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5 Ways to Measure the Success of Your Business Blog

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Aim High for Business Blog Success

Most people probably remember former NBA superstars Karl Malone and John Stockton. Together this dynamic duo from the Utah Jazz immortalized the play called the pick-and-roll.

While I won't go into the details of the play I wanted to highlight that individually Malone and Stockton were awesome players, but when executing this play together their combination was lethal to the opposition.

Number of game wins and their two runs at the NBA championship is probably the best way to measure their team's success, but other stats like setting up other players with assists and the ability to get offensive charges also played a vital part in their victories.

The same goes for your blog.  While you might think the Technorati rank and tops in Google results for a keyword or two is the end-all-be-all for your achievement, here are five other ways to measure the success of your business blog:

1. Reach

Let's start with the most common stat for any site or blog on the web - number of monthly visitors.  This gives you a pretty good idea of your blog's reach.  You might want to break this down further to see where people are coming from.

Blog visitors

Another measure of reach is the number of keywords drawing traffic to your blog and also checking to see if those keywords are drawing more and more traffic over time.

Blog Keywords

2. Stickiness

While the number of subscribers is a good measure of reach, I like to think of it as the number of people who've opted-in to hear from you regularly - and thus is a measure of stickiness.  How sticky is your blog?

Blog Subscribers


3. Engagement

Engagment is about guaging how much people interact with you or measuring the level of dialog. Comments on your blog or in social media is a good way to measure engagement quantitatively.

Blog Comments

One could go further and split the positive comments from negative comments to also get a qualitative measure of engagement.


4. Authority

Just like citations at the end of academic papers refer to important, authoritative works, in the same way inbound links are a good measure of authority for your blog and specific articles.

Blog Inbound Links

At the same time blog tweets or retweets or your brand mentions in relation to a particular blog article could be considered a good measure of authority.

Blog Retweets for Authority

You should be monitoring social media to capture the impact of influence of your blog on the community.

5. Conversion

At the end of the day what matters to most business is leads and customers.  How can you justify so much time blogging if there is no concrete business result from that activity?

Blog Conversions

While all results don't need to be tangible, a good way to measure the fruit of your blogging efforts is track conversion, i.e. how many visitors your drove back to your site or product pages and ultimately how many leads you got from that.

The Takeaway for Business Boggers

Coming back to my basketball analogy I want to reinforce that while your website may be powerful like the Mailman at 6' 9" 250 lbs and you may have a blog that is nimble with fresh content like Stockton at 6' 1" 170 lbs, it is really the combination of the two together like the pick and roll that can really accelerate your business success.

Keep measuring important aspects of your blogging efforts and try and improve them.  Aim high for that hoop and enjoy the success!

How are you measuring the success of your business blog?  Please share your thoughts in the comments.

 

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Download the free webinar to learn how to create a thriving blog.

 

Photo credit: Photohop (e453753)


Posted by Prashant Kaw on Tue, May 19, 2009 @ 06:25 AM

COMMENTS

A LOT of useful information here. Especially in terms of demonstrating ways to measure, assess and implement different strategies according to the specific results. If you follow these rules with a corporate blog...I don't really see how you could go wrong.

posted on Tuesday, May 19, 2009 at 7:46 AM by Stuart Foster


Agree on almost every point except stickiness. Repeat readers and subscribers are great metrics for journalists. But as you allude to in your first couple of points, Business Bloggers need to recognize that the vast majority of their traffic is going to come from search engines and it's going to come from first time visitors.  
 
I'd be interested to see the stats from your client base, but in ours it averages in the 85%-95% range. Meaning 85% of all blog visitors are first time visitors. 
 
This is fantastic for most Inbound marketers. Blogs drive search traffic from people who are expressing a need, your two main focuses need to be increasing that exposure and converting that traffic into leads. If you get a couple of Tweets along the way...that's awesome, but not nearly as awesome as doubling your conversion rate. 
 
Chris Baggott 
CEO 
Compendium Blogware 
 

posted on Tuesday, May 19, 2009 at 7:57 AM by chris baggott


Good info and great analogy! what are the reporting tools that generate the reports showcased in each of the topic sections?

posted on Tuesday, May 19, 2009 at 8:19 AM by Kelly Murphy


@kellymurphy Thanks! Except for the conversions graph which was done in Excel, all the other reports / graphcs are directly from the blog analytics of our HubSpot software. Feel free to sign up for a trial if you are intrested.

posted on Tuesday, May 19, 2009 at 8:23 AM by Prashant Kaw


@chrisbaggot Excellent point! We have around 14K RSS / Email subscribers - so the blog is definitely sticky for that audience. In fact it works wonderfully as a lead nurturing tool. 
 
That being said, I agree we do draw in 3x-4x times that in new site visitors every month, especially when a post gets a lot of social media attention. 
 
Thanks for sharing, the dialog really helps us all!

posted on Tuesday, May 19, 2009 at 8:36 AM by Prashant Kaw


I kept waiting for you to make the analogy more concrete?  
 
Are you suggesting that multiple bloggers on a company's blog is the right approach?  
 
Or are you suggesting that your website has to work with your blog and vice versa? 
 
I agree that "conversions are the key". It takes a long time and hard work to get to the point where a company can generate as many leads as HubSpot does from our blog.

posted on Tuesday, May 19, 2009 at 10:39 AM by Pete Caputa


The key to successful business blogging is to start with the focus on SEO. So many companies start with the idea of Community, Subscribers, Comments...Stickeyness.  
 
Usually the average business is disappointed. Forrester did a great report on this last fall. Only secondarily do businesses recognize that the vast majority of their traffic is coming from first time visitors and most of that comes from search. Your experience is actually atypical. Most people don't have the time or resources to do the heavy lifting that you guys do because this obviously your business. 
 
Think about the average company in your client base. Just normal businesses trying to generate inbound leads.  
 
The key is to target your blogs like you would target an email. Take aim at a specific term, write content talking about the problems you solve (plumbing or knitting or inbound marketing) and use the keywords you are targeting. 
 
I like to think of of it as delivering a message. You know the keywords that drive your business...Hubspot helps us with that. Target those terms with your blogs. Create lots of blogs to target lots of terms. Think about high converting/longer tail and generate the right content and business start to see results pretty quickly. Weeks not years. 
 
 

posted on Tuesday, May 19, 2009 at 11:26 AM by chris baggott


@pete the analogy sort of came together at the end - implying that blogs work best in tandem with your site. Of course having multiple bloggers is good, each has their own style, provides a different flavor or "personality"! Thanks.

posted on Tuesday, May 19, 2009 at 2:17 PM by Prashant Kaw


@chrisbaggot Thanks again for sharing! I'd like add a quote from @chrisbrogan that he stated onwww.hubspot.tv this past Friday. "Blogging is not about your or your business. It's about sharing, helpful stuff with your customers and the people you care about." That should be the real reason to start blogging. It's about inspiration. Of course one can smart about it and make sure to get some SEO credit in the process. But the SEO won't get you subscribers -- the awesome, helpful, non self-serving content is what will gain you fans!

posted on Tuesday, May 19, 2009 at 2:25 PM by Prashant Kaw


@Chris_Baggot 
 
 
 
Thanks for sharing your thoughts.  
 
 
 
If there were two companies in the world that couldn't agree more or be synced more with our approach to business blogging, it'd be Compendium and HubSpot.  
 
 
 
Here's an article we published awhile ago about the value of blogging for SEO>.  
 
 
 
And here's an article from Prashant about leveraging the Long Tail of search traffic.

posted on Tuesday, May 19, 2009 at 3:56 PM by peter caputa


Here is a great quote from Matt Cutts: 
 
"Think about what people are going to type...and talk about that" 
Matt Cutts: Google 
 
This from Ian Laurie author of the new book: Conversation Marketing 
 
“Burn the thesaurus. Think about the words that people use to find you.” 
 
“Then, as a revolutionary new internet marketing strategy, actually write those words in your copy. 

posted on Tuesday, May 19, 2009 at 3:57 PM by chris baggott


Google Analytics has some great resources for tracking site statistics.

posted on Wednesday, June 10, 2009 at 2:33 AM by Justin


Thank you for you rnice tips on business market, and they are seemed so important, thank youLink Text

posted on Tuesday, August 11, 2009 at 9:34 PM by serenalin


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