As the number of sales channels continues to increase, so has the need for organizations to get a strong, metrics-based grip on all that data to maximize their successes and learn from their
failures. When organizations begin to standardize marketing measurements across their sales channels, business units and media, they will come closer to the more complex process of tracking corporate
brand equity, market share, marketing ROI, and product and customer profitability. The alternatives -- misspending, poor targeting and losing competitive advantage -- make this concern a priority.
Here are 9 metrics that every marketing organization should be measuring.
Tracking fully loaded demand generation costs
Multichannel marketers are tracking the
costs to generate traffic to their sites from all possible sources. These often include the costs to complete the transaction, which can include a call center or the technical support of the site
itself.
advertisement
advertisement
Marketing spending
Marketers are always trying to establish the ROI value of incremental spending. Some of the measurements in this area
include cost per impression, cost per response, reach, frequency, and share of voice.
Visitor acquisition
KPIs are used to determine the health of the sales funnel.
Definitions are very important here, and the critical questions include: what is a visit, what is the source of the visitor, what is a return visitor, and what is a unique. Tracking sources often
requires integrating multiple reporting tools such as the ad-serving provider, Web tracking tools, and ad tracking tools.
Site effectiveness measurements
Site
effectiveness measurements analyze the conversion effectiveness of the site. The sales funnel is critical here –- how efficiently can a visitor be turned into a customer?
Conversion
Definitions are critical in conversion metrics -- especially if the conversions of one channel are to be compared to others. What does a conversion mean? An
important challenge is to properly attribute conversions to their sources, and this must be consistent across each channel. The easiest answer is often “last touch” conversion, which gives
credit to the last interaction -- but this can be very misleading and off by as much as 50%. Fractional attribution that gives partial credit to all known interactions is a better practice, but this
can also be a challenge.
Buyer metrics
These include the frequency of purchases, or the retention rates of customers that can be rolled up to overall
market share, brand equity and/or customer lifetime value. The most-quoted Buyer Metric is typically the Average Order Value, or the AOV, which is used to understand and compare different groups of
buyers.
Revenue
Multichannel and e-commerce marketers track revenue carefully to compare the margin generated from each channel, in order to
determine the value of incremental sales, and to guide pricing and promotion decisions.
Customer loyalty and customer profitability metrics
Companies
use these metrics to understand the value of their individual customers, regardless of which sales outlet they have chosen. This is another area where definitions are critical from one channel to the
next. The methodology for the measurement of loyalty and customer-level profitability can vary considerably from company to company, depending upon the purchase dynamics of the consumers for different
products.
Profitability and ROI
Each of these categories of metrics can include components such as:
- Channel
margin – From each channel selling different products
- Performance compared to a sales target – How close is the sales performance to a target that generates the profit
requirements for the channel?
- Net Profit – Sales revenue less total costs
- Return on Sales – Net profit as a percentage of sales revenue
- Return on
Investment – Net profits over the investment needed to generate the profits
- Net Present Value (NPV) – The value of a stream of future cash flows after accounting for
the time value of money
- Return on Marketing Investment (ROMI) – Incremental revenue attributable to marketing over the marketing spending
Any one of these metrics
can be challenging to reach as a goal without integrated databases and marketing technology. Creating clear definitions across departments and channels is the first step.
As data and tools
begin to converge, more and more marketers are building their ability to measure these key performance indicators and use them to make smarter decisions across the marketing organization.