What a Marketing Growth Plan Actually Looks Like | MD Sady
Marketing Strategy

What a marketing growth plan actually looks like and how to build one

Most small businesses don't have a marketing plan. They have a list of things they're trying. Here's what a real plan looks like and a 90-day example you can follow.

9 min read Strategy guide

Most businesses don't have a marketing plan. They have a list of things they're trying — posting on Instagram, running the occasional ad, sending emails when they remember to.

It's exhausting. And it rarely builds into anything, because each tactic exists on its own with no clear reason for being there. You can't measure what's working. You can't double down on it. You're just busy, not growing.

The problem isn't effort. It's the absence of a structure that connects each action to a goal.

"A marketing growth plan isn't a 40-page document. It's a clear answer to four questions and once those questions are answered, every tactic has a reason to exist."

Here's what that looks like in practice — including a real 90-day example plan you can adapt for your own business.

Section 01

What a marketing growth plan actually is

A growth plan is not a content calendar. It's not a list of platforms you're going to post on. It's not a goal written on a whiteboard that everyone ignores by February.

A marketing growth plan is a set of deliberate decisions about who you're trying to reach, where you'll reach them, what you'll say, and what success looks like in a defined timeframe. Everything else the tactics, the tools, the channels follows from those decisions.

When you have that clarity, choosing tactics becomes easy. Without it, every new platform or trend looks like an opportunity, and you end up spreading your effort across too many things to do any of them well.

Section 02 — The core framework

The 4 questions every growth plan answers

These four questions sound simple. Most business owners haven't answered them properly. Work through each one honestly — not with the answer you wish were true, but with what's actually true right now.

Question 1: Who are you trying to reach?

Question 01
Who is your ideal customer — specifically?
Not "Business owners." Not "anyone who needs a website." A real description: what industry are they in, what size is their business, what problem are they trying to solve, what have they already tried, and what does a good outcome look like for them?
Example answer: "Local service businesses in Bangladesh with 5–20 employees who have a website but aren't getting leads from it. They've tried Facebook ads with little result and want something that works without paying every month."

The more specific your answer, the more every subsequent decision simplifies. A vague audience means vague content, vague messaging, and vague results.

Question 2: Where do those people look when they need what you offer?

Question 02
Where does your ideal customer go to find solutions?
Google search? LinkedIn? Word of mouth from other business owners? Industry forums? Facebook groups? The answer tells you which channels deserve your attention and which ones you can ignore, no matter how often you hear about them.
Example answer: "They search Google first ('web design Bangladesh', 'how to get more leads from my website'). They also ask peers in local business groups on Facebook. LinkedIn is less relevant for this audience."

This is the question that determines your channel. If your customers search on Google, SEO and Google Ads are worth investing in. If they're on LinkedIn, that's where your content belongs. If they rely on referrals, your energy goes into making it easy for happy clients to recommend you. For a deeper look at how to choose between SEO and paid ads specifically, see our channel comparison guide.

Question 3: What do they need to see before they trust you enough to reach out?

Question 03
What builds enough trust for your ideal customer to contact you?
Social proof? Case studies with real numbers? A clear explanation of your process? A free resource that demonstrates your thinking? The answer shapes your content strategy and your website. It tells you what to produce and where to put it.
Example answer: "They need to see real results (not just 'we're great'). Case studies with specific numbers. A clear explanation of our process. And a low-commitment first step like a free audit — before they're willing to pay for anything."

This question is the one most businesses skip entirely. They create content without asking what their audience actually needs to see before they feel safe reaching out. The result is content that educates without converting.

Question 4: What does success look like in 90 days?

Question 04
What specifically will have changed in 90 days if the plan is working?
Not "more leads" or "better brand awareness." A number. A specific metric. 10 new enquiries a month. Ranking on page one for three target keywords. 200 new email subscribers. The goal doesn't have to be huge — it has to be measurable, so you know whether what you're doing is working.
Example answer: "In 90 days, we want 15+ website enquiries per month (up from 4), and to be ranking on page one for 'web design Bangladesh' and two related keywords."

A goal without a number is a wish. Putting a specific number on it changes how you make decisions — because now every tactic can be evaluated against whether it moves that number.

Section 03 — A real plan

A real 90-day growth plan for a local service business

Here's what the answers to those four questions produce when turned into an actual plan. The business: a web design and digital marketing agency in Bangladesh targeting local small businesses. Budget: modest but real.

Mo
01
Month 1 — Foundation
Fix the website. Set up the infrastructure.
  • Run a full website audit — fix load speed, mobile issues, missing CTAs, and unclear messaging. Use the free 25-point checklist as the starting point.
  • Set up Google Search Console and Google Analytics properly. Without data, the next two months are guesswork.
  • Complete and optimise the Google Business Profile — photos, services, description, and first 5 reviews requested from past clients.
  • Publish 2 foundational blog posts targeting the top keywords from Q2 ("web design Bangladesh", "how to get more leads from your website").
Focus: Building the base everything else will run on
Mo
02
Month 2 — Traffic & trust
Drive the right visitors. Give them reasons to reach out.
  • Publish 2 more blog posts — one case study with real numbers (trust-builder from Q3), one educational piece answering a common search query.
  • Launch a small Google Ads campaign targeting the 3 highest-intent local keywords. Small daily budget. The goal is data on what converts, not volume.
  • Add 3 client testimonials to the homepage with specific results not "great service" but "we went from 2 enquiries a month to 9."
  • Set up a simple email lead magnet — a free checklist or quiz to capture visitors who aren't ready to enquire yet. (See Day 4 for a working example.)
Focus: Generating the first measurable results and learning what works
Mo
03
Month 3 — Review & double down
Kill what isn't working. Scale what is.
  • Review Google Search Console — which blog posts are getting impressions? Which keywords are within reach of page one? Write one more post targeting the best opportunity.
  • Review the Google Ads data — which keywords produced enquiries, not just clicks? Pause everything that spent money without converting. Increase budget on what worked.
  • Follow up on every lead from Months 1–2 who didn't convert. A simple "just checking in did you manage to move forward with your website?" email converts more often than most people expect.
  • Measure against the Q4 goal: are we at 15 enquiries a month? If yes — what produced them, and how do we do more of it? If no — which step in the funnel is losing people?
Focus: Compounding what works. Stopping what doesn't.

This isn't a perfect plan. It's a real one built on actual answers to the four questions, with specific actions in a specific order, and a measurement at the end. That structure is what separates it from a list of tactics.

Section 04

The most common mistake — starting with tactics, not answers

Most businesses do this backwards. They decide on a tactic first "we should be on Instagram," "we need to run ads," "let's start a blog" and then try to make it work without the questions answered.

What this looks like in practice

Running Instagram content before answering Q2 (where does your audience actually look?) is wasted effort if your customers aren't there.

Running paid ads before answering Q3 (what builds trust?) means paying to send people to a page that doesn't convert them.

Publishing blog posts before answering Q1 (who specifically are you reaching?) means writing content for nobody in particular.

The questions come first. Every time. The answers take less than an hour to work through properly and they save months of effort spent on things that were never going to work for your specific business and audience.

Understanding which channel deserves your attention first is often the hardest part. If you haven't already, our guide to SEO vs paid ads for small businesses will help you answer Q2 specifically.

Want a plan built for your business?

Book a free 30-minute marketing consultation

We'll work through the four questions together and leave you with a clear direction whether you work with us afterwards or not.

Book your free consultation →

No pitch. No commitment. Just a clear plan for your business.

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