Archive for February, 2008

Measuring Results Online - What should you track?

Unfortunately, I still see marketers struggle to communicate the value of online marketing and how it drives bottom-line results. Much of this is caused by a lack of standard metrics by which to measure and report impact…especially when a direct response conversion is not clearly evident.

Most CEO’s and CFO’s are focused on driving efficiency and scale to acheive revenue growth. But when it comes to marketing, they need to be able to make a connection between the work ($) that is being done and the revenue that will be produce as a result.

Bottom line.

With studies suggesting that merely 2/3 of all marketers include metrics in their marketing plans…a need for more standard measurement is very necessary. So, what do you track? The ultimate answer is Everything…but realistically, try focusing on things that will move the needle and provide leading indicators of revenue. (Stuff that C-Levels discuss).

Here are a 10 tactical examples that you might not be considering when establishing metrics for your online marketing campaigns:

  1. Brand impact (i.e., increased brand awareness, intent or favorability)
  2. Number of impressions
  3. Position of paid listing
  4. Number of clicks
  5. Ratio of new to returning visitors
  6. Amount of increased website traffic
  7. Duration of website visits
  8. Amount of increased traffic to physical store
  9. Amount of increased volume to call center
  10. Number of leads generated for products sold online
  11. Number of leads generated for products sold offline
  12. Number of immediate sales generated for products sold online

Collecting this data will create trends and insight that will translate across most organizations.

How Marketers Measure Social Media Marketing

Everywhere I turn the buzz is Social Networking or Social Media.  Our clients, prospects, and partners are telling us they are or going to do it and want to know how we can help lead their initiatives.

As we help our clients focus on achieving measurable online objectives and goals, we as online marketers want to ensure that any tactic we employ or test aligns and contributes to meeting goals.  The challenge is that the web analytic standards that we are use to tracking campaign performance are different for Social Media marketing.

Metrics that are more important when measuring social media marketing include:

  • RSS subscribers
  • Email newsletter subscribers
  • Activity of comments added to your blog - BTW, would you please leave a comment?
  • Monitoring blogs and forums that reference you
  • Monitoring referring links
  • Measuing brand saturation
  • Monitoring engagement of visitors

As Social Media continues to mature, it’s important for marketers to be in the know and include Social Media Marketing in the mix.

 The ASK as I end my post today, is will you take a minute to leave your comments?  Is Social Media on your radar?  Are you already employing it?