A lot of marketing metrics are only good for making you look good—that’s why they’re called vanity metrics.
Vanity metrics don’t give you the insight you need to make good marketing decisions, leading you to pour resources into things that don’t matter for your business.
It’s better to pick a small set of meaningful numbers for any channel you work on and tie them to overall revenue goals.
But which metrics are right for each marketing channel, and how should you use them?
Here are 25 marketing metrics you should consider tracking:
Some numbers – such as revenue metrics – don’t belong to a specific channel but span all the work you’re doing. You’ll want to track most of these regardless of the area of marketing you’re working on.
Revenue growth is the difference between two revenue numbers. For example: before and after a marketing campaign.
Revenue Growth (%) = ((Revenue at end — Revenue at start) / Revenue at start) × 100
CAC is the dollar amount it takes your business to acquire a customer. The lower the number, the better.
It’s primarily used in relation to other metrics like lifetime value (more on that later) to work out how much you can afford to acquire additional customers in the future.
CAC = Total amount spent on marketing / Number of new customers acquired
A conversion happens when a visitor to your website completes an action that you are tracking. Examples include sign-ups, demo bookings, and purchases.
Tracking conversions allows you to see where customers are completing key actions in their customer journey.
In Google Analytics, you can set up Goals and then track conversion rate (the percentage of people completing an action) across your site.
In the image below, we can see which pages visitors land on before purchasing a product. We can also see the conversion rate and the revenue attributed to the conversions:
Share of voice tells you how visible you are compared to competitors.
Market share and share of voice are closely tied to one another. If you’ve got a 20% share of voice, you’re likely to have a similar market share.
If your share of voice is above your market share relative to your competitors, you have an excess share of voice (eSOV). In the long term, your market share will likely catch up with your share of voice.
That means SOV can be an indicator of future growth.
Share of voice = Brand visibility / Total potential visibility
It’s not practical to measure SOV for multiple channels simultaneously, so you’ll need to calculate it on a channel-by-channel basis.
Here’s how to do it for organic search:
Here you can see the percentage of clicks you’re winning for tracked keywords compared to competitors.
Recommended reading: What Is Share of Voice? How to Measure It Across Channels
ROI is a measure of the impact a campaign or channel had on the revenue of the business.
ROI = (Revenue attributed to marketing spend — Marketing spend) / Marketing spend
The higher the number, the better the ROI.
ROI is easiest to calculate through channels like paid advertising, where advertising pixels can effectively track the journey from lead to customer.
Marketing isn’t only about attracting new customers but also retaining existing customers. The longer you keep a customer, the more profit you’ll make from them.
Churn is the rate at which customers stop paying you. It’s prevalent in software as a service (SaaS) businesses that rely on recurring revenue to grow.
Churn rate = (Revenue lost during period / Revenue at start of period) x 100
High churn can be an indicator of poorly positioned products. If your customers are canceling their accounts because your product doesn’t do what they thought it did, you should revisit your website’s sales pages and try to clarify your value proposition.
LTV shows how much on average a customer pays you across their whole relationship with your business.
Sidenote.
Sometimes you see the acronyms CLV or CLTV as well. They mean the same thing. The ‘C’ stands for ‘customer.’
For an ecommerce business:
LTV = Avg. Order Value x Avg. Annual Purchase Frequency x Avg. Customer Lifespan
To calculate LTV for a SaaS business:
LTV = Avg. Monthly Revenue Per Customer / Avg. Monthly Churn Rate
If your business is new, it will take some time to get LTV numbers because you don’t know how long the average customer will pay you.
LTV to CAC ratio tells you how much you can reasonably spend to acquire a new customer.
For example, if your average customer pays you $30, spending up to $29.99 to get a customer would be a success. However, you’d end up with only a 1 cent profit which leaves zero room for margin.
There is no single ratio that works for every business because there’s no specific number you should pay for a customer. It varies by time, business and industry.
NPS is a widely used metric to measure customer satisfaction levels. Dissatisfied customers will often give low scores indicating that they’re likely to churn in the future.
NPS = Percentage of Promoters — Percentage of Detractors
Using a single strictly-defined survey question, NPS asks: ‘How likely are you to recommend {Company Name} to a colleague?’
Scores range between 0 and 10. Anyone who scores between 0–6 is a detractor, 7–8 scores are neutral, and 9–10 scores are promoters.
NPS scores range from ‑100 to 100, and a score greater than 70 is considered ‘world class.’
Repeat Purchase Rate is the percentage of customers who buy from you more than once.
It’s widely used in ecommerce to predict how effective a business is at retaining customers.
Repeat Purchase Rate = Number of customers who more than once / total number of customers
A high repeat purchase rate shows healthy retention and that you can spend more money on getting new customers.
Search is a fantastic channel for growing your business. But it’s important to make sure that you’re on the right path and that the strategy you’re following is working.
Use these SEO metrics to keep tabs on traffic growth from search.
It’s often helpful to know how many people find your website based on searches for your company name and related terms (branded) vs. everything else (non-branded).
If most people find you by searching for your brand name on Google, you’re likely missing out on a lot of customers who are just searching for solutions to their problems.
You can estimate the ratio of branded to non-branded traffic in Google Search Console.
Head to the Performance tab. From here, you’ll need to filter for branded searches from your report. Then add your brand name and any variations/misspellings to the query field, selecting ‘queries containing’ as the operator. Click Apply:
When you’re done adding those filters, make a note of the ‘Total Clicks’ number. This is your branded traffic figure.
Then change all your branded term filters’ operators to ‘Queries Not Containing’ and make a note of the ‘Total Clicks’ number again.
This will give you the amount of traffic for branded traffic vs. non-branded traffic.
Brand mentions show you how frequently you’re part of the conversation in your industry.
When a web page mentions your company or closely related terms like prominent employees (in relation to their work), you have received a brand mention.
If you want to be alerted when someone mentions your brand in the future, use Ahrefs Alerts.
Backlinks are links to your web page from other web pages on the internet.
A good backlink profile will help you rank better in search and drive relevant referral traffic. Ranking for keywords that your target customers are searching for will help you acquire users at decreasing cost over time.
You can check the growth in referring domains to any site in Site Explorer.
Using the Best by Links Growth report, we can see which pages have gained or lost backlinks in the previous 1, 7, and 30 day period:
Inefficient paid advertising spend will burn through your cash at an alarming rate.
Instead of leaving it to chance, track the following metrics to ensure the ad spend is paying off.
Google Ads uses Quality Score to estimate how relevant an ad is to a potential searcher.
Google calculates it for you.
Quality Score consists of three main factors:
High-scoring ads (on a scale of 1–10, where ten is highest) win better placements and cost less in general.
Knowing this will give you lots of scope for improving your Quality Score by making changes to your landing page, improving your targeting, or changing ad copy to make it more appealing.
Cost Per Click is a number that shows the price that you pay every time someone clicks your ad.
CPC = Total cost of clicks / total number of clicks
Cost Per Click varies between keywords, but you can get an average CPC in Keywords Explorer while doing keyword research:
It’s a helpful number to know so that you can think about your bidding strategy on existing and future campaigns.
Cost Per Conversion tells you how much it costs per conversion from your ads.
Cost per Conversion = Total Amount Spent / Total Number of Conversions
That allows you to decide whether it’s an effective use of your marketing budget.
ROAS is the dollar return on your ad spend
ROAS = Total Conversion Value / Amount Spent
ROAS is similar to Cost Per Conversion. However, ROAS factors in only conversions with a dollar amount attached, whereas Cost Per Conversion includes conversions like ‘download PDF’ that have no immediate monetary value.
View-through conversions are when customers see but don’t interact with your ad and then later complete a conversion on your site.
Ad networks know how to attribute conversions to clicks and views because they require you to install a pixel on your site before launching your campaigns.
The pixel gathers data about people who visit, including where they came from.
For example, if a user sees your ad, scrolls past it, and then visits your website 30 days later to make a purchase, a view-through conversion will be added to your campaign stats.
If your sales cycle is longer than 30 days, you’ll want to set the look-back window on campaigns to a length that’s appropriate for your business.
Unlike search and paid traffic, owned channels like email are ‘always on.’ Your subscribers have given you consent to contact them directly in their inbox.
These metrics show you where you’re keeping their trust and when you need to improve.
Subscriber growth rate is the percentage difference between subscribers at the start and end of a period (month/year/all-time).
Subscriber Growth Rate (%) = ((Subscribers at end of period — Subscribers at start of period) / Subscribers at start of period) x 100
Growing email lists create new opportunities for engaging potential customers.
Measuring your mailing list growth rate over time is a much better metric than a standalone subscriber count figure.
Subscriber growth rate gives you insights into how quickly you’re growing your lists.
Open rate is the percentage of subscribers who opened your email.
Open rate = (Emails opened / (Emails sent — bounces)) * 100
You shouldn’t use a high open-rate as a sign of good engagement. A lot of people will open emails and not read or interact with them. Sometimes they’re just opening to press the delete button. Open-rate doesn’t distinguish between bad and good opens.
Still, open-rate could give you some general insights into how well your subject line and excerpts are landing with your audience.
Click rate is the percentage of recipients that click a link in your email.
Click rate = (Emails clicked / (Emails sent — bounces)) * 100
Link clicks in emails almost always indicate that your content has piqued a reader’s interest. To that extent, click rate is a reliable measure of engagement that you can track as a KPI for email.
Most email service providers (ESPs) will give you click rate data on a campaign level as well as an account level.
Unsubscribe rate is the percentage of recipients who unsubscribe after receiving your email.
Unsubscribe rate = (Unsubscribers / (Emails sent — bounces)) * 100
Tracking the unsubscribes rate from your campaigns is useful when the numbers on your recent campaigns are high. If someone unsubscribes, you can no longer send them messages, which will likely impact your ability to sell them additional products/services.
If you’re seeing many people unsubscribe, chances are there’s a problem with your messages or your marketing is generally not meeting the expectations of your subscribers.
Bounce rate is the percentage of emails that weren’t delivered because an email address is incorrect, doesn’t exist, or the email server blocked delivery for some other reason.
Bounce rate = (Number of bounces / Emails sent) * 100
Bounce rate can have a knock-on effect on your business because marketing messages aren’t reaching potential customers. In which case, they might be less likely to buy from you in the future.
Bounce rate can also indicate the health of your mailing list. If you have a high hard bounce rate, you may be attracting lots of false emails.
Sidenote.
Occasionally, you’ll see soft bounces mentioned. There are dozens of reasons soft bounces happen, including a message being marked as spam by an email server or a recipient’s mailbox being full. Unlike hard bounces, most ESPs will try sending soft bounces again at a different time before cleaning them.
Social media metrics are tricky because social networks operate on secretive and often changing algorithms.
In addition to that, each social network defines metrics differently. For example, here’s what constitutes a video view on different social networks:
The upshot is tracking metrics on social media is difficult and prone to change. You have to ask the question: is it worth making these metrics part of the reporting at all?
Engagement is a broad category that includes each social network’s specific post actions.
You can use each social network’s built-in analytics tools to get engagement numbers. Alternatively, using a social media analytics tool like Buffer Analyze.
However, there is no standardized set of actions across social media.
For example:
Twitter – likes, retweets, quote tweets, replies, profile clicks
Facebook – shares, views, likes/reactions, comments, clicks
LinkedIn – impressions, comments, shares, reactions
This means it can be tough to compare the value of engagement between social networks.
Brand mentions refer to the number of times your brand name gets mentioned on social media in a given period.
You can use a tool like Hootsuite to track this, where you can even segment by sentiment to help understand how positive your audience is feeling towards your brand.
Tracking mentions of your brand on social media gives you insight into how customers perceive the marketplace.
For example, suppose your brand name is getting consistent mentions on social media. That may be a good sign that you should continue to invest in social media as a marketing channel.
The famous Peter Drucker quote goes: “What gets measured, gets managed.”
But just because you’re staring at Google Analytics for hours on end doesn’t mean you’re effectively tracking marketing metrics. If you’re not tracking your marketing impact on the bottom line, how will you know where to invest in the future?
Instead, choose the right metrics for your marketing channels, manage them over time and focus on growing the business’ profits.
Got questions? Ping me on Twitter.
Source: ahrefs.com, originally published on 2021-03-16 11:26:11
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