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Digital Marketing

The Minimum Viable Marketing Stack for a Small Business in 2026

Forget the 47-tool marketing stack everyone tells you to buy. Here's the minimum viable set a small business actually needs to run marketing in 2026 — and what to skip.

A laptop with various app icons representing a marketing software stack.

Every “marketing stack” article online is sponsored by a SaaS company with a 47-tool stack to sell. Real small businesses can’t run all that. Most don’t need to.

Here’s the minimum viable marketing stack I set up for small businesses (under ৳50L/year revenue). It’s deliberately small. Each tool earns its slot.

The 7 tools that earn their slot

1. Website            (one of: Astro/Next custom, Shopify, WordPress)
2. Analytics          (Google Analytics 4 + Search Console)
3. Email              (ConvertKit / MailerLite / Brevo)
4. Forms              (Tally or Typeform)
5. Booking            (Cal.com)
6. Ads                (Meta Ads Manager + Google Ads)
7. Inbox              (WhatsApp Business + a shared Gmail)

That’s it. Total monthly cost: under ৳3,500 if you’re below 1,000 contacts. You can run a real marketing operation on this.

Tool-by-tool — and what each one is for

1. Website

This is the only thing customers see, so it has to load fast and be findable in search. Pick one of:

  • Custom build (Astro/Next.js) if you have a developer or a good template
  • Shopify if you sell physical products
  • WordPress if you publish a lot of content

Don’t pay for Wix, Squarespace, or anything that locks you in with no SEO control. The migration cost later is brutal.

2. Analytics

Two free tools, both required:

  • Google Analytics 4 — tells you what’s happening on your site
  • Google Search Console — tells you how people find you

Skip Mixpanel, Amplitude, Heap, etc. for now. They’re for product companies tracking feature usage, not service businesses tracking marketing performance.

3. Email

The most under-rated channel for small businesses. Pick whichever has the simplest editor:

  • ConvertKit (now Kit) — best for creators / coaches
  • MailerLite — cheapest, very capable
  • Brevo — local pricing in some Asian markets

Skip Mailchimp (overpriced for what it does), HubSpot (you’ll never use 80% of it), and any tool that requires a sales call to sign up.

4. Forms

You need one tool that handles:

  • Contact forms
  • Lead-gen forms
  • Application forms
  • Quizzes

Tally is free and excellent. Typeform is more polished but expensive. Pick one and use it everywhere — never embed a form your website’s “contact us” plugin built. They’re always slower.

5. Booking

If you do calls / consultations / appointments:

  • Cal.com — free, open-source, integrates with Google Calendar

Skip Calendly’s paid plans unless you need team scheduling. Cal.com does 95% of what most people use Calendly for, free.

6. Ads

If you run paid ads:

  • Meta Ads Manager (Facebook + Instagram) — direct, no third-party tools needed
  • Google Ads — direct

Skip “ad management platforms” and “AI ad optimizers.” For under ৳1,00,000/month spend, they don’t add value, they add cost.

7. Inbox

For Bangladesh businesses specifically:

  • WhatsApp Business app (free) — primary customer channel
  • A shared Gmail with labels and templates — for international clients

You don’t need Intercom, Zendesk, or Tawk for the first 50 customers/month. WhatsApp + Gmail covers everything.

What I deliberately left out (and why)

These are common stack additions I almost never recommend for small businesses:

  • CRM software (HubSpot, Pipedrive, Zoho) — for under 100 active prospects, a Google Sheet beats every CRM in usability and cost.
  • Marketing automation (Mailchimp Customer Journeys, ActiveCampaign) — you don’t have enough volume yet to justify the complexity.
  • Project management (Asana, ClickUp, Monday) — for marketing only, Notion or Trello is enough.
  • AI content generators (Jasper, Copy.ai) — ChatGPT/Claude direct is cheaper and better.
  • Social schedulers (Buffer, Hootsuite) — for one-person operations, scheduling natively in Meta Business Suite is fine.
  • SEO tools (Ahrefs, SEMrush) — at $99–229/month, only worth it once you’ve got real organic traffic to optimize. Use Search Console first.
  • Heatmap tools (Hotjar, Microsoft Clarity) — Clarity is free if you actually want this. Hotjar is rarely worth paying for.

When to expand the stack

Add tools only when you can name the exact problem they solve. If you can’t, you’re collecting tools, not solving problems.

Trigger points:

  • Past 100 active prospects/month → maybe a CRM (try HubSpot’s free tier first)
  • Past 5,000 website visits/month → add Microsoft Clarity for heatmaps
  • Past ৳1,00,000/month ad spend → maybe a tracking tool like Triple Whale (e-commerce) or Hyros (lead gen)
  • Past 50 customers/month → maybe a help desk like HelpScout
  • Past 5 employees → real PM tool like Linear or ClickUp

Notice the pattern: every tool addition is gated on real volume. Tools are how you scale solved problems, not how you solve them.

The honest truth about marketing stacks

The brands you see on Twitter listing 23 tools in their “marketing stack” are mostly performing. The brands that actually grow predictably tend to use 5–10 tools and spend their time on the work itself, not the tooling.

Pick the 7 above. Use them well for 12 months. Then expand based on what you’ve actually learned about your business.

Bottom line

Marketing tools don’t make you better at marketing. Discipline, repetition, and listening to your customers do. A simple stack you actually use beats a complex stack you barely understand — every single time.

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