There are metrics, and then there are metrics. We've already talked about the dangers of pursuing vanity metrics – those that look pretty in a quarterly report yet tell you very little about the effectiveness of your marketing efforts – but what about the essential marketing metrics you really ought to be measuring?
Marketing metrics help you measure the success (or failure) or your marketing efforts. That might be by campaign, by theme, by time period or by some other factor. There are key marketing metrics that your should measure such as revenue and cost per lead.
Simply knowing your page views and click-throughs is not enough; isolated data points might go down well in status meetings, but they can't really tell you if you're getting a good ROI from your marketing spend.
You need metrics that tell a story and show you a more detailed picture of your marketing efforts.
Using web and marketing analytics tools, like Google Analytics, HubSpot Analytics, KISSmetrics and Clicky, you can track and dig down into the metrics that will help you to understand the customer journey and identify what sort of content and which channels are contributing to the bottom line.
But what, exactly, should you be measuring?
Looking at how much revenue each channel is actually generating gives you a more objective way of identifying your most effective channels. (Don't forget, revenue differs from profit. Profit is your net revenue after expenses.)
Tracking revenue means you can begin to justify your continued investment in successful channels and allows you to reroute funds from less successful ones to experiment with other tactics.
Rather than using this as a general figure, filter it down to establish the cost per lead for each channel and identify which are the most cost effective.
It's also important to remember that a lead might convert through a particular channel, but they've likely touched many other channels before that point of conversion.
If you want to break it down further, define your marketing-qualified leads (MQLs) and sales-qualified leads (SQLs) to establish the quality and readiness of the leads you're generating.
This helps you establish whether your content and landing pages are resonating with your personas.
You can then tinker with them, changing each bit at a time to see what clicks – is it the wrong offer? Could the wording and layout be improved? Should the 'download' button be more obvious? You can then breakdown your leads based on which offer/s they've completed.
Knowing how many customers you have is all well and good, but how much and how often are they buying? And for how long do they remain a customer?
To calculate the lifetime value of a customer, follow HubSpot's step-by-step instructions in this blog post.
If you’re losing customers or they’re only making one-off purchases, you need to work on your post-purchase nurturing. Content marketing means more than just buttering up leads.
Of course, stats mean nothing if you don't do something with them.
Measuring these metrics should be an integral part of your marketing strategy. Getting to the people and journeys behind the numbers delivers insights that help you to patch up the leaky funnel and direct investment into the most successful methods more intelligently.
[This content was updated in 2022.]