Let’s get real: the budgeting process can suck. As a tech marketer, the struggle of continually proving value to a sales-driven leadership team is an unfortunate reality of the job. And if you do get the budget you asked for, how should you allocate those funds?

This article is not about the “right” answer for your company—it’s about the REAL answers…what your peers at other software/tech companies are actually spending behind-the-scenes. Curious how your marketing budget stacks up? Read on…

Does a marketing budget directly correlate to a tech company’s revenue?

The short answer: sometimes.

It probably doesn’t come as any surprise that almost all of the tech companies we surveyed who make less than $1M in annual revenue had a marketing budget of under $10,000/year. (These figures exclude salaries/overhead, but do account for agency spend, paid media, etc.) On the flip side, the huge tech companies making $50M+ in annual revenue were the biggest spenders on average, with several marketing budgets of $1M+ year.

For companies in the middle of those two revenue extremes, however, we found that marketing budgets can vary dramatically. Here are some of the most intriguing stats pulled from survey answers:

  • The highest marketing budget reported for a tech company making under $1M in annual revenue was $10,001-$50,000/year.
  • For tech companies making $1-5M/year, about half reported spending $10,001-$50,000/year on marketing…but a few lucky departments had budgets of 10x that amount: $500,001 to a whopping $1M/year.
  • For tech companies making $5-25M/year, there was a pretty even number of responses for budgets ranging from $10,001-$500,000/year (quiet the large span); no one reported spending over $500,000/year on marketing (unlike tech companies in the lower $1-5M revenue bracket).
  • The lowest marketing budget reported for a tech company making $50M+/year was $50,001-$100,000/year.

Our take on the survey results: It’s pretty obvious that low-revenue tech companies are bootstrapping marketing efforts whereas high-revenue tech companies have formal budgets and more money at their disposal. But what about those huge gaps in the middle? Our hypothesis all comes down to venture capital: those who have it can invest big bucks into marketing and those who don’t are stuck working within a smaller budget generated organically by sales vs. outside investors.

How much are tech companies spending on specific marketing tactics?

Now that you know how much tech companies are spending on marketing overall, the next question is how are they allocating that money? Here’s how the survey takers responded… 

How much are tech companies spending on paid digital advertising?

Google Ads, retargeting ads, paid social…seems like you can pay to put an ad on just about any online property nowadays, which is probably why 73% of the tech companies we surveyed do some form of paid digital advertising.

Here are some other interesting stats from our survey:

  • SaaS companies spent the most on paid ads each month ($5,001+).
  • Tech consulting companies spent the least on paid ads each month (not doing it at all or under $250/month).
  • Several companies in the highest revenue bracket ($50M+/year) reported spending only $501-$1,000/month on paid digital advertising; by contrast, it wasn’t uncommon for a company in the $1-5M range to spend $2,501-$5,001+/month on paid advertising. 

Our take on the survey results: Why aren’t huge tech companies spending a lot on paid digital advertising? The answer is probably that they don’t have to! At that size, companies will have amazing name recognition and rank high within organic search results. By contracts, smaller tech companies need to pay for exposure…especially in the extremely saturated SaaS industry.

How much are tech companies spending on print advertising?

Is print dead? No…but it’s not faring well. Only 30% of tech companies reported using print advertising in our survey. What else did the survey find?

  • Most companies using print advertising identified as hardware, SaaS or consulting.
  • A monthly budget of $1,001-$2,500/month was the most popular response, with only one company spending $5,001+/month.
  • No one earning more than $25M/year reported using print advertising.

Our take on the survey results: Print advertising can be effective for raising brand awareness, which is more important for smaller companies. However with people working from home last year, it’s no surprise that budgets for this tactic were on the lower side.

How much are tech companies spending on direct mail?

Identical to print advertising, only 30% of tech companies reported using direct mail. However, these weren’t always the same people…only a few companies reported doing BOTH print advertising and direct mail; most chose one or the other.

  • Most companies using direct mail identified as hardware or SaaS.
  • No one reported spending more than $1,000/month on direct mail and several companies are spending under $250/month.
  • Companies making $5-25M/year were the most likely to use direct mail.

Our take on the survey results: With the ever-rising cost of printing and postage, such small monthly direct mail budgets aren’t going to be doing much at scale. Perhaps these companies are using direct mail in a more targeted way for ABM (account-based marketing) instead of trying to mail to a broader audience. That said, sending materials via the post office is becoming difficult for B2B tech companies since it’s much more common for people to be working from home; it’s way easier (and less creepy) to mail something to the corporate HQ vs. trying to hunt down someone’s home mailing address.

Conclusion

Wondering how other tech companies use agencies and freelancers as a marketing resource? Download our free “Working with an Agency in the Real World” survey report to see how you stack up against others in your industry.

Tech Marketing Survey Series: Working with an Agency in the Real World