Most Local Businesses Set Their Ad Budget on Gut Feel - Here Is the Math That Should Replace It

Three numbers you already know - or can find in five minutes - that turn your next campaign decision from a guess into a calculation.

7th July, 2026
Rulrr
paid adsad budgetunit economicsFacebook adsGoogle ads

Ask ten local business owners how they set their ad budget and nine will give you the same answer: a round number they feel comfortable losing. Fifty pounds a week. A hundred dollars a month. Whatever is left after payroll. The logic is understandable - paid advertising feels like a gamble, and no one wants to gamble more than they can afford. But that instinct is exactly what keeps most local campaigns stuck in a loop of mediocre results and vague disappointment. The fix is not a media buyer or a finance degree. It is three numbers you almost certainly already know, arranged in the right order.

Why Round Numbers Are the Wrong Starting Point

A round number tells you what you are willing to lose. What you actually need to know is what you can afford to spend to acquire one customer - and still make money. Those two figures are almost never the same. When you start with a budget instead of a break-even point, you are building the campaign backwards. You end up optimising for spend efficiency without knowing what efficient actually means for your specific business. The result is a campaign that might be profitable, might not be, and you genuinely cannot tell which.

A budget without a target acquisition cost is not a strategy. It is a spending limit with hope attached.
- Unit economics principle, direct response marketing

The Three Numbers That Replace the Guess

You need exactly three inputs to build a sensible ad budget. None of them require an accountant. Here is where to find each one and how they connect.

Turning Those Three Numbers Into an Actual Budget

Once you have your maximum CPA, the rest is arithmetic. If you want to acquire 20 new customers this month and your CPA target is £75, you need your ads to produce 20 conversions at or below that cost - which means your campaign budget ceiling is £1,500 for the month. Now you can work backwards through your conversion rate. If your landing page or booking link converts at 4%, you need 500 clicks to get 20 customers. If your average cost per click on Facebook is £0.80, that is £400 in click spend to produce those clicks. The gap between £400 in click spend and £1,500 in allowable budget tells you either that you have room to scale, or that your conversion rate is doing real work - and you should protect it before you touch anything else.

Local butcher shop owner reviewing handwritten ad budget calculations at his counter

Where Most Local Ad Budgets Actually Break Down

Running traffic to a weak offer is the single most common way local businesses burn their ad budget with nothing to show for it. The math above assumes a functioning conversion path - a clear offer, a fast-loading page or booking link, and a reason for someone to act now rather than later. If that path is broken, increasing your budget does not help. It accelerates the leak. Before you raise spend, audit the offer itself: Is it specific? Does it speak to a real moment of intent? Is there a reason to act today? A £500 campaign with a sharp offer and a 6% conversion rate will consistently outperform a £2,000 campaign pointed at a vague one.

Yoga studio owner reviewing ad campaign performance on her laptop at the front desk

One Place to See Whether the Math Is Holding

The model only stays useful if you can see actual performance against your CPA target without spending an hour pulling reports. Platforms like Rulrr surface campaign data - spend, clicks, conversions - alongside the business context that gives those numbers meaning, so you can check whether your cost per acquisition is tracking inside the range you set, and adjust before a bad week becomes a bad month. The goal is not to obsess over dashboards. It is to spend ten minutes a week confirming that the math still works - and to know exactly which lever to pull when it does not.

The One-Page Budget Model You Can Set Up Before Your Next Campaign

The round number instinct is not stupidity - it is caution in the absence of information. Once you have the three inputs, the round number disappears and a defensible range takes its place. That shift - from 'what am I comfortable losing' to 'what does one customer need to cost me' - is the difference between running ads as a cost and running them as a system.

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