There’s a conversation that happens quietly in offices and break rooms across East Texas every month.
It sounds like this: “I think the marketing is working. I’m not really sure.”
That uncertainty isn’t unusual. Most business owners in this region are operators first. They run crews, manage clients, oversee projects, handle payroll, and squeeze marketing into whatever time is left. There’s rarely a moment to step back and evaluate whether the effort is producing results.
But here’s the thing. Marketing that isn’t measured isn’t marketing. It’s hope. And hope is a beautiful quality in a person but a terrible strategy for a business.
Before you spend another dollar — on ads, on social media, on a new website, on anything — sit down and answer five questions honestly.
1. Do I know where my customers are actually coming from?
Not where you think they’re coming from. Where they’re actually coming from.
When a new customer calls, do you ask how they found you? When someone walks in, do you know whether it was the Facebook ad, the Google search, the yard sign, or the referral from their neighbor?
Most East Texas businesses have a general sense — “I think most of our business comes from word of mouth” — but general senses don’t help you decide where to invest. Tracking matters. Even something as simple as asking every new customer “how did you hear about us?” and writing it down creates data you can act on.
2. Is my website doing anything?
Pull up your website on your phone right now. Time how long it takes to load. See if your phone number is clickable. See if a stranger could figure out what you do, where you are, and how to contact you within five seconds.
Then check your analytics. If you don’t have Google Analytics installed, that tells you something important — you’ve been operating without a dashboard. You wouldn’t drive your truck without a speedometer. Your website shouldn’t run without measurement either.
If you do have analytics, look at how much traffic you’re getting, where it’s coming from, and what people do when they arrive. Are they visiting your contact page? Are they leaving immediately? The answers will surprise you.
3. Am I being consistent?
Pull up your Facebook page, your Instagram, your website, and your Google Business Profile side by side. Does the logo match everywhere? Are the hours correct? Is the description of what you do consistent? Does the tone feel like the same business?
Consistency builds trust. Inconsistency — even the subtle kind — makes people hesitate. And in a market like East Texas, where relationships drive business, hesitation is expensive.
4. Am I tracking the things that matter?
Likes and followers feel good. But they don’t pay the bills.
The numbers that matter for most local businesses are straightforward: phone calls, form submissions, direction requests, website visits that lead to contact, and — most importantly — which of those actually turned into a paying customer.
If you can’t trace a line from your marketing activity to revenue, you’re flying blind.
5. When was the last time I changed anything based on data?
This is the one that separates businesses that grow from businesses that stay stuck.
Measurement only matters if it leads to adjustment. If you’ve been running the same ad for six months and never checked whether it’s converting, that’s not persistence — it’s autopilot. If your social media strategy is the same as it was two years ago and your results haven’t changed, that’s a signal, not a routine.
The businesses in this region that are growing — really growing — are the ones that look at what’s working, cut what isn’t, and make intentional decisions about where to put the next dollar.
The hard truth
Answering these questions honestly might reveal that your marketing is in better shape than you thought. It might also reveal gaps you didn’t know existed.
Either way, clarity is the starting point. You can’t fix what you can’t see. And you can’t grow what you can’t measure.
Lee Allen Miller is the founder of MSGPR Ltd Co, a full-service creative agency in Lufkin, Texas, and author of Entrepreneurship God’s Way. For more insights on marketing and business growth, visit msgpr.com.