Most "marketing strategies" are either a 40-page document no one reads or a vague intention to "do more marketing." For a service business, what you actually need fits on a page, and answering five questions honestly beats any template you buy.
TL;DR: A workable strategy answers five things: what you're trying to achieve (a number), who you serve, where they look for you, how you'll capture and convert the interest you create, and how you'll measure it. Nail those, and the tactics (which ads, which posts, which automations) become obvious.
The five parts:
- Goal · Audience · Channels · Capture & convert · Measurement
1. Goal: a number, not a vibe
"More leads" isn't a goal. "Ten new clients a month at a profitable cost" is. A concrete target tells you how much to spend and what "working" looks like. Start from the revenue you want and work backwards.
2. Audience: who, specifically
The narrower you describe your ideal client, their situation, what they're trying to solve, how they choose, the sharper everything downstream becomes. Vague audiences produce vague marketing that speaks to no one.
3. Channels: where they actually look
Pick the two or three places your audience genuinely searches and spends time (usually search and your Google Business Profile for service businesses, plus one social channel) and do those well, rather than spreading thin across every platform.
4. Capture & convert: the part most skip
Generating interest is wasted if you drop it. Decide how every enquiry gets answered fast, followed up, and turned into a booking; see capture and convert. This is usually where the biggest, cheapest wins hide.
5. Measurement: a few numbers you check
Track leads, conversion rate, cost per client, and repeat business. Four numbers you actually review beat a dashboard you ignore. Adjust the plan from what they tell you.
Key takeaways
- A real strategy fits on a page: goal, audience, channels, capture, measurement
- Make the goal a number and the audience specific
- Do two or three channels well, not all of them badly
- Don't skip capture & convert: it's where the cheap wins are
Frequently asked questions
How long should a marketing strategy be?
For most service businesses, one page. Length isn't the point; clarity on the five parts is.
How often should I revisit it?
Quarterly is sensible, plus any time something big changes (a new service, a new goal). Measurement tells you when to adjust.
Do I need different strategies per channel?
No. One strategy, then channel-specific tactics that serve it. The strategy decides which channels even make the cut.
What if I have no budget?
Start with the free fundamentals: your profile, reviews, and capturing the enquiries you already get. Strategy matters more than spend.
Want to see where your business stands? Get a free AEO visibility scan, or book a free strategy session.
Written by Katrina Curll, Founder of Linkai Digital. Twenty years in marketing, including seven as a Vice President at Forrester, helping Australian service businesses build systems that capture, convert and keep more clients.
