One of the most common lines I hear in client meetings—usually around the second cup of tea—is:

“Digital marketing ta aba garna parcha jasto cha.”

Translation: “I guess we have to do digital marketing now.”

Small business discussion around digital marketing in Nepal

There’s usually a pause after that, as if they’re bracing for a complicated, expensive, slightly magical process that they don’t fully trust but feel pressured to adopt.

After more than a decade in this field, working with businesses across Nepal—from boutique hotels in Bandipur to electronics shops in Kathmandu—I can confidently say: we still have a digital marketing misunderstanding problem.


Misconception #1: It’s Just Boosting Facebook Posts

Facebook boost post interface on phone screen

Let’s start with the classic.

Many business owners equate digital marketing with “boosting” a post once a week for a few hundred rupees. I once had a hardware store owner tell me he “already does digital” because his cousin boosts their monthly sale announcement.

That’s like saying you’re doing fitness because you walked to the shop last Saturday.

I don’t blame them, though. Platforms like Facebook make it easy to click “boost” without context or strategy. The result? Money spent, very little learned.

What I tell clients is: boosting is not a strategy. It’s a tool—and only as good as the goal behind it.


Misconception #2: It Should Deliver Instant Results

Frustrated business owner checking marketing results

Another one I hear often:

“We tried digital marketing for one month. Didn’t work.”

Imagine applying that same logic to opening a new physical store. Would you shut it down if no one walked in the first week?

Digital marketing takes time—especially if you’re building organic presence or targeting new audiences. But that’s a hard sell when you’re used to newspaper ads that generate phone calls the next day.

This is where education comes in. I show clients real campaign timelines. I walk them through the learning curve. I explain how it compounds.

In one case, a client was frustrated after the first month of SEO work. Six months later, that same client was ranking #1 for three high-value keywords—and thanked me for “not giving up even when they were about to.”


Misconception #3: It’s Just Posting on Social Media

Team posting on social media without clear strategy

Social media is part of digital marketing—but it’s not the whole meal.

I’ve had clients say, “We post daily. Why aren’t we getting results?” My answer is usually: “What are you posting, and why?”

Without strategy, social content becomes digital noise. Likes and shares don’t always lead to conversions. One restaurant we worked with used to post only food photos. We added behind-the-scenes prep videos, stories from staff, and a weekly customer spotlight—and engagement went up and footfall improved.

Digital marketing is a full ecosystem: content, paid ads, SEO, email, analytics, messaging. It’s all connected.


How I’m Changing the Conversation

Consultant discussing marketing goals with client

When I sit down with a new client, I don’t open PowerPoint slides or start with jargon. I start with questions:

  • What are you actually trying to achieve?
  • What does success look like for you?
  • Who are your customers, and what do they care about?

This often leads to unexpected insights—and sometimes, changes in the client’s own thinking. I’ve had entrepreneurs completely shift their messaging once they realized their audience wasn’t who they assumed it was.

I also make it a point to teach while I deliver. Every report comes with plain-language explanations. Every strategy includes a rationale. If a client wants to know how a Facebook pixel works, I’ll explain it—without the tech ego.

The result? More empowered clients, better partnerships, and campaigns that actually solve problems—not just check boxes.


A Cultural Factor We Can’t Ignore

Traditional Nepali business environment with modern tools

I think part of the misunderstanding comes from how we view marketing in Nepal. For many, it still feels like a cost, not an investment. Or worse—a luxury.

Digital marketing feels intangible compared to, say, stocking new inventory or renovating a storefront. My job is to show how digital is just as real—and often more impactful—if used well.

This shift won’t happen overnight. But it is happening. Slowly.


Final Thought

Lightbulb moment representing client marketing understanding

I don’t expect every business owner to become a digital marketing expert. That’s my job. But I do believe they deserve to understand what they’re investing in—and to trust that it’s more than just buzzwords and boosted posts.

The good news? When they get it, they really get it. And those are the partnerships that create real, measurable, long-term growth.

So if you’re a Nepali business owner reading this: ask more questions. Push for clarity. Expect strategy—not just services.

And if you’re a marketer: keep explaining. Keep listening. And never forget—our work is only as good as our client’s understanding of its value.