Last Updated on March 30, 2026
A Simple Framework for UK Businesses
Most UK businesses add marketing channels emotionally.
A competitor is on TikTok.
An agency suggests LinkedIn Ads.
Someone mentions YouTube.
Budget follows excitement.
Note: Before committing to any marketing channel, answer three questions: What does a lead cost from this channel? How many leads does it generate per month? What is the average deal value? If you cannot answer all three, you do not have enough data to commit budget.
ROI follows structure.
Note: Run every channel for at least 90 days before judging ROI. SEO needs 6 to 12 months. Google Ads needs 4 to 8 weeks of data. Social media organic needs consistent posting for 3 months. Judging too early wastes the investment you already made.
Every channel should pass a test before it gets funded.
The Core Rule
If a channel cannot be linked to profitable revenue, it should not receive budget.
Not because awareness is useless.
But because growth requires discipline.
The 5-Part ROI Test
Every marketing channel must answer these five questions.
If it fails one, pause.
1. Is The Goal Commercially Defined?
Not:
“Grow visibility.”
But:
- Generate 20 qualified leads per month
- Reduce cost per acquisition by 15%
- Increase repeat purchase rate
- Shorten sales cycle
If the outcome is vague, ROI will be vague.
2. Is Success Measurable?
Can you track:
- Cost per lead?
- Cost per acquisition?
- Revenue per channel?
- Conversion rate?
- Payback period?
If you cannot measure performance, you cannot optimise it.
If you cannot optimise it, you cannot scale it.
3. Is There A Clear Revenue Path?
Every channel must map to:
Spend → Traffic → Lead → Sale → Revenue → Margin.
If the path is unclear, you are funding speculation.
Brand activity may sit higher in the funnel.
But it still needs downstream linkage.
4. Is The Channel Economically Viable?
Ask:
- What is our break-even cost per acquisition?
- What is our customer lifetime value?
- What margin do we operate at?
If acquisition cost exceeds sustainable margin, the channel fails.
Not because it cannot generate traffic.
But because it cannot generate profit.
5. Is The Foundation Ready?
Before scaling a channel, confirm:
- Website converts
- Offer is clear
- Sales process is aligned
- Capacity exists
- Tracking is accurate
Traffic into a weak structure magnifies inefficiency.
Scale multiplies both strengths and weaknesses.
The Red Flag Channels
Be cautious when a channel is funded because:
- “Everyone is doing it.”
- It feels modern.
- It increases vanity metrics.
- It looks impressive in reports.
Trend-driven marketing rarely passes the ROI test.
Note: A channel that generates 10,000 impressions but zero enquiries is not “building awareness.” It is burning budget. Track cost per enquiry, not cost per click or cost per impression.
The Channel Scoring Method
Score each channel 1–5 across:
- Commercial clarity
- Measurability
- Revenue linkage
- Margin alignment
- Structural readiness
If a channel scores below 18/25, do not scale it.
Optimise first.
Example: Paid Search
Commercial goal defined.
Tracking installed.
Cost per acquisition clear.
Revenue visible.
Break-even known.
Pass.
Goal vague.
Revenue link unclear.
Attribution weak.
Margin undefined.
Fail.
The Discipline Difference
High-performing UK businesses:
- Kill weak channels quickly
- Double down on proven ones
- Reallocate budget monthly
- Track ROI obsessively
Underperforming businesses:
- Protect underperforming channels
- Hide behind dashboards
- Confuse activity with progress
The difference is in measurement.
The Compounding Principle
Once a channel passes the ROI test:
- Increase spend gradually
- Monitor cost per acquisition
- Watch margin
- Improve conversion
- Reinvest profit
That is a controlled scale.

