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Posts Tagged ‘marketing metrics’


Does Your Google Page Rank No Longer Matter?

April 13th, 2012 ::

Page Rank

When it comes to Internet marketing, the rules can change quickly – sometimes overnight. As marketers, most of us have been meticulously developing our SEO strategies to achieve the best possible Google Page Rank for a while now. According to SEO pros, your Google Page Rank may not even matter anymore. But before you completely wipe this metric off your marketing to-do list, let’s take a closer look at why Page Rank has become irrelevant.

Page Rank cannot be tracked

Metrics are only useful if they can be tracked, and Page Rank is not one of those metrics. Even if you still check your Page Rank, Google delays that information for up to nine months. So, tracking the metric in real-time is impossible, making it useless for assessing your current performance.

Page Rank does not affect SEO

The link between Page Rank and SEO is fragile at best. Plenty of websites have a Page Rank of zero, and yet they still manage to get organic rankings and traffic for competitive search terms. Why bother with a number that does not affect your Web traffic’s “bottom line?”

Page Rank is not relevant for social media or real-time results

Social media content and real-time news are becoming increasingly relevant for search results. Page Rank really has nothing to do with either of these.  A tweet may have a Page Rank of zero, but it still makes its way into search results. And, breaking news stories – which are only a few minutes old – also come out on top in search results, and yet they haven’t had time to build a Page Rank either.

Page Rank is not a results-driven metric

Marketing metrics are all about results. Businesses want to keep track of things that get real results, such as revenue and customers, or things that lead to those results, such as leads. Page Rank can’t tell you if your marketing efforts are yielding any of those results, so why should businesses worry about it?

When you examine the facts, it really doesn’t make sense to worry about your Google Page Rank anymore. So, what should you do to improve your SEO performance? Your best bet for getting found online is to create useful and interesting content, optimizing it for search and promoting it through social media. In other words, although the rules may change, you can always count on the importance of great content for getting the online marketing results you want.

Image courtesy of creative design agency Arrae

5 Marketing Metrics Mistakes to Avoid

January 17th, 2012 ::

Frustrated marketer

We often read about what to do for a successful marketing metrics strategy, but sometimes it’s just as helpful to study what not to do.

Trying to decipher which metrics to track from the hundreds of marketing metrics out there can be overwhelming.  Whether you’re just starting to measure your marketing efforts, or you’re fine-tuning an existing strategy, here are five mistakes you’ll want to avoid:

1. Focusing on activity instead of results

It’s easy to see marketing activity, such as the time and resources invested into a social media campaign.  It can be much harder to see marketing results, especially if they often create more tangible results in other departments (sales, for example).  You can’t measure what you can’t see, so be careful not to overlook marketing activities that are driving results throughout the business.

2. Using vanity metrics

Marketers are often tempted to use vanity metrics that sound good and impress managers rather than those that will improve profitability.  Don’t focus solely on press release impressions, email sign-up lists, and Facebook “Likes” just because they look good on paper.  Find the metrics that lead to performance, and track those instead.

3. Focusing on quantity instead of quality

Marketers who focus on lead generation often get caught up in the number of leads they bring in, while ignoring the quality of those leads.  This skewed focus can cloud decision making when programs that look good initially end up falling short on delivery.  Be sure to include a metric for tracking quality in your plan.

4. Being efficient, but not effective

This point is similar to the one above.  Too often, focus is given to the number of Twitter followers, or the number of attendees at a conference.  But what if those followers and attendees aren’t the people who will help your business succeed?  Marketers should strive for doing the things that have impact rather than simply getting the job done.

5. Measuring what’s easy

It can be difficult to pin down metrics for revenue and profit, even though these metrics are what executives are most interested in.  The problem comes when marketers use stand-in metrics for those other numbers, forcing the marketer to prove a relationship and jeopardizing credibility.  Give colleagues what they really want by measuring bottom-line metrics.

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Have you made marketing metrics mistakes not listed above?  Help your fellow marketers avoid them by sharing in the comments section below.

Image courtesy of creative design agency Arrae