How can I measure Digital Marketing ROI?
I heard a wise person say, “Never conduct a marketing effort if it cannot be measured.” For both traditional and digital marketing, the wisdom applies.
In the context of digital marketing, as you define your campaign objectives, make sure that each objective can be measured. Measurement attributes can include number of clicks, site traffic, landing page engagement, bounce rate, click-through rate, et cetera. The goal is to utilize captured data points to help define and tell a successful story.
And keep in mind, ROI measurements change with the times. Remember the visitor counters? The practice still continues, but more importantly, it is all about user engagement levels with website content – not visits. Web page engagement rates have now become the most critical ranking attribute. According to Moz, Google will penalize site pages with low user engagement.
The typical ROI formula is common knowledge: Profits – Expenses / Marketing Expenses. For example, if we are driving a campaign on jeans, and we bring in $100,000 in revenue, but spend $25,000 in marketing costs, the ROI would be $3 ($100,000-$25,000 = $75,000/$25,000), which means that we can make $3 for every $1 spent on marketing.
Outside of the traditional ROI model, the following is a quick-hit list of other important digital marketing measurements that you can apply to help you define success (list is certainly not exhaustive):
The list of measurements can be many, and if you are not measuring performance, it is critical to start now! Wisdom (and plain smarts) implies that for any digital marketing campaign or objective, make sure you are measuring performance. Make “the wise person” and your boss very happy.
To learn more about optimizing your analytics, capturing necessary data points, and driving ongoing strategic decisions, check out ROI Intelligence.