As marketers and analysts, one of the most important aspects of any of our activities is the ability to accurately track how they contribute to our business’ bottom line. Being able to clearly identify the source or channel through which a business inquiry was generated was particularly difficult – making it difficult, by extension, to prove the ROI of any marketing activity.
Cross-channel analytics provides marketers with exactly that.
By utilizing all of your marketing data, cross-channel measurement and analytics enable businesses to clearly visualize the path a customer takes to conversion, analyzing customer behavior and interaction, which allows them to identify what channels drive conversions, popular conversion paths both in and across channels, and a detailed evaluation of specific paths.
By incorporating cross-channel measurement and analytics into the overall marketing mix, businesses can develop a granular understanding of how each channel contributes to the bottom line – their overall marketing ROI – and how these individual channels all come together.
Ideally, you want to be in a position where you can confidently tell your CEO and board of directors the conversion ratios involved at every stage of your sales funnel; for example:
In addition, beyond reporting on these conversion ratios, you want to be able to attribute the values to the individual channels within your marketing regime – and with a tremendous level of granularity.
All of this will allow you to better understand your marketing activity internationally and start attributing value to specific aspects or marketing channels. Having this level of granularity is absolutely essential and will enable you to improve your campaigns significantly as you begin to analyze your performance across the board.
If you want to learn more about international ROI reporting, cross-channel measurement & analytics and comparative reporting, please download our free eBook by clicking here.