Meet the Founder: A Conversation with Josh Spencer, Managing Director of TLC Business

At TLC Business, everything starts with people – and that includes our founder, Josh Spencer. With over 20 years in marketing and more than a decade supporting SMEs, Josh has built TLC Business around practical thinking, strong relationships and results that matter.

We caught up with Josh to talk about his journey, his approach to marketing and what keeps him motivated…

Q: Can you tell us a bit about your background and how TLC Business came to life?

“It’s a fairly typical story in some ways; I didn’t set out thinking I’d run my own business. I started out in corporate marketing with BT, then moved into agency life at APCO. Both were brilliant experiences, but very different.

What I found over time was that I really enjoyed working more closely with businesses (particularly SMEs), where you can actually see the impact of what you’re doing. That’s really where TLC Business came from. I wanted to create something that felt more hands-on, more personal and ultimately more useful to the people we work with.”

Q: You’ve worked both in-house and agency-side. How does that shape the way you approach marketing today?

“It gives you a bit of balance. Corporate roles teach you structure, process and how to think strategically over the long term. Agency life teaches you to be adaptable and to deliver – often quickly!

With TLC, I try to bring the best of both worlds. We’re strategic, but we’re also practical. There’s no point producing a beautiful strategy document if it just sits on a shelf. It has to work in the real world.”

Q: What do you think are the biggest marketing challenges SMEs face right now?

“Time and clarity, without a doubt.

Most SME owners are juggling a hundred things at once, so marketing can end up being reactive, or pushed down the list altogether. The other issue is knowing what works. There’s so much noise out there, so many channels, so many opinions.

A big part of what we do is simplify things. Get clear on the message, the audience and the priorities, then focus on doing a few things really well rather than trying to do everything.”

Q: How would you describe the TLC Business approach in a nutshell?

“We are your outsourced marketing department – practical, honest and collaborative.

We don’t come in with a one-size-fits-all solution. Every business is different, so we take the time to understand what’s going on first. Then we build something that fits, whether that’s strategy, campaigns or ongoing support.”

Q: What’s been one of the most rewarding parts of running TLC Business?

“Seeing clients grow – it sounds simple, but it’s true.

When you’ve worked with a business a number of years and you can see the progress they’ve made, it’s incredibly satisfying. Especially when you know you’ve played a part in that journey.

Also, the relationships. That’s a big one for me. We’ve worked with some clients for a long time now and it genuinely feels like a partnership rather than a supplier relationship.”

Q: You’ve been in marketing for over 20 years – what’s changed the most?

“The pace, definitely.

Everything moves faster now – new platforms, new tools, new trends. But interestingly, the fundamentals haven’t really changed. It’s still about understanding your audience, having a clear message and communicating it well.

The tools evolve, but the core principles stay the same.”

Q: Finally, what advice would you give to business owners trying to improve their marketing?

“Don’t overcomplicate it. Start with the basics – who you’re trying to reach, what you want to say and why it matters. Be consistent, be clear and give things time to work.

And if you can, don’t try to do it all on your own. A bit of external perspective can make a huge difference.”

Short-Form Video That Converts

By Emily – Marketing Executive, TLC Business

Short-form video is everywhere.

Instagram Reels, TikTok, YouTube Shorts, LinkedIn video – brands are posting constantly. But there’s a big difference between content that gets views and content that gets results.

As marketers and designers, we see it all the time: great ideas held back by poor structure, weak visuals, or videos that don’t guide the viewer anywhere.

Here’s how to approach short-form video so it works for your business.

The biggest mistake brands make with short-form video

Most businesses focus on what they want to say, not how people consume content.

Short-form video isn’t about:

  • Explaining everything
  • Being overly polished
  • Going viral at all costs

It is about:

  • Grabbing attention quickly
  • Making one clear point
  • Giving the viewer a reason to stay, save, or act

If your video doesn’t hook someone in the first 2–3 seconds, it’s already lost.

The 3-part structure every short video should follow

1. The Hook (First 3 Seconds)

This is non-negotiable.

Strong hooks include:

  • A bold statement
  • A relatable problem
  • A visual interruption (movement, text, jump cut)

Pro-Tip: Big, readable on-screen text matters more than fancy animation.

2. The Value (next 5–15 seconds)

This is where you deliver one clear takeaway.

Good short-form videos:

  • Focus on a single idea
  • Use simple visuals
  • Avoid jargon

Design Pro-Tip: Clarity always beats creativity. Clean layouts, high contrast text (subtitles) and consistent branding make videos easier to watch, especially without sound. Around 79–85% of social media videos are watched without sound, meaning subtitles hold a huge value.

3. The Direction (The end)

Every video needs a purpose.

That could be:

  • “Save this for later”
  • “Follow for more tips”
  • “DM us to chat”

If you don’t guide the viewer, they’ll just scroll on.

A simple short-form video checklist

Before posting, ask yourself:

  • Is the hook clear in the first 3 seconds?
  • Can this be understood with no sound?
  • Does it make one clear point?
  • Is the branding consistent but not overpowering?
  • Is there a clear next step for the viewer?

If the answer is yes across the board, you’re in a good place.

Final takeaway

Short-form video isn’t a trend – it’s a skill.

Brands that take the time to understand structure, design and audience behaviour will always outperform those chasing formats without strategy.