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Marketing Budget Allocation: The 60/40 Rule, Zero-Based Budgeting & More

A practical framework for deciding how much to spend on brand vs. activation, which channels to fund, and how to defend every line item to your CFO.

Updated June 2026~7 min read

Marketing budget allocation is one of the most consequential decisions a marketing leader makes — and one of the least supported by clear frameworks. Spending too much on short-term activation erodes long-term brand equity. Spending too much on brand building starves the pipeline. Getting the balance right requires both the right models and the discipline to apply them consistently. This guide walks through the leading allocation frameworks, how to adapt them to your context, and how to build the measurement system that lets you defend and refine your choices.

The 60/40 rule: brand vs. activation

The most empirically grounded framework for marketing budget allocation comes from Les Binet and Peter Field's analysis of the IPA Databank — the largest database of marketing effectiveness case studies in the world, covering hundreds of campaigns across decades. Their finding, published in The Long and the Short of It (2013) and refined in subsequent work, is that the optimal long-term split for most categories is roughly 60% on brand-building activity and 40% on sales activation.

DimensionBrand building (60%)Sales activation (40%)
Time horizonLong-term (months to years)Short-term (days to weeks)
GoalGrow mental availability and price premiumConvert existing demand into revenue
Typical channelsTV/video, sponsorship, content, PR, social brandSearch ads, retargeting, email, promotions
TargetingBroad reach (future buyers)Narrow (in-market buyers)
MeasurementBrand tracking, share of voiceROAS, CPA, pipeline generated

Binet and Field found that companies which over-invest in activation at the expense of brand building see short-term revenue lift but long-term profit erosion — because they become more reliant on promotions and price cuts to drive sales. The 60/40 split is a starting point, not a rigid rule. B2B categories, where purchase cycles are long and the buyer set is small, often shift toward 46% brand / 54% activation, as Binet and Field noted in their 2019 follow-up work for the IPA.

The key insight from Binet & Field: activation spending harvests demand that brand building has already created. If you cut brand investment today, activation will still work for 12–18 months — then it will stop working and you will not immediately know why. This lag effect makes brand budget the first to be cut and the hardest to defend.

Zero-based budgeting

Traditional budgeting starts from last year's number and adjusts up or down. Zero-based budgeting (ZBB) starts from zero every cycle and requires every line item to be justified on its expected return. Popularised in corporate settings by consultancies including McKinsey and applied by large consumer goods companies, ZBB forces a discipline that incremental budgeting never achieves.

In marketing, ZBB works best when combined with clear attribution data. Each channel or programme is assessed on its marginal contribution: if you did not run this activity, what revenue or brand equity would you lose? Activities that cannot answer that question are candidates for elimination or reduction.

The practical downside of ZBB is the time it consumes. For most marketing teams, a hybrid approach works better: ZBB applied to the bottom 20% of spend each year, with incremental budgeting for established channels where historical data provides a clear return signal.

The 70-20-10 model

Originally articulated in an innovation context and widely adopted in marketing, the 70-20-10 model allocates budget across three risk tiers:

  • 70% — core. Proven channels and programmes with predictable returns. Search, email, established content formats, owned channels. Low risk, reliable output.
  • 20% — adjacent. Extensions of what already works: new geographies, new audience segments, new formats in proven channels. Medium risk, higher potential upside.
  • 10% — experimental. New platforms, emerging formats, untested hypotheses. High risk, but essential for discovering the next core channel before competitors do.

The 70-20-10 model is particularly useful for marketing planning because it makes the risk conversation explicit. When leadership asks why you are spending money on an unproven channel, the answer is structural: 10% of budget is reserved for learning, and the expected output is insight, not revenue.

Allocating by channel and funnel stage

Once you have established your top-level brand/activation ratio and risk tier allocation, the next decision is channel-level distribution. The right allocation depends heavily on your category, competitive set, and growth stage. A Series A SaaS company allocating budget the same way as a mass-market FMCG brand will misallocate almost every pound.

Funnel stageGoalTypical channelsKey metric
Awareness (TOFU)Reach future buyersDisplay, video, content, PR, social, SEOReach, brand recall, share of voice
Consideration (MOFU)Educate and differentiateContent marketing, webinars, nurture email, comparison pagesEngaged sessions, MQLs, demo requests
Decision (BOFU)Convert intentSearch ads, retargeting, sales enablement, review sitesCPA, pipeline created, win rate
RetentionExpand and retainEmail, in-product, CS comms, communityNRR, churn rate, NPS

For more on how to map content and activity to funnel stages, see the marketing funnel guide. For measurement frameworks to validate your channel choices, the marketing KPIs guide covers leading and lagging indicators by stage.

How much should you spend on marketing overall?

Total marketing budget as a percentage of revenue varies significantly by industry and growth stage. Gartner's annual CMO Spend Survey has historically placed the median at 9–12% of company revenue for B2C companies and 5–8% for B2B. High-growth SaaS companies often run at 15–25% of ARR in the early stages of their growth curve, reducing as they achieve market leadership.

Rather than anchoring on a percentage, a more rigorous approach is to model the budget from the bottom up: what pipeline does the business need from marketing? What conversion rates apply at each funnel stage? What does it cost to generate the required volume of demand at each stage? That bottom-up model gives you a defensible budget number grounded in business outcomes rather than historical precedent.

Watch the mix, not just the total. A budget that is the right size but wrongly allocated will underperform. A slightly smaller budget with the right brand/activation ratio and channel mix will consistently outperform a larger one that is all activation.

Defending your budget to the CFO

The most common failure mode in marketing budget conversations is presenting outputs (reach, clicks, impressions) rather than outcomes (pipeline, revenue, market share). CFOs operate in the language of financial returns, payback periods, and marginal revenue. Translate every major budget line into those terms.

For brand investment specifically — where the payback period is long and causality is hard to prove — the best available tool is marketing mix modelling (MMM), which uses regression analysis on historical sales and spend data to decompose the contribution of each channel. When combined with brand tracking, MMM provides the clearest evidence of brand ROI available to most marketing teams. See the marketing mix modelling guide for a full explanation.

Building your marketing plan's budget section inside a structured tool also helps: it forces you to attach an expected return to every line item and creates a record for quarterly performance reviews. Use the Hatch plan builder to structure your budget allocation alongside your objectives and KPIs.

Build and allocate your marketing budget in one place

Hatch's free plan builder includes a budget allocation module that maps spend to channels, funnel stages, and objectives — ready to share with your CFO.

Free Plan Tool

Frequently asked questions

Is the 60/40 rule applicable to B2B marketing?
Yes, with adjustment. Binet and Field's B2B-specific research suggests a ratio closer to 46% brand / 54% activation for most B2B categories, because purchase decisions involve longer cycles and smaller audiences. The principle — that brand investment is necessary for long-term efficiency — applies in full.
How often should marketing budgets be reviewed?
A full budget review annually, with quarterly reforecasting, is standard practice. In high-growth environments or volatile markets, monthly budget reviews with a small discretionary reallocation pool (typically 5–10% of total) allow faster response without constant replanning.
What percentage of marketing budget should go to content?
There is no universal answer. Content spans the entire funnel and supports both brand and activation objectives. Rather than budgeting content as a separate line, it is more useful to allocate by programme: what content supports each campaign, and what is the total cost including production, distribution, and promotion?
Should startups follow the 60/40 rule?
Early-stage companies with limited budgets typically need to prioritise activation to generate immediate revenue — a 30/70 or even 20/80 split in favour of activation is common and defensible. The shift toward brand investment becomes appropriate as the company achieves product-market fit and needs to build scalable demand generation.