One formula begins by identifying property and business type and what the goals and objectives are.
For example, if property is, highway-oriented conveyor, goal and objective may be to increase exposure to drive higher sales volumes.
Here, some operators rely on highway billboards to help achieve this. In some areas, a basic billboard advertisement may cost $20,000 a year or more.
So, if gross is $750,000, a billboard alone would be 3.0 percent of sales. I’ve seen billboards increase site volumes by as much as 25 percent.
Full-service spends from $18,000 to $30,000 or more on advertising.
If self-serve, goal and objective may be to recover lost business from downturn and /or increased competition.
For example, if the target is 18 to 30 year olds, forget newspaper ads, yellow pages, etc.
They get everything from the internet.
Cost of virtual store varies - website design, monthly fee, merchant account for shopping cart, phone
app design and monthly fee, POS integration, etc.
I have also seen survey results for some carwash businesses with zero responses for seniors, people 69 years and older. Seniors typically represent 25 percent of an area’s population.
In this case, traditional
marketing works better like direct mail coupons, etc.
So, it’s not how much to spend on percentage of sales basis but rather what are you trying to accomplish and what is the best or optimal way to achieve the results?
This determines how much to spend.