{"id":2447,"date":"2020-03-25T19:31:11","date_gmt":"2020-03-25T19:31:11","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/leapgroupnetwork.com\/measuring-success\/"},"modified":"2022-08-10T14:54:58","modified_gmt":"2022-08-10T14:54:58","slug":"measuring-success","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/leapgroupnetwork.com\/logic-magic\/measuring-success\/","title":{"rendered":"Measuring Success"},"content":{"rendered":"

\"Measuring<\/p>\n

I can see it in your eyes, you’ve been reading this issue of Logic + Magic, and have caught the content marketing bug. You are armed with a brilliant strategy, tactics, and a drive to paint the world with content. Before embarking on your crusade, allow me a few minutes of your time to assist in the development of a plan for measuring the success of your efforts. The most awe-inspiring content won’t mean a thing to your client if you cannot provide some measure of its success.<\/p>\n

The Fundamentals<\/h3>\n

It’s best to start this process at the beginning, allow the content objective to inform measurement. All metrics should provide measurement of the content objective. Thus, if the goal of your campaign is awareness you would measure consumption of the content and not necessarily sales or lead generation.<\/p>\n

In addition, the metric should be actionable, providing findings that shape future strategy and tactics. In a lead generation campaign, a 300% increase in traffic to the website might seem like a great story; but how does that measure the goal of the campaign (conversions) and does it provide any actionable insight? Perhaps more meaningful would be an A\/B test in which the contact form was 3 items shorter for half of the audience and remained the same for the other half of visitors. Thus, if the group with the shorter form converted 40% more often, you have a finding that is both actionable and relevant to the goal of the campaign.<\/p>\n

Finally, borrowing generously from LEAP, “Measure Less. Matter More.” I am as guilty as anyone at collecting metrics for the sake of collecting metrics. The wealth of data at our disposal, and ease of access, is both a blessing and a curse. While I find the navigation path of mobile users from Vermont as interesting as the next guy, there is something to be said for brevity. The performance of a singular key performance indicator can provide a more relevant and meaningful story than dozens of vanity metrics.<\/p>\n

Content Marketing Measurement Funnel<\/h3>\n

Having explained the fundamentals, let’s discuss some of the more common content objectives and associated metrics.<\/p>\n

LEAP suggests content marketing metrics break down as follows:<\/strong><\/p>\n

Awareness<\/h3>\n

According to the 2015 B2B Content Marketing Trends – North America report from Content Marketing Institute and Marketing Profs, 84% of B2B marketers surveyed cited brand awareness as their primary goal for content marketing. The primary objective of an awareness campaign is to build familiarity or knowledge of a particular brand, product, or service. The most precise method of measurement would be to conduct a pre and post-campaign deployment awareness assessment of the target audience. Given the cost and difficulty of eliciting response data from the target audience, the more approachable strategy is to measure content consumption.<\/p>\n

Some awareness key performance indicators:<\/strong><\/p>\n