The short answer: pick two or three channels — usually email, one social platform, and your product/SEO basics — do a little every day, and build the habit. Most small Shopify stores don't fail at marketing because they chose the wrong tactic; they fail because they do it in bursts and then stop. Consistency beats cleverness.
There are hundreds of tactics, dozens of apps, and endless advice — and you're already running the shop. So marketing becomes the thing you'll do "when there's time," which never comes. The way out isn't more tactics; it's fewer, done regularly.
You don't need hours. A workable week in ~10–15 minutes a day:
Almost everyone knows roughly what to do. The gap is consistency: marketing competes with running the business and loses. What fixes it isn't a better plan, it's a daily structure — one clear task, done, with a sense of momentum so you don't drop it after a fortnight.
Shopify Sidekick (native, free) is great when you remember to ask it — it'll write copy and answer "how do Iā¦". Marketing calendars and planners (for example PromoPrep) help you plan, but you still have to know what to put on them and actually do it. GrowthMap — one of our own apps — fills the gap those leave: it gives a solo owner one clear marketing task per day across email, social, SEO and content, and uses streaks to keep you going — like Duolingo, for growing a store. It's for owners who aren't marketers and won't stick with a blank calendar. We mention it plainly because we build it; the principle (daily, small, consistent) stands whatever you use.
Start with email (capture sign-ups, set up a welcome and an abandoned-cart flow), one social channel you will actually keep up, and your product and SEO basics (clear titles, descriptions and images). Do a little consistently rather than everything once.
Less than people think if it is consistent. Ten to twenty minutes a day on the right one or two tasks beats a once-a-month marathon. The win is the habit, not the hours.
Not to start. Shopify's native tools and a free email tier cover the basics. Paid tools help once you know your routine; the bigger risk is installing many apps and using none of them.
Because there is no daily structure ā marketing competes with running the shop and loses. A simple daily task plus a streak or accountability loop is what makes it stick.
Know you should be marketing but never know what to do today? Take a look at GrowthMap, or ask us for free advice on the simplest routine for your store.