Good morning Marketer, what does the future of small businesses look like? 

With COVID-19 striking a heavy blow to the global economy, SMBs are at unprecedented odds – facing an existential threat unlike anything in the last 75 years. The survival of small businesses as a group matters to digital marketers, agencies and SaaS companies because marketing spend from small businesses represents billions of dollars annually

Typically, SMBs spend roughly $6,000 on average for advertising and marketing each year, though often less. “Let’s conservatively assume that the universe of SMB marketing spenders is 6 million,” writes Marketing Land’s Greg Sterling. “Hypothetically, that would represent $36 billion in annual marketing spend, some of which still goes to traditional media and offline marketing. But companies such as Intuit have argued the SMB holistic marketing spend annually exceeds $100 billion.” 

With that in mind, it’s safe to say that small businesses make up a good chunk of change for Big Tech companies like Google and Facebook. Whether motivated by their own self-interest or not, the giants are stepping up to give SMBs a boost. 

Google, for example, introduced support links for business profiles earlier this month for the U.S. Canada, UK, and other English speaking markets. Facebook previously made $100 million available in grants (including ad credits) to small businesses, with $40 million of that dedicated to the U.S. market. Yelp made a range of tools and services available for free to small business, especially restaurants and bars. It also implemented an SMB relief program worth $25 million, consisting of waived ad fees, free ads and various product upgrades. Other companies like Bing and Nextdoor have followed suit. 

But the question, according to Greg, remains: “Can the combination of government loans and private fundraising keep more small businesses from running out of money?” 

We hope so. Our industry relies on it.  

Taylor Peterson,
Deputy Editor

 
 
 

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Social Shorts
 

Joe Rogan’s departure from YouTube presages a market shift for platforms

If you hadn’t heard, The Joe Rogan Experience – a podcast launched back in 2009, made famous for its candid interviews with notable figures – is moving on from YouTube, Variety reported last week. Host and creator Joe Rogan will be taking his show exclusively to Spotify on September 1 in a multi-year contract that’s reportedly worth more than $100 million

Why we care: This is a big deal for a few reasons. Spotify, once a music-only streaming platform, has been building up its suite of streaming capabilities to include video, podcasts, and even audiobooks. In doing so, Spotify is slowly cutting into YouTube’s market share – and is doing so profitably. After the news broke about Rogan last week, Spotify’s shares climbed 8.4% by market close that day.

Rogan isn’t the first major creator to leave YouTube in recent months. As reported by the Verge, “YouTube star Emma Chamberlain launched her podcast off platform; Tyler Oakley and Korey Kuhl moved their show, Psychobabble, away from YouTube; and, like Rogan, Daniel Keem and Ricky Banks just signed a deal to bring their YouTube show, Mom’s Basement, to Spotify.” The major takeaway? YouTube is still a giant, but rising stars like Spotify could give it a run for its money. Advertisers will want to keep an eye out as platforms vie for ad dollars with likely new and/or improved ad offerings. 

In other social media news… 

 

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What we're reading
 

We've curated our picks from across the web so you can retire your feed reader

59% of ad agency employees working longer during pandemic, study says – Marketing Dive

Roku explains OTT audience surge as its OneView ad product comes to market – The Drum

John Krasinski’s adorable YouTube series ‘Some Good News’ is moving to CBS All Access – The Verge 

EasyJet faces huge class-action lawsuit over data breach – TechRadar 

Facebook renames its service that will let people send Libra digital currency to one another – CNBC

Americans’ TV Time Will Grow for First Time Since 2012 – eMarketer