Businesses that struggle the most with measuring social media are the ones that struggle with measurement, period.
Social media isn’t harder to measure than any other area of business. It’s harder to prove causality, but then again, direct and independent causality is awfully hard to prove for any singular event that impacts a sale. Sure, you can track your direct response codes all you want, but you can’t tell me definitively that the advertising you did, or the relationship that person had with Bob the Sales Guy, or the article than ran in the New York Times didn’t also have an effect on that eventual decision.
But I digress. Back to the point.
What Are You Measuring Now?
My sense is that if you’re a company that’s in a measurement frame of mind in the first place, you’ve managed to measure and quantify (or qualify) something that you’re doing. For instance:
- What’s the conversion rate of your e-newsletter subscribers to actual prospects or sales?
- What’s your resolution time on customer service calls?
- What’s the cost of having a human resources department?
- What percentage of your customers renew after the second purchase?
- How do you calculate your customer satisfaction, and what is it currently?
- What return do you get on your advertising dollars, direct or implied (and which is it)?
- How do you justify your investment in your IT department and infrastructure?
- What is your return on training materials or continuing education for your employees?
Guessing that the last two might have thrown you a bit, but these are legitimate measurements, too, aren’t they? We often term measurement as only having value when it relates to dollars in, but I’d venture to say that measuring (and justifying) dollars out is important. After all, if you know your stuff about the actual calculation of ROI, you’ll agree completely.
If, however, you don’t have an answer for anything above or anything that looks like those things, you probably need to improve the practice of your measurement to start with.
Measurement Needs Infrastructure
I’m going to put this simply. If you’re not already rigorously applying measurement (i.e. justification) standards to other areas of your business – on both the cost and revenue side – you can stop blustering about needing measurements for social media specifically. Why? Because you’re not equipped, and you don’t have a discipline of measurement upon which to build.
Measuring things properly takes, at least:
- Time: In terms of man hours to actually do the gathering of data and the further analysis of it, over a period of time that can actually provide context and account for trends and anomalies.
- Tools: The ability to capture, aggregate, and correlate the data you wish to measure, whether that’s a spreadsheet or a more complex software application.
- Humans: One metric alone means little. You need people to draw relationships and correlations between the data points that indicate progress toward the goals you’ve set. Few machines alone are capable of such insights and conclusions. Those people also need to report back their findings and offer recommendations for acting on them.
It’s staggering to see how many companies are demanding measurements and some mysterious definition of ROI for social media that can’t even tell you their conversion rate on various website properties, or the retention rate for their customers. Please stop demanding something you’re not prepared to do as a matter of business, and as a cop-out for not implementing a strategy that is unfamiliar to you.
Start With What You Know
You might think you need to develop and invent a whole new set of metrics to illustrate how social media impacts your business. Sometimes, that might be true or valuable, because there are things we can measure now that we couldn’t measure easily before. For example, I’m particularly bullish on the potential for metrics like Share of Conversation.
However, if measurement of the new stuff confounds you, start with what you know. Figure out how social media activities and participation impacts and influences the metrics you already use.
For instance, when you launch your blog, do your email newsletter subscriptions go up? If you know the average conversion rate of those subscribers (and perhaps their average value as a customer), you’ll be able to correlate the increase in your blog awareness to those subscriptions. Are they the only driver? No. Can you map the two together over time and see if they rise proportionally to demonstrate impact? Absolutely.
If your call center costs you $5 per incoming issue and you deploy a DIY YouTube help series or a Twitter team to triage in the social media realm, watch your daily call volume. Does it drop over a 30 day period in conjunction with those efforts? How much time and manpower does that Twitter team or video series cost you overall? Line up that investment against the drop in call volume by $5 per call, and see if you end up in the red or in the black.
It Doesn’t Have To Hurt
Measurement doesn’t have to be arduous and painful. It should be something you can stream into your daily or weekly processes. Remember that the goal isn’t the measurement itself, but the insights you get out of doing it. Keep it straightforward, simple, and utterly tied back to the goals you’ve set for yourself. (Start over here if you need help setting measurable objectives).
Make measurement a part of each department or function’s leadership. Put it in terms they’re familiar with. And at least to start with, measure social media against and along with the things you’re already tracking. See whether it has an impact either way.
And above all, be sure that you’re building a discipline of measurement and accountability in your business before you blame the medium itself for being immeasurable.
There’s loads of opportunity to evaluate your efforts, if it’s a mindset you’re willing to take.
Over to you. Agree? Disagree? I’m here to listen.
Great post as usual. I think social media measurement is bit tough since there are lack of tools. But I totally agree that “start with what you know”. There’s no SOP for social media measurement. It’s entirely depends on your business anatomy, your goals, the platforms you’re using and the efforts you’re putting in. One of our issues is we always think of the final result or last stages like “conversion” even while tracking the simple clicks.
Great post as usual. I think social media measurement is bit tough since there are lack of tools. But I totally agree that “start with what you know”. There’s no SOP for social media measurement. It’s entirely depends on your business anatomy, your goals, the platforms you’re using and the efforts you’re putting in. One of our issues is we always think of the final result or last stages like “conversion” even while tracking the simple clicks.
Hi Amber,
Great post. The biggest challenge with measuring marketing is the expectation that it can be balanced like accounting. It can’t. Everything from website usability to call center friendliness to order fulfillment works together to generate sales.
You have to look at everything to see the effect of your different efforts. This includes keycode analytics. The tools direct marketers have used effectively for years are tainted by websites providing coupon codes. Tests to determine segmentation validity are skewed when the codes are posted online. There has to be deeper analysis using matchbacks to provide realistic results.
Your start where you are recommendation is spot on. The only way a company can create an effective benchmarking program is to grow it from the ground up. It is often a painful process, but the wisdom gained is invaluable.
Hi Amber,
Great post. The biggest challenge with measuring marketing is the expectation that it can be balanced like accounting. It can’t. Everything from website usability to call center friendliness to order fulfillment works together to generate sales.
You have to look at everything to see the effect of your different efforts. This includes keycode analytics. The tools direct marketers have used effectively for years are tainted by websites providing coupon codes. Tests to determine segmentation validity are skewed when the codes are posted online. There has to be deeper analysis using matchbacks to provide realistic results.
Your start where you are recommendation is spot on. The only way a company can create an effective benchmarking program is to grow it from the ground up. It is often a painful process, but the wisdom gained is invaluable.
Amber, somehow you always manage to explicate these controversial topics beautifully. How can we possibly apply standard/generic ROI measurement to a medium that is all about nurturing relationships, engaging readers, and building communities? My feeling is that businesses who are overly preoccupied with the social media ROI topic may be missing the point entirely. Granted – there must be some form of measurement in place. New media calls for new measurement tactics.
Amber, somehow you always manage to explicate these controversial topics beautifully. How can we possibly apply standard/generic ROI measurement to a medium that is all about nurturing relationships, engaging readers, and building communities? My feeling is that businesses who are overly preoccupied with the social media ROI topic may be missing the point entirely. Granted – there must be some form of measurement in place. New media calls for new measurement tactics.
Hey Amber,
Great post. I completely agree. I wish more companies I have worked with would approach measurement this way. It’s important to first have a solid foundation in place, and many businesses still don’t have this. I think it’s not because they can’t, but because they haven’t made it a priority and built in time/resources to make it happen.
.-= Jason Peck´s last blog ..Community Measurement – Other Ideas =-.
Hey Amber,
Great post. I completely agree. I wish more companies I have worked with would approach measurement this way. It’s important to first have a solid foundation in place, and many businesses still don’t have this. I think it’s not because they can’t, but because they haven’t made it a priority and built in time/resources to make it happen.
.-= Jason Peck´s last blog ..Community Measurement – Other Ideas =-.
Oh, my! Just the post I’ve been looking for. I’m so glad to hear someone else agreeing that they’re annoyed in hearing that social media ROI needs to be demonstrated first before a company will start using the tools to do so.
Newsflash- It’s almost impossible to truly calculate where your sale actually came from! Just because you put a billboard up or had that 30-second TV spot, doesn’t mean that’s why I’m buying your stuff. It could be that my Aunt Loretta said your stuff was good or an aggregation of all of these things. Most people don’t know why they purchase certain things at all. I could have built up my perception about your brand over years and years. That one ad you did may not have meant anything. -End rant-
Start with what you know and see how things change as you introduce new tactics. Don’t be afraid to experiment!
.-= Rob Ungar´s last blog ..Update on Rob =-.
Oh, my! Just the post I’ve been looking for. I’m so glad to hear someone else agreeing that they’re annoyed in hearing that social media ROI needs to be demonstrated first before a company will start using the tools to do so.
Newsflash- It’s almost impossible to truly calculate where your sale actually came from! Just because you put a billboard up or had that 30-second TV spot, doesn’t mean that’s why I’m buying your stuff. It could be that my Aunt Loretta said your stuff was good or an aggregation of all of these things. Most people don’t know why they purchase certain things at all. I could have built up my perception about your brand over years and years. That one ad you did may not have meant anything. -End rant-
Start with what you know and see how things change as you introduce new tactics. Don’t be afraid to experiment!
.-= Rob Ungar´s last blog ..Update on Rob =-.
I’d like to read more about social media, keep it coming! Thanks for the post. @marklatimer
I’d like to read more about social media, keep it coming! Thanks for the post. @marklatimer
Amber, a great post. I like the way you have taken the mystery and the fear out of measuring and at the same time shown the need for this business function. We measure so many things in our lives from putting our hand in the shower each morning to test if the water is the right temperature to tasting our food to see if it needs more seasoning. If we all applied this natural human function to our business activities, we would all be more successful. Thanks for the post.
.-= Al Hanzal´s last blog ..No One Else can take Your Place in This world =-.
Amber, a great post. I like the way you have taken the mystery and the fear out of measuring and at the same time shown the need for this business function. We measure so many things in our lives from putting our hand in the shower each morning to test if the water is the right temperature to tasting our food to see if it needs more seasoning. If we all applied this natural human function to our business activities, we would all be more successful. Thanks for the post.
.-= Al Hanzal´s last blog ..No One Else can take Your Place in This world =-.
“It should be something you can stream into your daily or weekly processes. Remember that the goal isn’t the measurement itself, but the insights you get out of doing it.”
You just helped ground me. The measurement aspect of SMM has had me spinning a little bit. These two sentences remind me of my initial tracking efforts (in other medias). As questions came up that I needed answers to, I worked on how to flesh them out. There is no magic formula for measurement in SMM (otherwise there wouldn’t be so many theories on how to track it); we just need to acknowledge the questions that arise, figure out how to answer them without creating more work than is necessary and then apply our knowledge to our decisions.
Thanks, Amber.
.-= Beth Coetzee´s last blog ..Perspective: View from a High Horse =-.
“It should be something you can stream into your daily or weekly processes. Remember that the goal isn’t the measurement itself, but the insights you get out of doing it.”
You just helped ground me. The measurement aspect of SMM has had me spinning a little bit. These two sentences remind me of my initial tracking efforts (in other medias). As questions came up that I needed answers to, I worked on how to flesh them out. There is no magic formula for measurement in SMM (otherwise there wouldn’t be so many theories on how to track it); we just need to acknowledge the questions that arise, figure out how to answer them without creating more work than is necessary and then apply our knowledge to our decisions.
Thanks, Amber.
.-= Beth Coetzee´s last blog ..Perspective: View from a High Horse =-.
Hi Amber.
I thought this was a really good post and very well written.
I’d definitely echo your sentiments about introducing measurement in to a team or department’s weekly processes. I’d also add the importance of keeping those metrics from the weekly meetings and building up a good set of historical information. Then not only can the team or department see how particular campaigns are going over time, but the information can be factored in to other corporate metrics (e.g. revenue).
We’re currently building a dashboard for one of our clients to do just that, and their intention is to use the data to make pricing decisions and drive offers (they are a niche e-retailer so I understand their case might be a bit specialised).
Hi Amber.
I thought this was a really good post and very well written.
I’d definitely echo your sentiments about introducing measurement in to a team or department’s weekly processes. I’d also add the importance of keeping those metrics from the weekly meetings and building up a good set of historical information. Then not only can the team or department see how particular campaigns are going over time, but the information can be factored in to other corporate metrics (e.g. revenue).
We’re currently building a dashboard for one of our clients to do just that, and their intention is to use the data to make pricing decisions and drive offers (they are a niche e-retailer so I understand their case might be a bit specialised).
I want to learn as much as I can about social media which is why I will keep visiting your blog due to the information being extremely impressive.
I want to learn as much as I can about social media which is why I will keep visiting your blog due to the information being extremely impressive.
You make a very valid point. Measurements are the source of making something happen in your business. Great coaching.
You make a very valid point. Measurements are the source of making something happen in your business. Great coaching.
Hi Amber,
<One metric alone means little.
So true. Saying that I try zoom in one 1 key metric in each area and really get a handle on it.
Once you understand some of the areas where your customer = converions, then you can start to tweak other areas accordingly.
Ivan
Beijing
Hi Amber,
<One metric alone means little.
So true. Saying that I try zoom in one 1 key metric in each area and really get a handle on it.
Once you understand some of the areas where your customer = converions, then you can start to tweak other areas accordingly.
Ivan
Beijing
I have to say that I totally agree with measurements for social media are totally different and difficult. Measuring a response rate from marketing emails maybe easy, but measuring marketing results from your facebook is still quite difficult.
I have to say that I totally agree with measurements for social media are totally different and difficult. Measuring a response rate from marketing emails maybe easy, but measuring marketing results from your facebook is still quite difficult.
Good Post Amber…
You have raised the write question but the mystery remains unsolved…that is is there some basic question that can be raised while measuring and evaluating the social media…could I look forward to some ideas to do the same
Good Post Amber…
You have raised the write question but the mystery remains unsolved…that is is there some basic question that can be raised while measuring and evaluating the social media…could I look forward to some ideas to do the same
Hi,
I agree quite a bit on what you say about measurement but what we are learning at the University of Westminster is to try and find a common ground between definitive measurement of campaigns and the qualitative evaluations of the campaigns. But I feel that in the PR business change either ways comes as more of long term result than short term.
I liked how you concluded by saying that the goal isn’t the measurement itself but rather it is the insight which is the key. For my reflection blog (http://ayeshasattarblog.wordpress.com/) that we are asked to keep as part of the course I echo similar thoughts 🙂
Hi,
I agree quite a bit on what you say about measurement but what we are learning at the University of Westminster is to try and find a common ground between definitive measurement of campaigns and the qualitative evaluations of the campaigns. But I feel that in the PR business change either ways comes as more of long term result than short term.
I liked how you concluded by saying that the goal isn’t the measurement itself but rather it is the insight which is the key. For my reflection blog (http://ayeshasattarblog.wordpress.com/) that we are asked to keep as part of the course I echo similar thoughts 🙂
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great post
Great insight, especially bout relating it to business process already in place