This is a post about the advantages of social media for small businesses.
There is a version of marketing that requires a lot of money (I used to work with it!). Press releases sent to journalists who may or may not open them, paid placements in publications your audience may or may not read, ad campaigns managed by agencies charging retainers that would make your eyes water. PR firms promising coverage that arrives three months later, if at all.
For a long time, that was the only version available. If you wanted people to know your business existed, you paid for the privilege and hoped for the best.
That is no longer true and it’s glorious! It’s allowed so many of us to branch out and go off on our own creating our own independent businesses. It’s quite freeing in a way…
Why Traditional Marketing Doesn’t Work for Most Small Businesses
Let’s be honest about what traditional marketing involves. A PR retainer for a small to mid-sized business typically starts at £1,500 to £3,000 a month and that’s before you factor in event costs, press trips, sample send-outs or paid placements. Google and Meta ads can work, but they require consistent spend, expert management and an audience that’s already warm enough to convert. A single billboard or print ad campaign? Thousands, for something that disappears in a few weeks and leaves behind no data, no relationship and no way of knowing if it worked.
None of this is inherently wrong. Some of it can work brilliantly in the right context. But for most small businesses, service providers and independent brands, it’s either inaccessible or a very expensive gamble.
The Real Benefits of Social Media Marketing for Small Businesses
Social media didn’t just give businesses a new channel, but it fundamentally changed the economics of reaching people.
For the first time, a small business could put something in front of thousands (sometimes millions!) of potential customers without paying to place it there. The currency shifted from budget to attention, from spend to strategy. What matters now is not how much you can put behind a post but whether the post is actually worth stopping for.
Is Social Media Management Worth It for Small Businesses?
This is incredibly levelling. A well-made reel from an independent café can outperform a paid campaign from a chain. A thoughtful carousel from a solo service provider can reach more of the right people than a press release sent to a hundred journalists. Not always and not automatically, but the potential and the possibility are there in a way it simply wasn’t before.
I watched this play out repeatedly during my years in the music industry. Independent artists with no PR budget, no plugger, no label backing…just great music and a creative, consistent social media presence, building real, engaged audiences. Not because they gamed the algorithm but because they showed up, they were themselves and they gave people a reason to follow.
Compare that to the old route: a review in a music publication, however glowing, reaches the people who already read that publication. Even then it doesn’t guarantee that reader will play it! A real person playing thirty seconds of a song they love to their 4,000 followers reaches people who trust that person’s taste. Which one do you think is more likely to convert? I mean, just look at TikTok and all the songs it made go viral… I worked with a band that had a viral song on TikTok in 2020. That band is STILL seeing much higher engagement and a lot of revenue from that ONE song. Their audience keeps growing and now they have so many fans that weren’t even born when they released said song!
Every time I saw it happen it reinforced the same thing: word of mouth has always been the most powerful form of marketing. Social media just gave it a much bigger scale.
How Much Does Social Media Marketing Actually Cost?
Here is the thing that people don’t usually stop to think about: social media is free to use. But it’s not free to do it well.
The platforms cost nothing. The time, the strategy, the consistency, the creativity; those cost something. Either your own time, which has a value even if it doesn’t appear on an invoice or someone else’s expertise.
This is where the conversation about SMM costs usually goes wrong. People see a monthly management fee and compare it to the sticker price of social media being zero. But that’s not the right comparison; the right comparison is:
What would it cost to get the same reach, the same relationships and the same long-term brand presence through traditional marketing?
A PR retainer, paid ads, sponsored placements, event appearances, press trips. Put those numbers next to a well-run social media strategy and the maths looks very different.
More importantly, digital media compounds in a way most traditional marketing doesn’t. A well-optimised Pinterest pin can drive traffic for years. A useful Instagram carousel gets saved and shared long after it was posted. A blog post with solid SEO keeps bringing in new readers every month without any additional spend. You are not just buying reach, you are building assets.
What Small Businesses Actually Need to Grow on Social Media
You do not need a big budget. You need a few things that money alone cannot buy:
Clarity on who you’re talking to: the biggest mistake in social media marketing (and in most marketing, actually!) is thinking about how you receive the message rather than your audience. The businesses that grow on social media are the ones that understand their audience well enough to create content that feels like it was made for them specifically.
Consistency over perfection: a polished post that goes up once a month will not perform as well as a straightforward, useful post that goes up every week. The algorithm rewards consistency but, more importantly, so do people. Showing up regularly builds trust in a way that sporadic bursts of brilliant content simply cannot.
Content that has a shelf life: not everything needs to be reactive and trend-led. Evergreen content (posts that answer real questions, solve real problems and stay relevant regardless of when someone finds them) is the foundation of a social media presence that keeps working without constant feeding.
Someone who actually understands your voice. Whether that is you or someone you bring in, the content needs to sound like the real thing. The businesses that do well on social media have a point of view and sound like somebody, not everybody.
How to Outsource Social Media Management (And What to Spend First)
If budget is limited (and for most small businesses it is), here is how to think about it:
Spend on strategy before you spend on content. Understanding your audience, your positioning and your content pillars properly will make everything else more effective. A good strategy session or audit will save you months of posting into the void.
Spend on someone who will do it properly rather than paying for volume. Eight really good posts a month will work out much better than twenty average ones. Quality of reach matters far more than quantity of output.
Spend on the channels where your audience actually is. You do not need to be everywhere, you need to be somewhere consistently and do it well. One platform done properly is worth more than five done badly.
And if you are weighing up social media management against traditional PR or paid ads, factor in the longevity. A campaign ends while a well-built social media presence keeps going.
The honest version of this is simple: the barrier to reaching your audience has never been lower (I know, the algo can really get in the way though!). What stands between most small businesses and real growth on social media is not budget, it is strategy, consistency and a true understanding of who they are talking to.
Besides, I don’t know what you offer but…say you’re a psychologist charging £100 per session. Once a week is about £400 a month. If your social media is doing its job, that’s 3-4 clients per month that you need to cover it. That’s it!
That is totally fixable and it costs a lot less than you think!
Good Season offers social media management, content strategy and Pinterest services for small businesses and service providers. If you want to talk through what would actually work for your business, get in touch.

This was a post about the advantages of social media for small businesses.
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