I speak to, and often train, a lot of new businesses. Most owners and directors understand that the first year is a test of judgment as much as it is about effort. They are expected to make the right calls on pricing, cash flow, staffing, operations and sales, and often all at once.
Perhaps one of the reasons marketing is sometimes the poor relation in the new business family is that it can easily become reactive and sort of passive when the demand for attention elsewhere is high. As a result, a few social media posts go out, a website is put live, perhaps a brochure is written, and the hope is that visibility will somehow turn into enquiries.
The problem is that that sort of passive visibility is not enough and it isn’t going to work in the vast majority of cases.
It’s a big, a very big, mistake to see marketing as a financial loss or a chore to be completed as fast as possible. Ask someone who went out of business in the first year why it happened and they rarely say they were overwhelmed with appropriate customers all clamouring to buy from them.
What they say is that they didn’t get enough of the customers they wanted.
For some businesses, they didn’t check the market fully, and the customers just weren’t there in the first place. For a handful of others, it may be that the market was saturated or they underestimated their appeal to the customer base. For most, though, one major factor was not talking to the right people through the right content.
The hard reality is that whether you like it or not, you need to market well to have a successful first year.
If your content is attracting the wrong audience, generating poor-fit leads or failing to explain clearly what you do and who you help, then it’s just not working, is it? In the first year of trading, every enquiry counts. Every missed opportunity is a step down a rocky road to financial issues. New businesses often feel pressure from this to “look busy” online. That leads to rushed content, AI-led generic messaging, and a scattergun approach. The result is often too much effort for very little return.
In reality, early-stage marketing needs to be focused. You don’t need to appeal to everyone. You just need to be clear enough and visible enough that the right people recognise themselves and see your message. To do that, you need to understand what your ideal customer is worried about, what they are searching for, what questions they are asking, and what makes them trust one provider over another.
In practical terms, that could well result in fewer posts, fewer pages and fewer campaigns, and better results.
Hard Reality Advice Point: In your first year, marketing should be judged by the quality of the audience it attracts, not simply by how often you post.
One of the biggest mistakes new businesses make is creating content around what they want to say rather than what their prospective customers need to hear.
I see too many websites where business owners talk about their passion, their values and their big ‘why’ they are in business. Look, let me be blunt here, those things have their place but a potential customer doesn’t care about them as much as they do about:
Well-written website pages, informative blogs, useful FAQs, clear service descriptions and targeted articles all help your business appear in the right searches. They make it easier for people to find you and easier for them to choose you. Content should not just fill space. It should answer questions, reduce uncertainty and move the reader towards action.
Hard Reality Advice Point: Effective content is a practical sales tool that helps good-fit customers recognise your value. It isn’t about your vanity or self-expression.
One common mistake that new business owners make is to be too worried about the metrics and scattergun sales possibilities to narrow their message. They worry that being specific will exclude opportunities. In fact, the opposite is usually true. Forget the vanity numbers like the number of followers, likes on your articles, or footfall through your site. Those numbers only inflate your ego, not your bank account.
When your content is too broad, it tends to attract vague interest rather than serious enquiries. Assuming you hear anything at all, you will hear from people who are not suited to your services or, worse, unclear about what you actually offer. That creates a pipeline full of weak leads and drains time that could be better spent on real prospects.
Clear content isn’t just there to fill pages; it should also act as a filter. It tells the right people that they are in the right place, while also (politely) signalling to the wrong people that the offer may not be for them. Deterring someone who is not going to be a customer, or be one you don’t want, is not a weakness… It is efficient marketing.
As a sort of bonus feature of good content, it also saves you time. In the first year of business, protecting time and focusing effort are essential. Content that filters the bad as well as attracting the good clients will support both.
Hard Reality Advice Point: The commitment to a more precise message often leads to fewer wasted enquiries and better-quality opportunities.
I can’t tell you how many times I have been called in to fix content that was created in response to what I call ‘panic points’. These are times when you just fire off content randomly. Such as when there is a quiet week, so you jump in the chair and post something ill thought out because you had a bit of spare time. Perhaps a competitor publishes an article, so you write one quickly in response. Maybe a month passes and you realise you haven’t done any updates, so a burst of rushed activity follows.
Don’t pretend you don’t know what I mean. I do it, you do it, we all do it, and we all need to stop it!
Don’t mix these panic points up with a strategy. They’re not, they’re just drift.
A content strategy gives structure to your marketing. It helps you decide who you are trying to reach, what they need to know, which topics matter most, which services deserve the most visibility and what action you want readers to take. It should also help to keep your messaging consistent across your website, email marketing, LinkedIn activity, blog content and other sales materials.
For a first-year business, it prevents wasted effort and helps ensure that the marketing you produce has a clear commercial purpose.
Hard Reality Advice Point: You may not want to do a content strategy, but it helps turn random marketing activity into a more deliberate process for winning the right business.
Many small businesses overcomplicate content, but honestly speaking, the best early content is usually fairly simple. Just build it around straightforward questions like:
If you can answer those questions well, you already have the basis of a strong content plan.
Think about service pages written around real customer problems, blog posts tackling common concerns, case-study-style examples, short explanatory articles, buying guides, checklists and FAQ content and so on. These are the kinds of assets that help support search visibility while also making your marketing more useful to genuine prospects.
Hard Reality Advice Point: The strongest first-year content usually starts with customer concerns, not your internal talking points. Customer first at all times will work best.
It doesn’t need to be hard. This is a quick review of the main components that help make a first year content strategy attract the right customers.
When it comes right down to it, surviving the first year will rely on customers giving you money for the services you provide. My advice boils down to one simple suggestion. If you want to sell to those customers who really need your excellent services, you need to tell them you are there and why they need you.
About the Author
Kevin Robinson is the founder of The Content Generator, a UK content strategy and copywriting business that helps organisations turn expertise into clear, commercially effective marketing. With a background spanning education, sales, and marketing, Kevin specialises in creating content that attracts the right audience, builds trust and supports better business growth.
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