When Doing It Yourself Costs More Than Hiring Help: A Reality Check for Business Owners

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Over the past several weeks, this column has covered a lot of ground.

We’ve talked about how to audit your marketing. Why brand consistency builds trust. How to approach social media with a framework instead of guesswork. What your website is saying about you. How to earn media coverage. Where video fits. What SEO actually means for a local business. The difference between advertising and PR. How to build a marketing plan that works.

Every article gave you real tools. Real frameworks. Real things you can do yourself, starting today.

And if you’ve been reading along, you’ve probably noticed something that none of those articles said directly but all of them implied.

This is an enormous amount of work.

The math most owners don’t do

Let’s add it up.

Managing social media well — planning, creating, scheduling, engaging — takes five to ten hours a week. Maintaining a website — updates, content, analytics, optimization — takes another three to five hours. Email marketing runs two to four hours per campaign. A PR push — writing, pitching, following up — can consume 20 hours before you see a result. Running ad campaigns — setup, monitoring, adjusting — takes another three to five hours weekly.

That’s 15 to 25 hours a week. Every week. On top of running the actual business.

Most business owners in East Texas aren’t sitting around with 20 spare hours. They’re already stretched. They’re managing teams, serving clients, handling operations, dealing with the unexpected. Marketing gets squeezed into whatever cracks are left in the day.

Which means it gets done inconsistently. Or poorly. Or not at all.

The cost nobody talks about

Here’s the number that most business owners never calculate.

What is your time worth?

Not philosophically. Economically. If your business generates $250,000 a year and you work 50 hours a week, your time is worth roughly $96 an hour. Every hour spent writing a social media post, editing a photo, troubleshooting a website issue, or drafting an email campaign is an hour not spent on the activities that actually generate revenue — sales, client work, strategic decisions, business development.

At 15 hours a week, that’s over $1,400 in opportunity cost. Weekly. More than $70,000 a year in time that could have been spent doing what only you can do.

And here’s the part that stings: you’re probably not doing the marketing as well as someone who does it every day. Not because you’re not smart enough. Because marketing is a craft. Writing compelling copy, designing effective visuals, building media relationships, managing ad platforms, interpreting analytics, developing strategy — these are skills that take years to develop. Just like the skills that built your business took years to develop.

The mistake tax

Beyond the time cost, there’s the cost of getting it wrong.

An ad campaign with poor targeting doesn’t just waste the ad spend — it generates zero return. A website that’s not optimized for search doesn’t just miss traffic — it hands that traffic to competitors. Inconsistent branding doesn’t just look unprofessional — it actively erodes the trust you’ve spent years building. A missed media opportunity doesn’t just mean no coverage — it means your competitor got the story instead.

These aren’t dramatic failures. They’re slow leaks. They compound quietly over months and years, and most business owners never see the full cost because they don’t know what they’re missing.

The comparison that matters

The question has never been “can I do this myself?”

Of course you can. These articles proved it. The information is all here. The frameworks are real. The strategies work.

The question is “is doing it myself the best use of my time and energy?”

And the answer depends entirely on what else you could be doing with those 15 to 25 hours a week.

If your business needs you on the tools, with the clients, in the meetings, making the calls, closing the deals — then every hour you spend on marketing is an hour stolen from the activities that actually grow your revenue.

What the growing businesses know

The fastest-growing businesses in East Texas — the ones that seem to be everywhere, the ones whose name keeps coming up, the ones that always look polished and present and professional — aren’t run by people who do everything themselves.

They’re run by people who know what to hold and what to hand off.

They hold the vision. The relationships. The client work. The leadership.

They hand off the marketing execution to people who do it every day. People who have the systems, the tools, the creative talent, and the media relationships to execute at a level that would take the owner years to reach on their own.

It’s not an expense. It’s a reallocation. Time and energy move from something you’re doing adequately to someone who does it excellently — and your time moves back to the work that only you can do.

A final thought

If you’ve read this entire series, you know more about marketing your business than most of your competitors do.

That knowledge is valuable. Use it. Whether you implement it yourself or hire someone to carry it, understanding what good marketing looks like makes you a better business owner and a smarter buyer of marketing services.

But if you find yourself six months from now still planning to get started — still meaning to update the website, still intending to get consistent on social media, still thinking about reaching out to the media — consider the possibility that the most productive thing you can do isn’t try harder.

It’s get help.

The businesses that grow in this region are the ones that invest in growth. Not just with money, but with the decision to stop carrying everything alone.

Lee Allen Miller is the founder of MSGPR Ltd Co, a full-service creative agency in Lufkin, Texas, and author of Entrepreneurship God’s Way. For more insights on marketing and business growth, visit msgpr.com.

Lee Allen Miller
Lee Allen Millerhttps://msgresources.com
Lee Miller is a veteran of the broadcast media industry and CEO of MSG Resources LLC, where he consults on media strategy, broadcast best practices, and distribution technologies. He began his career in Lufkin in the early 80s and has since held leadership roles in both for-profit and nonprofit broadcasting. Lee serves as Executive Director of the Advanced Television Broadcasting Alliance and is a member of the Texas Association of Broadcasters Golden Mic Club. He lives near Lufkin on his family s tree farm, serves on the board of the Salvation Army, and plays keyboard in the worship band at Harmony Hill Baptist Church. He and his wife Kenla have two grown children, Joshua and Morgan.

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