed test is a success, because you've learned that a particular channel or offer doesn't work, and you can move on without wasting any more money on it. A good Meta Ads campaign structure for a low budget follows this same principle: test, learn, and only then, scale.

Your offer is probably the real problem

I've got to be brutally honest. Most of the time when ads 'don't work', it's not the ads. It's not the targeting or the budget. It's the offer. You could have the best ads in the world, but if what you're selling doesn't solve an urgent, painful, or expensive problem for a very specific type of person, you're pushing water uphill.

I see it all the time. Founders who've built a clever piece of software but can't explain who it's for or what nightmare it solves. Service businesses that sell vague benefits like "business growth" instead of concrete outcomes like "we'll get you 5 qualified sales calls a month".

Before you spend money on ads, you need to be able to finish these sentences:

  • My ideal customer is [a very specific person, e.g., a founder of a B2B SaaS company with 10-50 employees].
  • Their biggest frustration right now is [a specific, painful problem, e.g., their engineers are wasting hours manually managing their cloud spend].
  • My product/service solves this by [a clear, tangible outcome, e.g., providing a dashboard that automatically identifies and eliminates cloud waste, saving them £1,000s a month].

If you can't answer those with crystal clarity, your ads are doomed. The number one reason campaigns fail is a weak offer with no clear demand. Your offer has to be a painkiller, not a vitamin. People pay to get out of pain. They only think about taking vitamins. Nail this, and your budget will suddenly start working a lot harder for you.

This is my main advice for you:

Okay, that was a lot of information. To make it super simple, here is the exact framework I'd follow if I were starting from scratch with a small business budget today. This is the path from guessing to knowing.

Step Action to Take Why It's Important
1. The Maths Use the calculator above to figure out your LTV, your max affordable CAC (Customer Acquisition Cost), and max CPL (Cost Per Lead). This replaces guesswork with a clear financial target. You now know exactly what a 'good' result looks like for YOUR business.
2. The Channel Decide if your customers are actively searching for you (Google Ads) or if you need to find them (Meta Ads). Pick ONE platform to start with. Focuses your limited budget so you can gather meaningful data quickly, instead of spreading it too thin and learning nothing.
3. The Offer Nail down who you're selling to, what painful problem you solve, and what the clear outcome is. Make your offer irresistible. This is the engine of your campaign. A powerful offer can make average ads work. A weak offer will make even the best ads fail.
4. The Test Set a 'validation budget' of £500 - £1,500 per month for 90 days. The only goal is to hit your target CAC/CPL. This is a low-risk experiment to prove the model. You're buying data, not immediate profit. This confirms if your strategy is viable before you scale.
5. The Decision After 90 days, analyse the data. Are you hitting your target costs? If yes, you're ready to slowly increase the budget. If no, you need to fix the offer or test a new channel. This is the critical go/no-go point. It stops you from throwing good money after bad and forces you to make a data-driven decision about your marketing.

When should you get help?

You can absolutely do all of this yourself. But the process is slow, and mistakes are expensive. Every month you spend testing the wrong thing is a month of lost revenue. The main reason to work with an expert isn't because they have some secret button to press, it's because they've already made the mistakes you're about to make, but on someone else's budget.

An experienced eye can look at your business, do the maths in minutes, and immediately spot the biggest opportunity or the most glaring flaw in your strategy. We can help you build the LTV model, pick the right channel, structure the campaigns correctly from day one, and interpret the data so you're not just guessing what it means. This can shorten that 90-day validation period and save you thousands in wasted ad spend.

Getting your budget right is the foundation of scalable growth. It’s not just about spending money; it’s about investing it intelligently. If you've read this far and feel a bit overwhelmed, or you just want a second opinion on your numbers before you dive in, we offer a free, no-obligation strategy session. We can run through this exact framework for your specific business and give you a clear plan of action.

Hope this helps!

Lukas Holschuh
Lukas Holschuh

Founder, Growth & Advertising Consultant

Great campaigns fail without expertise. Lukas and his team provide the missing strategy, optimizing your entire advertising funnel—from ad creatives and copy to landing page design.

Backed by a proven track record across SaaS, eLearning, and eCommerce, they don't just run ads; they engineer systems that convert. A data-driven partnership focused on tangible revenue growth.

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