@stuartm1962 this whole approach to marketing and digital is the wrong way around. Now I understand the brief to agencies and marketers is often framed the other way around; e.g. I want more business, I've got an XYZ budget, what can I do... but it's wrong.
I don't know what's profitable for your shipping business, nor what services you want to specialise in, but that's the approach you should take; e.g. what do I want to sell, where is my customer and how do I get to them.
If shipping musical instruments is lucrative, requires your key skills and is a profitable service, then you/they should be doing this the other way around.
Disclaimer here, as lead gen is what we do, but if we did this for you we'd find out more and research:
- more about your service; what it entails, price to customers, profitability etc
- that services customer type; e.g. is this professional music artist or amateurs, booked by an agent/tour manager, related to an instrument purchase etc
- where would each search for the service, e.g. a musician and an agent may do something very different
- what keywords do they use; e.g. is there search volume out there to make this a viable campaign
- is this something you might need to offer as B2B to other companies rather than B2C
Once you've done this type of work you can figure out what marketing to do. Its highly likely to be some sort of search based marketing.
YouTube is more about brand awareness, or pushing something revolutionary/exciting to customers. It's like door dropping flyers where most end up in the bin, the conversion rate is low, as the customer has to be interested in your service at that time or you're just annoying them.
If you have a limited budget and need a high return on leads/sales from it, then research and targeted campaigns will achieve far more, as you're marketing to people looking for what you provide.