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September 25, 2025

Cost-effective manufacturing marketing: the ultimate guide for 2026

Angel Broom
Marketing Manager

Angel Broom

Marketing Manager

As Marketing Manager at P+S, Angel keeps our clients, internal teams and the wider marketing community up to date with the freshest insights, initiatives and intelligence. Seamlessly managing numerous campaigns, projects, and initiatives, Angel always finds time to stay informed on the latest creative, strategic and digital trends.

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It’s no secret that the recent US tariffs are having a major effect on the manufacturing industry.

With the additional financial pressure, many businesses will be looking for places to cut costs, and marketing is often the first to be scaled back.

We’d recommend a note of caution: marketing isn’t just a nice-to-have, and there are many cost-effective ways to ensure your manufacturing marketing boosts long-term growth, even in tough economic times.

In this guide we’ll cover:

  • Establishing a marketing strategy
  • Digital marketing
  • Email marketing
  • Video marketing

How do you establish a manufacturing marketing strategy?

It’s common to see businesses approach their marketing strategy as a more ‘ad hoc’ activity. In reality, this will be your roadmap when it comes to interacting with customers, growing your audience and ultimately increasing your sales.

When it comes to saving on costs, a clear strategy will help you map out exactly what you want to spend and where. If you don’t have an overarching plan and budget in place, you risk spending money on ineffective channels and losing track of how much you’re spending.

To put your plans into action, a good place to start is with your brand strategy. Once you have established exactly what your brand is, and who your audience is, you can move on to the wider marketing plan.

A good marketing plan will include:

  • Establishing your goals as a business and what you want to achieve
  • Researching your market and competitors
  • Identifying your unique offering
  • Establishing where your audience is most active
  • Deciding which marketing channels you want to be active on
  • Crafting your messaging and content plan
  • Setting your paid media budgets

With that established, you can move forward with confidence, knowing that all your marketing efforts will be underpinned by clear goals and a solid plan.

What does digital marketing for manufacturers include?

The manufacturing industry has traditionally relied on trade shows, print advertising, and relationship-based sales to reach customers and bring in more revenue.

While these methods still have their place, digital marketing is now an essential addition to any successful manufacturing marketing strategy in 2026.

Digital marketing can seem daunting as it encapsulates so much, but don’t feel like you need to tackle it all right away. Especially with smaller marketing teams, you need to be able to prioritise the best, most cost-effective approaches to start.

Organic search engine optimisation (SEO)

Organic SEO is the process of getting your website to appear higher up on search engines when potential customers search for terms relating to your business or industry.

Unlike paid search, organic SEO is a free marketing method that can generate more traffic to your site.

By creating content and pages that use optimised keywords, you’re telling the search engine algorithm what your content is about and the specific search terms it should rank for.

For example, if you were a packaging manufacturer and you wanted more people to find out about your shelf-ready packaging products, you would use ‘shelf-ready packaging’ as your main keyword.

This means dotting the term throughout the content on that product’s page, along with other related keywords, so you can tell the search engine that when someone looks for this service it should show your content.

The key to successful SEO is selecting keywords that have a high search volume (so plenty of people are looking for the term), and low competition (not many other businesses are ranking for it so you have a good chance of getting your page to the top!).

Google analytics

Google Analytics is a free platform created by Google that can show you all the data relating to your website and your website’s traffic.

It will give you information on:

  • The number of active users on your site
  • The most viewed pages on your site
  • How long people spend on your site
  • Where in the world your users are coming from
  • How people arrived to your website (i.e. via ads, social media, direct etc.)

And that’s just a few of the things it can do!

By looking at your website’s data you can form a much stronger marketing strategy that reaches the right people at the right time with the right content.

Social media marketing

Social media marketing can be organic (no direct cost) or paid. The main difference here is when you put money behind your social media content, it will get put in front of tens, if not hundreds, of thousands more people.

However, organic social media marketing is still incredibly important and will help build a new audience, foster trust with your prospects, and help you become an authority in your industry.

The key with social media marketing is to find out where your typical customers spend their time. For example, B2B companies often find the majority of their audience operates on LinkedIn. Whereas a lot of B2C organisations may find their audience is more active on Meta (Facebook and Instagram).

By ensuring you’re active on the right channels, you’re increasing your chances of prospects seeing your business. You’re also saving time and resources that would be wasted on platforms which won’t give you a return.

The type of content you post really depends on your business, but some good places to start are:

  • Thought leadership – blogs, whitepapers and insights
  • Case studies – boosting your social proof
  • People – posting some behind-the-scenes glimpses of your business humanises your brand
  • Awards / achievements

And the number one rule of making the most out of your social media: stay consistent. Ideally you want to be posting at least five times per week, but if that’s too much to start with, try once every week and build up from there.

These are just a few elements of digital marketing that should make a big difference to your business with little to no budget (especially if you haven’t got these strategies in place already).

If you want to learn more, you can get in touch with us and we would be happy to help!

Email marketing for manufacturers

Email marketing is a great way of getting your message directly in front of people. Where social media can be a more general approach, email marketing is more direct and targeted.

The key to a successful email marketing campaign is to have strong audience segmentation. This means grouping all your contacts into specific areas i.e. you may have a group of decision makers, you may have a group of prospects in a specific industry, or you may have a group of contacts who have been on your website before.

The possibilities for audience segmentation are endless, especially if you have large contact lists, but you need to make sure each segment is built for a specific purpose.

For example, if you create an audience segment of people who have visited your website but didn’t make a purchase, these would be the perfect prospects to put in an email campaign with a special offer or discount. This is because they have shown intent in looking at your business and your services, but they didn’t convert.

You can also run email campaigns that are more generalised, like an email newsletter. This is a great way to remind your contacts of you and your business without being too sales driven. You can run these monthly or quarterly, and it means you can keep your audiences updated on any news, offers or new products you may have.

The cost implications of this form of marketing can vary. You can do it organically for free, but this will take more time and manual effort. The other option is using a specialised email marketing platform like Mailchimp or ActiveCampaign. This costs more but means you can keep all of your contacts and emails in one place, and automate your email sequences.

Video marketing for manufacturers

As mentioned previously, companies in the manufacturing industry often still rely on print materials and trade shows to attract new business.

But with the rise in digital marketing, standing out online can be a challenge. This is where video marketing can be incredibly valuable.

According to a 2025 Wyzowl report, 93% of marketers say video marketing has given them a good return on investment (ROI).

Video marketing can serve a range of purposes; from increasing brand awareness and engagement, through to boosting bottom-line sales. And there are plenty of video types to choose from! To name a few:

  • Explainer videos
  • Show your audience how your products or processes work! This is a great way to demystify complex process without using words alone. Take the explainer we created for Epson about dry fibre printing:
  • Testimonial videos – Film some of your happy customers to boost your social proof! This will increase trust and confidence in your audience and help convince them to go with you over your competitors.
  • Product demo videos – Showing prospects how your products work in action not only creates clarity, but it gives you the chance to show specific product features that may otherwise have been missed. It’s also a great way to show ease of use, which can be the deciding factor for customers.

Video marketing can seem daunting, but once you have a plan for your content laid out, getting started is easy! In fact, it’s often the shorter videos that perform better online in terms of engagement.

Video marketing is a key player in standing out in your market and can be the big differentiator between you and your competitors.

What are the best manufacturing marketing strategies?

Now that we’ve covered some of the main marketing strategies you can use for your manufacturing business, you may be wondering which one is the best.

The key here is to understand that this isn’t a tick box exercise. It isn’t about doing each activity once and expecting the results to pour in overnight. You need to be applying each strategy consistently and in tandem with one another.

Each point has a different purpose and benefit:

  • Establishing a marketing strategy is about laying strong foundations. Whilst this may not be an outward-facing piece of content, it will direct all of your marketing going forwards.
  • Digital marketing is about improving your digital presence so a higher volume of prospects can find you and convert into customers.
  • Email marketing is about direct outreach with your contacts. It’s a way to send them messaging that resonates with them and their unique challenges so they’re more likely to convert.
  • Video marketing is about setting yourself apart from your competitors and building trust and confidence with your audience.

But the main takeaway is that there are plenty of ways to improve your marketing approach that don’t need to break the bank.

If you would like to find out more about how we can help you with your marketing strategy, get in touch with our experts and we’d be happy to help!

Angel Broom

Marketing Manager

As Marketing Manager at P+S, Angel keeps our clients, internal teams and the wider marketing community up to date with the freshest insights, initiatives and intelligence. Seamlessly managing numerous campaigns, projects, and initiatives, Angel always finds time to stay informed on the latest creative, strategic and digital trends.