How to Create a Media Plan That Actually Supports Your Business Objectives

Why Most Media Plans Fall Short

Too often, media plans are built backward: “We have a budget, let’s spend it on ads.” The result? A disjointed mix of placements, channels, and messages that don’t actually support revenue, retention, or long-term growth.

A real media strategy starts with business outcomes—and works backward to tactics.


Step-by-Step: How to Build a Goal-Driven Media Plan

1. Define the Business Objective, Not Just a Marketing Goal

Before you pick platforms or set CPM targets, clarify what you’re really trying to accomplish. Is it:

  • Increasing top-of-funnel awareness?

  • Driving trial or product adoption?

  • Re-engaging existing customers?

  • Supporting a product launch or entering a new market?

This sets the tone for everything else.


2. Choose Campaign KPIs That Actually Reflect That Objective

If your goal is customer acquisition, don’t just measure reach. Track:

  • Cost per lead (CPL)

  • Cost per acquisition (CPA)

  • Conversion rate from ad to action

If your goal is awareness, don’t just look at impressions. Track:

  • Lift in branded search volume

  • Brand recall

  • Video completion rate

  • Time spent with content

Tie metrics to movement, not just exposure.


3. Segment Your Audience—Then Pick Channels That Match

Audience segmentation should go deeper than age or industry. Consider:

  • Behavior: What are they doing, avoiding, searching for?

  • Stage: Are they aware of the problem, or ready to buy?

  • Context: Are they in a work mindset, a scroll mindset, or something else?

Then select channels and placements that align:

  • Programmatic and paid social for top-of-funnel reach

  • Google Search and retargeting for bottom-funnel intent

  • Email and owned content for nurturing and post-purchase engagement


4. Allocate Budget by Funnel Stage and Objective Weight

Avoid throwing all your money at the top or bottom of the funnel.

  • Allocate spend based on where your bottlenecks are

  • Don’t underfund mid-funnel content or retargeting

  • Give high-intent channels a testing budget before scaling

Use a 70/20/10 model:

  • 70% proven performers

  • 20% new channel or creative tests

  • 10% bold experiments (emerging media, influencer trials, etc.)


5. Align Messaging Across Channels and Assets

Media placement alone won’t move the needle if the message misses.

For example:

  • Don’t promote a product feature ad to people who haven’t bought into the problem

  • Match creative tone to platform (i.e., TikTok ≠ LinkedIn)

  • Make sure brand identity is consistent across visuals and copy

A great media plan includes not just where you show up—but how you show up.


6. Set a Real Measurement Framework (Not Just a Dashboard)

Media performance shouldn’t be judged on CTR alone. Set benchmarks across:

  • Lead quality

  • Channel-assisted conversions

  • Attribution lift

  • Post-campaign sales behavior

Use first-party data, pixel tracking, UTM structures, and CRM tagging to understand real impact over time—not just in the moment.


A Smart Media Plan Turns Strategy Into Results

When you align your media plan with actual business goals, everything sharpens:

  • Messaging gets clearer

  • Spend gets more efficient

  • Teams align on impact—not just tasks

If your ads look busy but don’t move numbers, the strategy is broken—not just the creative.


Need a Media Plan That Does More Than Burn Budget?

I help brands build media strategies that drive measurable outcomes—not just clicks. From channel selection to creative alignment and performance tracking, let’s build a plan that connects the dots between your campaigns and your growth goals.