Social Media Packages - Customised To Suit Your Needs

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WE'RE OFFERING A FREE MARKETING CONSULTATION.  CLICK HERE

Social Media Marketing

Managing your social media presence requires a clear content strategy, creativity and consistency. Our service takes away time and frustration from trying to maintain a presence on social media. Looking months ahead, we can fully develop and manage your social media strategy. Our expert team specialise in creating content that commands attention - whatever your goals. Using specialist tools, we can take care of the full posting schedule, optimising posting times to achieve maximal engagement.


Monthly reporting of key metrics provides full visibility of the results of your posts and a demographic breakdown of who they are reaching. If that isn’t enough, our organic growth methods focus on engaging with users to increase your audience and grow relevant followers to your page.


What we do:

 

•  Social media strategy

•  Copywriting & design for posts & ads

•  Post scheduling

•  Ad creation & management

•  Follower growth/engagement strategies

•  Analysis and competitor reviews

 

Why invest?


Build brand awareness and stand out from competition. We produce interactive, shareable and relatable content that connects with your audience.  To find out more, simply get in-touch and we can talk you through the options and make some recommendations.

Get in touch

Latest Blogs

Business owner looking out of a window
By Chris Lunn January 27, 2026
I’ve noticed something over the years. Most founders can tell me exactly what they spend on rent every month. But when it comes to marketing, the answer is usually vaguer. “I guess, in total… with the time various people put into it… we spend about…” “Well, it changes depending on the month and how it’s working…” “Whatever’s left after everything else…” The truth is: most marketing “budgets” aren’t budgets at all. They’re leftovers. And when you really think about trying to compete using leftovers, it becomes clearer why growth so often feels like hard work. Don’t get me wrong, I get it. Cashflow matters. Committing spend feels risky. Marketing results are never guaranteed. And it’s easy for anyone in my position to say “ just spend X% of turnover and everything will be fine. ” But here’s the issue. When you cut back on marketing, you rarely feel it straight away. The impact comes later on, when enquiries slow, pipelines thin out, and suddenly it feels like you’re pushing uphill to get momentum back. That’s usually when confidence drops, spend tightens further, and marketing gets blamed for not working. From the businesses I’m introduced to by accountants, bank managers and business coaches, I see the same pattern repeatedly: marketing that feels time-consuming, dull and frustrating. That isn't because marketing doesn’t work, but because the plan was never properly set up or backed in the first place. Underfunded marketing doesn’t become lean. It becomes random. A simple way to bring some clarity (no spreadsheets required) is to answer three questions honestly: Roughly what is one new customer worth to you? (If you have multiple client types, pick a good one.) How many more would you actually like to win this year? What would you be comfortable paying to acquire each one? Sharing those answers with whoever leads your marketing should change the conversation completely. No more speculative spend. No more “nice to haves”. Just a structured approach built around commercial reality. If you do nothing else after reading this, ask yourself: Could I clearly explain why our marketing budget is what it is? Or is it just the number we landed on? This is often the very first conversation we have with founders before tactics, channels or tools even come into the picture. More on this to come in future blogs but if you want to discuss this further, feel free to get in touch with me direct. If you're new to me/Digity, click here to book an call with me and we can talk it through.
By Tabitha Pearson December 22, 2025
Get your business ready for 2026 with a practical review of 5 key digital areas, from your website and social media to early-year planning.
By Tabitha Pearson November 20, 2025
Boost visibility in AI search. Learn how to structure your content, build authority and optimise your website to appear in ChatGPT answers.
Show more
Business owner looking out of a window
By Chris Lunn January 27, 2026
I’ve noticed something over the years. Most founders can tell me exactly what they spend on rent every month. But when it comes to marketing, the answer is usually vaguer. “I guess, in total… with the time various people put into it… we spend about…” “Well, it changes depending on the month and how it’s working…” “Whatever’s left after everything else…” The truth is: most marketing “budgets” aren’t budgets at all. They’re leftovers. And when you really think about trying to compete using leftovers, it becomes clearer why growth so often feels like hard work. Don’t get me wrong, I get it. Cashflow matters. Committing spend feels risky. Marketing results are never guaranteed. And it’s easy for anyone in my position to say “ just spend X% of turnover and everything will be fine. ” But here’s the issue. When you cut back on marketing, you rarely feel it straight away. The impact comes later on, when enquiries slow, pipelines thin out, and suddenly it feels like you’re pushing uphill to get momentum back. That’s usually when confidence drops, spend tightens further, and marketing gets blamed for not working. From the businesses I’m introduced to by accountants, bank managers and business coaches, I see the same pattern repeatedly: marketing that feels time-consuming, dull and frustrating. That isn't because marketing doesn’t work, but because the plan was never properly set up or backed in the first place. Underfunded marketing doesn’t become lean. It becomes random. A simple way to bring some clarity (no spreadsheets required) is to answer three questions honestly: Roughly what is one new customer worth to you? (If you have multiple client types, pick a good one.) How many more would you actually like to win this year? What would you be comfortable paying to acquire each one? Sharing those answers with whoever leads your marketing should change the conversation completely. No more speculative spend. No more “nice to haves”. Just a structured approach built around commercial reality. If you do nothing else after reading this, ask yourself: Could I clearly explain why our marketing budget is what it is? Or is it just the number we landed on? This is often the very first conversation we have with founders before tactics, channels or tools even come into the picture. More on this to come in future blogs but if you want to discuss this further, feel free to get in touch with me direct. If you're new to me/Digity, click here to book an call with me and we can talk it through.
By Tabitha Pearson December 22, 2025
Get your business ready for 2026 with a practical review of 5 key digital areas, from your website and social media to early-year planning.
By Tabitha Pearson November 20, 2025
Boost visibility in AI search. Learn how to structure your content, build authority and optimise your website to appear in ChatGPT answers.
Show more