Why Most B2B Marketing Isn’t Focused on Profit—and How to Fix It

If your marketing feels like a series of disconnected efforts rather than a cohesive strategy, you’re not alone. Many businesses are doing a lot of marketing but not seeing the results they want. The reason isn’t always budget. Often, it’s because marketing activity isn’t aligned with business priorities. If your business sells to other businesses, your marketing should be built to support your bottom line. But in reality, most B2B marketing plans aren’t connected to profit at all.
They’re driven by tactics: a new website, a LinkedIn campaign, maybe some Google ads.
They’re based on assumptions: we need to be on social, we need to get our name out there.
And they often focus on volume: more leads, more content, more visibility.
But none of those guarantee profit.
TLDR
Many B2B businesses struggle with marketing that feels busy but doesn’t drive profit. This often happens because marketing efforts are disconnected from business priorities and focused on tactics rather than outcomes. Signs of this disconnect include unclear product focus, targeting the wrong audiences, and inconsistent messaging.
Key Takeaways:
- Identify Profitable Products/Services: Focus your marketing on the products or services that generate the most profit.
- Target High-Value Audiences: Prioritize marketing efforts towards industries or customer segments that offer the best margins and long-term value.
- Align with Operational Goals: Ensure your marketing supports capacity, sales targets, and scalability.
- Create a Cohesive Plan: Develop a marketing strategy that integrates with your business goals and stick to it.
Want to shift your marketing to support profit? We can help with a tailored plan that connects your marketing spend to business outcomes. Let’s talk.
How to tell if your marketing isn’t supporting profit
It’s not always obvious when marketing has drifted from profit. These signs are easy to overlook:
- You’re not clear which products or services your marketing supports. When everything gets equal attention, profitable areas don’t get the focus they deserve.
- You’re not focused on your most profitable audiences. Trying to reach everyone often means you’re missing the industries or customer segments that deliver the best margins and long-term value.
- Sales says the leads aren’t a good fit. If marketing is generating activity but not sales opportunities, there’s a disconnect.
- You’re investing in visibility but not seeing business traction. Awareness without a path to conversion doesn’t support profit.
- Budget decisions are made on autopilot. Activities continue because they’ve always been part of the plan—not because they’re delivering results.
- Your message shifts with every new idea. Inconsistent messaging makes it harder for prospects to understand why they should buy from you.
If these sound familiar, your marketing might be working hard—but not in the right direction.
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For a practical approach to fixing this, see Doing Less, Getting More.
The disconnect: why it happens
Most small and mid-sized B2B businesses don’t have an internal marketing leader who can connect marketing strategy to business results. Marketing is usually outsourced or pieced together, and the focus becomes execution rather than direction. That’s where the disconnect begins.
In many cases, the issue isn’t just structure—it’s time. Business owners and leadership teams are managing too many priorities and don’t find the time to step back and create a focused marketing plan.
Marketing becomes reactive.
A new tactic gets added when someone brings forward an idea.
A campaign gets launched to respond to an opportunity.
Activity replaces strategy because at least it feels like something is happening.
Even when the intent is good, the lack of time and clarity leads to a scattered approach. Without a plan, it’s easy to keep saying yes to disconnected efforts that don’t build on each other—or don’t connect to the parts of the business that actually drive profit. But that doesn’t help you reach your targets.
What a profit-focused approach looks like
Marketing shapes how your business grows. The products you promote, the customers you attract, and the conversations you enable all come back to marketing decisions. But marketing usually gets treated as something separate from business strategy. That’s when things drift. When marketing supports profit, it works alongside sales and operations. It helps focus effort on the products and audiences that contribute most to growth.
If you’re not thinking about profit, margin, or capacity when planning marketing, you’re missing a key piece. Every marketing decision affects how your team spends its time and where your business gains traction. A profit-focused marketing plan isn’t about the latest tactic. It’s about making sure your marketing resources are supporting the right parts of the business. It starts with:
- Identifying your most profitable products or services
- Prioritizing the industries or audiences that produce the best margins or long-term value
- Understanding operational goals like capacity, sales targets, or scalability
Once you have those pieces, you build campaigns that support those specific goals.
What changes when you shift your focus
Shifting to a profit-focused approach isn’t about doing more. It’s about focusing your efforts where they matter most.
One of the biggest benefits is clarity. When you know which products, services, and audiences are your priority, marketing decisions become easier. You’re not pulled off course by every new idea or trendy opportunity because you can see whether it fits your goals—or not. Instead of asking “Should we try this?” you can ask “Does this support our priority?” That makes it easier to decide where to invest time and budget.
With this shift, you’ll also see these changes:
- Your message gets clearer and more relevant to the right customers
- You can focus spend on fewer, higher-value audiences
- You can stop marketing the parts of your business that aren’t generating strong returns
- You’ll have real data to show what’s working
You don’t need a full-time marketing team to do this
You don’t need to hire an in-house team to take a smarter approach. What you do need is clarity, a plan that supports your business goals, and consistency in how you execute. Most of our clients don’t have in-house marketing. You don’t need one to take a more profitable approach. What you do need is:
- A clear view of your sales and margin goals
- A partner who can build a plan around them
- Discipline to stick to the message and priorities
Bench Strength Marketing is a fractional marketing firm based in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. We work with B2B businesses across Western Canada—including Saskatchewan, Alberta, and Manitoba —who want practical, results-driven marketing that connects spend to business outcomes. Whether you’re looking to focus your marketing efforts, improve campaign performance, or align your message with your business goals, we help you get more from the budget you already have.

About the Author: Carla Trobak
Carla is a B2B Marketer and Partner at Bench Strength Marketing. She sees the big picture and loves to get her hands into the details.
