In a world obsessed with cutting costs, it's easy to overlook the strategic marketing investments that actually move the needle. The good news? There's no shortage of options designed specifically for small to medium businesses that need expert guidance without the full-time overhead. Here are 10 marketing strategy services worth considering, along with what to expect, realistic costs and the actual returns you should be tracking.
A fractional CMO gives your business the strategic leadership of a senior, experienced marketing professional at a fraction of the cost of a full-time hire. You're getting years of expertise without the salary, superannuation, leave entitlements and recruitment headaches.
Strategy and oversight of your entire marketing function. Team guidance. Planning for marketing tactics that actually reach your business goals, rather than reactive decisions made in isolation. A fractional CMO isn't there to execute; they're there to lead.
$5,000 to $15,000 per month, depending on scope and hours required.
Think about it this way: a full-time CMO in Australia costs $180,000 to $250,000+ annually, plus super, leave and recruitment fees. With a fractional model, you're getting that same 15-year experience and credibility at a fraction of the price. You should see clearer sales pipelines, better cross-channel alignment across your marketing function and faster decision-making from a marketing perspective. No more waiting for junior team members to figure out the strategic direction.
An upfront strategic project with a fixed scope, typically delivered over 4 to 12 weeks. A marketing consultant (like myself) digs into your business, understands your pain points and goals and builds a marketing strategy tailored to where you actually are right now.
A discovery workshop to understand what's really going on. Customer journey mapping. Brand positioning work. Competitor analysis and SWOT review (depending on your business). An action plan your team can actually execute. Real frameworks, not generic templates.
$2,500 to $8,000, depending on scope and business complexity.
A clear focus on what matters. Wasted spend and wasted effort gets cut. Instead of chasing an idea that sounded good in a meeting but doesn't fit your market, you wind that back and focus energy into what actually moves the needle. Your team understands where your brand sits in the market and why customers choose you over the alternative.
A consultant reviews what's currently happening with your marketing and identifies where tools, tactics and processes could improve efficiency and effectiveness. This is diagnosis, not prescription. Recommendations are included.
Meetings to understand your current setup. Access to your tools and platforms so the consultant can assess performance. A comparison against what your competitors are doing. A report with specific recommendations you can implement.
$1,200 to $5,000, lower than a full strategy because scope is narrower.
Guesswork goes away. You get clear priorities based on data, not hunches. You spot expensive mistakes before they happen. Mistakes that could've cost you thousands over the next 12 months.
A focused strategy that sits within your broader marketing one. Content pillars get defined. Channels get identified. A publishing plan comes together that your internal team can actually follow without constant direction.
Audience insights. A content calendar tailored to your business. A messaging framework so your voice stays consistent across everything you publish.
$3,000 to $8,000 upfront. If an agency executes the plan as well, ongoing costs apply.
Better visibility in Google search results and AI-powered search. Lead nurturing that actually works because the content is timed and positioned right. Authority positioning as a leader in your space, which builds trust with the buyers you want.
A specialist consultant looks at your local search positioning, your reviews and how to build them and the technical setup of your Google Business profile. It's hyper-local marketing that drives foot traffic and qualified leads.
Keyword research for your local area. On-page optimisation for your website. Help building local citations in directories that matter. Ongoing support as needed.
$800 to $3,000 upfront, plus ongoing support depending on execution required.
More foot traffic if you're a bricks and mortar business. Better-qualified leads from people actively searching for what you offer locally. Improved visibility when potential customers search in your area.
A consultant or social media expert identifies which channels will actually work for your target audience. This analysis should happen before anything else. They determine the posting cadence required to hit your business goals. Then they build an engagement plan and content calendar you can follow.
Target audience analysis. Competitor research. A posting calendar and engagement strategy. Channel recommendations based on where your audience actually spends time.
Varies based on industry complexity, competitive landscape and business goals, but generally $1,500 to $4,000.
Track brand awareness if that's your goal. Monitor lead generation if that's what you're after. Watch customer engagement rates online. The metric that matters depends on what you actually need right now.
A consultant or agency helps you configure the platform, design the processes that connect marketing, sales, customer support and delivery. Often includes team training so everyone knows how to use the system.
Pipeline configuration. Automation workflows that save time and reduce manual data entry. Alignment between your marketing and sales teams so leads actually get followed up.
$3,500 to $8,000 for setup, plus ongoing monthly support.
A shorter sales cycle because less falls through the cracks. Better data because everything gets logged in one place. Scalable processes that can be automated, so you're not doing the same manual work every single month.
Ongoing strategic advice from someone senior. Problem-solving. Ad-hoc consultation when things come up. It's having a marketing brain available when you need it, without the commitment of a full-time hire or the project-based limitation of a one-off package.
A monthly meeting or quarterly deep dive with monthly check-ins. Responsive guidance when you need quick input. Someone who knows your business and can advise on the fly.
$1,500 to $3,500 per month, depending on scope and turnaround speed.
Better decision-making because you've got someone to pressure-test ideas with. Less friction between your internal teams because there's clarity on what marketing is doing and why. A marketing plan that actually stays current instead of becoming outdated.
Deep work on who you are, who you're trying to reach and why someone would choose you. This includes audience definition, competitive positioning and a messaging framework that guides everything you say.
A brand audit. Refinement of your ideal customer profile. A clear positioning statement. A tone and messaging guide your team can reference.
$4,000 to $10,000, reflecting the research and strategy depth required.
Consistent messaging that builds recognition. Stronger differentiation so you're not competing on price alone. Faster sales conversations because buyers understand what you do and why it matters.
You've got a product launch coming up. A seasonal promotion. A specific campaign with a defined goal and timeline. You know your team doesn't have the bandwidth to do it justice. A consultant comes in for that specific project.
Timeline planning. Messaging input. Help activating channels. Accurate data tracking. A post-campaign review so you learn what worked, what didn't and what you'd do differently next time.
$2,000 to $6,000 per campaign, depending on scope.
A measurable sales lift during the campaign. Market response data that shows real traction. Confidence in your positioning as you go to market. And crucially, documented learnings so the next promotion runs smarter than the last one.
Picking the right support depends on several factors working together. Budget and cash flow matter. Small businesses know they need help, but the money upfront isn't always there. That shapes what's realistic right now.
Your business maturity stage matters too. Are you starting out, scaling or repositioning? Each stage needs something different.
Team capacity is critical. Do you need someone to execute what's being suggested, or do you need strategic leadership only? That answer changes which service or combination of services makes sense.
Your immediate pain point is the real driver. Are you lacking pipeline? Struggling with retention? Drowning in processes that should be automated? Is everything in the founder's head and it needs to get into systems? These questions point you toward what you actually need to solve first.
Most businesses don't pick one service and stop there. You might start with a one-off audit or strategy package to get clarity. Then layer in execution support. Then add advisory to keep things on track. Build it as you go based on what you learn.
The goal isn't to hire every service at once. It's to invest in the right support at the right time, so your marketing actually drives the business outcomes you're after.