Most business owners I talk to in this region don’t have a marketing plan.
They have a collection of activities. A Facebook page they try to keep active. A website they built a few years ago. An ad they run when things slow down. A flyer for the next Chamber event.
None of that is bad. All of it is disconnected.
And disconnected marketing is why so many businesses feel like they’re spending money, investing time, and not seeing results. Not because the individual pieces are wrong, but because the pieces aren’t connected to each other — or to any clear destination.
A marketing plan doesn’t have to be complicated. In fact, the simpler it is, the more likely you are to follow it.
Here’s a framework that works.
Define what success looks like — specifically
“More customers” isn’t a goal. It’s a wish.
A goal sounds like this: 15 new client inquiries per month by September. A 25% increase in repeat customers by year-end. Three media placements in regional publications this quarter. Enough booked work to hire an additional crew by Q4.
When the destination is specific, every marketing decision becomes easier. You can ask “does this move us closer to the goal?” and get a clear answer. When the destination is vague, every marketing decision feels like a guess.
Know exactly who you’re talking to
This is where most business owners rush past, and it’s the step that matters most.
Who is your ideal customer? Not “anyone who needs what we do.” The specific person. What kind of business do they run? How big is their team? What problems keep them up at night? Where do they spend time online? What would make them choose you over the two other options they’re considering?
In East Texas, this often means thinking about the specific communities you serve, the industries that drive the local economy, and the relationship dynamics that influence buying decisions. A marketing message that resonates in Lufkin might need to sound different in Nacogdoches or Jasper or Huntsville. Not dramatically different, but tuned to the audience.
When you know who you’re talking to, you know what to say. And you know where to say it.
Pick three channels and commit
The fastest way to waste a marketing budget is to spread it across seven platforms and do a mediocre job on all of them.
Pick three. For most local businesses in East Texas, the highest-impact combination is a well-maintained website, one primary social media platform, and either email marketing or Google advertising.
Master those three before adding a fourth. A business with a strong website, an active Facebook presence, and a monthly email to past customers is in better shape than a business with accounts on six platforms and no consistent activity on any of them.
Plan 90 days at a time
Don’t try to plan a full year of marketing content. The world moves too fast and your business changes too much. Plan in 90-day cycles.
Each quarter, define your theme. What’s the message? What’s the focus? What are the key dates, events, or promotions you want to build around?
Then build a weekly content plan for your three channels. This doesn’t need to be elaborate. A simple spreadsheet or even a notebook works. Monday is a value post. Wednesday is a story post. Friday is a promotion or engagement post. Your email goes out the first Tuesday of each month. Your Google ad runs during your historically slowest weeks.
The plan won’t survive the quarter unchanged. Things happen. Opportunities appear. But having a baseline means you’re adjusting intentionally instead of improvising constantly.
Review honestly every 90 days
At the end of each quarter, ask yourself three questions.
Did we execute the plan? If not, what got in the way?
What worked? Not what felt good — what produced measurable results? More website traffic. More phone calls. More inquiries. More booked work.
What didn’t work? This is the uncomfortable question. But it’s the one that saves you from spending another quarter doing something that isn’t producing returns.
Then adjust. Double down on what’s working. Cut what isn’t. Refine the plan for the next 90 days.
Where discipline meets reality
Here’s what I’ve observed in 30-plus years of working with businesses in this region.
The plan is never the problem. The follow-through is.
Business owners build the plan with good intentions. Then April arrives and the crew is shorthanded. May brings an unexpected opportunity that demands all their attention. June is the busy season and there’s no time for social media. July is slow but they’re exhausted from June. And by August, the marketing plan from January is a distant memory.
This isn’t a failure of discipline. It’s a failure of capacity. Running a business takes everything you have. Marketing consistently, on top of everything else, takes something extra — time, creative energy, strategic attention — that most business owners simply don’t have in reserve.
The ones who grow aren’t always the ones who try harder. They’re the ones who recognize when they need a partner to carry what they can’t carry 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.