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Top 10 Most Commonly Used Internet Marketing Metrics [Data]

 

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describe the imageMarketers are desperate for a clear, comprehensive, and effective set of metrics and measurement systems for driving marketing performance.

According to Geoff Ramsey, CEO of eMarketer, “The right metrics and measurement framework will allow you to prove your worth in both the short-term and the long-term."

A recent survey by Chief Marketer revealed that, of seven typical measurements, the metric most used by U.S. marketers to evaluate interactive performance is click-throughs. Ramsey suggested that while "click-through is the most commonly used metric by online advertisers...it is still relied on too heavily and in inappropriate ways. Click-through rate (CTR) should continue to be used as a diagnostic metric for direct response initiatives; however, it should not be used as a primary metric."

7 Marketing Metrics

“Digital marketers today are drowning in metrics, but they don’t know which ones are important or how to connect the dots in a meaningful way that will drive marketing performance,” concluded Ramsey.

MarketingExperiments believes that there are really only four elements that are considered measureable:

1. The amount of activity on your website, which includes page views, visitors, returning visitors, etc.

2. The source of activity on your website. Consider referrers, search terms, languages, countries, etc.

3. The nature of that activity on your website. Represented in this category are entry pages, exit pages, browsers, platforms, cookie support, average time per page, etc.

4. The results of the activity on your website. This is the area that marketers tend to concentrate upon with most requested pages, leads generated, number of downloads, orders, etc.

You may be obsessing over metrics that won't move the needle for your business.  Instead, find those areas that really matter to your website, your business, and your bottom line. Then, take a focused look at defining the metrics that matter.

What metrics are you measuring in your marketing departments?  Are you convinced they are the right ones?

Image credit: jkfid

essential-im-guide

Posted by Jeanne Hopkins on Wed, Sep 07, 2011 @ 10:00 AM

COMMENTS

The breakdown into 4 is very interesting. In my own experience it seems that metrics can and should vary based on goals, industry, etc. The point of drowning in metrics is all too true when for most sites only one or two really matter.

posted on Wednesday, September 07, 2011 at 12:23 PM by Chris Wiegman


Good stuff Jeanne! 
 
I was surprised not to see 'bounce rate', 'time on site' and 'percentage of new visitors'. 
 
The first two are important for Google SEO as they are used for relevancy of keyword engagement. 
 
The percentage metric is what i like to monitor to make sure i'm getting new traffic and maintaining old visitors. It reflects a unique balance of new/old visitors. 
 
Lastly, I'm thrilled to see that FB social shares are rapidly declining. Look at the history of your 'shares' and notice they are now being shared by reputable sources (+1, LinkIedIn, Twitter) instead of the 'Jersey Shore' social site...its was only a matter of time! 
 
Yay! 
 

posted on Wednesday, September 07, 2011 at 4:09 PM by Rick Rys


Yes, to piggy back off of Chris' comment. I think that many organizations try to do too many things well and end up doing nothing well. This goes for metrics as well, obviously. If you focus on too many at once, you're likely to make little impact on any. 
 
I know for us, we're anxious to improve everything, but we need to get better at acknowledging the "longest poles in the tent" and focusing on those metrics first.

posted on Wednesday, September 07, 2011 at 4:11 PM by Jennifer Beal


Hey Jeane, 
 
These metrics are very general, nevertheless, widely used by many. I believe the importance of a metric depends on what your goals are, increase pageviews, increase conversions or leads. 
 
Every business needs to decide what it wants to achieve from their online campaign and based on the these goals, create a set of metrics. 
 
Ilias

posted on Wednesday, September 07, 2011 at 8:07 PM by Ilias Chelidonis


I'm actually a bit surprised that "Clickthru Rate" is the number one metric. Yes it's what you're after but if those clickthrus aren't resulting in sales, then it doesn't really matter. 
 
I think something like ROI or brand awareness would be much more valuable for a business. ROI comes down to the dollars and cents which is what keeps every business functioning after all. 
 
Very interesting results and I think it's important to note that metrics don't mean anything unless you know how to apply them to better your business.

posted on Thursday, September 08, 2011 at 9:07 AM by Chad Gingrich


Good information is presented about the most popular internet marketing metrics. Thanks for sharing this post.

posted on Friday, September 09, 2011 at 6:10 AM by FD Thomson


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