How to Build a 90-Day Marketing Plan for Your Small Business (Without Hiring an Agency)

Small business founder building a 90-day marketing plan at their desk
  • A 90-day plan outperforms annual plans for small businesses because it matches the pace at which your market, budget, and priorities actually change
  • Before writing any tactics, you need four things: one goal, one audience, one primary channel, and your current baseline metrics
  • The plan runs in three phases: Foundation (weeks 1-4), Momentum (weeks 5-8), and Optimise (weeks 9-12)
  • Focus beats volume — one channel executed well outperforms five channels done poorly
  • Most small business marketing stalls not from lack of effort, but from lack of a clear direction to apply that effort
Diagram showing the three phases of a 90-day marketing plan: Foundation, Momentum, and Optimise
Three phases, one direction – Foundation, Momentum, Optimise.

 

 

Small business team setting marketing foundations and reviewing strategy together
Before any tactic – get the four foundations in place first.
  • Defining your core message. Write one clear sentence that describes who you help, what problem you solve, and what makes you different. This becomes the through-line for everything you produce.
  • Auditing what you already have. Review your website, LinkedIn profile, any existing content. Does it reflect your core message? Does it speak to your specific audience? Fix the obvious gaps before creating anything new.
  • Publishing your first two pieces of content. A blog post that answers a question your audience is actively searching for. A social post that introduces your point of view. The goal is to start, not to be perfect.
  • Setting up tracking. Google Analytics 4, a basic spreadsheet, a simple CRM — whatever fits your setup. Just make sure you can see where traffic comes from and where leads originate.

 

  • Maintain your publishing rhythm. Whatever you committed to in Phase 1 — one blog post a week, three LinkedIn posts a week, a monthly newsletter — keep it consistent. Consistency over 60 days builds more trust with your audience than a burst of activity followed by silence.
  • Start one acquisition experiment. A small paid social campaign, a cold outreach sequence to 50 ideal prospects, or a referral request sent to existing clients. Pick one, run it for four weeks, and measure it properly.
  • Begin capturing leads. If you don’t have a lead magnet, create one: a checklist, a short guide, a free audit offer. Something that gives your ideal client a reason to share their email address before they’re ready to buy.
  • Do a mid-plan review at week 6. Look at your baseline metrics. What’s moved? What hasn’t? Make small corrections — not full pivots.

 

  • Identify your highest-performing content or channel. What drove the most traffic, the most leads, or the most conversations? Double the output there.
  • Cut what isn’t working. If a channel hasn’t shown any meaningful signal in eight weeks, stop spending time or money on it. This is the hardest decision for most founders — but it’s what separates a 90-day plan from a random list of activities.
  • Begin planning your next cycle. In the final two weeks, draft the brief for your next 90 days. You’ll have real data to base it on — which makes the second plan significantly sharper than the first.
Graphic showing the Optimise phase approach in a 90-day marketing plan for small businesses
By week nine you have real data – this phase is about using it.

 

Founder reviewing marketing results and identifying common mistakes in their marketing plan
Most marketing plans don’t fail from lack of effort – they fail from lack of direction.
Metrics tracker for a 90-day marketing plan showing leads generated, channel performance and content engagement
Track three numbers, not thirty — leads, channel performance, and content engagement.

 

Picture of Sonya Trivedi

Sonya Trivedi

Sonya Trivedi is the Founder and CEO of AIMAR, an AI-powered Marketing and Growth platform for lean teams. Sonya has over 20 years of experience in marketing and communications across B2B, tech, startups, and global brands. She is passionate about helping lean teams build smarter, faster, and more focused marketing systems.

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