If you're obsessed with marketing metrics, this article is for you. If you HATE marketing metrics, this article is also for you. Why? The fact of the matter is that in 2023, any marketing campaign piloted purely on intuition is sure to come crashing down in a ball of fire.
But you already knew that. As we move into the new year, it's time to start thinking about which marketing metrics to track in your campaigns. While you can't forget classics like click-through rate or dwell time, this might be your year to experiment with monitoring some new classics...
Here are seven essential marketing metrics you should keep an eye on in 2023:
We'll cover the tools you need to find each metric, the insights you can draw from it, and how to implement the findings into your marketing organization.
Ready? Let's go!
MQLs measure the success of your lead generation efforts. Typically, a marketing-qualified lead is a lead that has made it past a certain level in the sales process and is deemed more likely to convert into a paying customer.
Often, this means they've engaged with your brand in more voluntary measures — examples include opting into an email series or downloading gated content.
You'll want to use a CRM system like Salesforce or HubSpot to track these marketing metrics. Alternative tools include Leadfeeder and Freshsales.
By tracking MQLs, you'll see how effective your lead-generation strategies are in terms of marketing ROI.
You'll also be able to identify which channels are producing the most high-quality leads by looking at the conversion rates for each channel.
First, let's unpack how MQLs are identified. Generally, it's a good idea to identify the behavioral trends you see in your customers-won.
Let's say many of your leads who follow a given buyer journey (e.g., Instagram ad to gated content to sales demo) tend to convert successfully and fall into a similar demographic. Future prospects who mimic these habits and features are more likely to be MQLs.
Velocity measures the speed at which leads are engaging with your marketing efforts. It's essential to keep an eye on this metric as it can indicate any bottlenecks or friction points in converting leads into customers.
Note: this is different from funnel velocity, the speed at which prospects move through your digital marketing funnels.
You can track velocity by looking at engagement or conversion rates over time or by setting up automated processes within your marketing platform.
Google Analytics is an excellent tool for tracking velocity on your website. You'll want to look at the user journey over time and see where users drop off or speed up in their journey.
On social media, you can track engagement with metrics like average weekly posts or comments per post (check out social listening tools like Hootsuite or Sprout Social for this).
For your overall marketing function, centralized suites like HubSpot, Salesforce, or Segment CDP are solid options for getting a global view of your customer's journeys.
Average weekly frequency shows how often a customer interacts with your marketing messages (in a week). It can be used to assess the effectiveness of campaigns and identify opportunities for improvement. You can track these marketing metrics by recording how often customers open emails, click links, visit web pages, or take any other action related to your business over a set period.
Your marketing teams can track the average frequency of customer engagements using analytics tools like Google Analytics or Adobe Analytics. You'll want to look at how frequently users visit specific pages on your website, how much time they spend on them (dwell time), and whether they've purchased anything during that period.
For your other channels, like SMS, email, or social media, you'll benefit from using tools like Klaviyo, Mailchimp, and Sprout Social.
You can gather a 360-degree view of your customer touchpoints and marketing metrics from a CDP (Adobe, Segment, HubSpot, Salesforce, etc.).
This metric shows how many people are responding to your campaigns and is usually measured in terms of clicks per message sent. Tracking this allows you to gauge how successfully each campaign draws attention from potential customers. (Note: this is different from the click-through rate, we're looking at whole numbers here).
You'll need an email marketing platform like MailChimp or Constant Contact to track click-reach metrics.
Revenue per subscriber/follower (RPS) is a metric that measures the amount of money generated by each visitor, subscriber, or follower. It's essential to keep an eye on this metric to identify which channels drive the most revenue for your business.
Moreover, a loyal audience is a superpower in an economy increasingly driven by creators with followings. After all, the difference between selling to a customer and a fan is monumental.
In short, RPS tells you how productive your YouTube/Instagram/email list subscribers and followers are for your business.
You can track these metrics using tools like Google or Adobe Analytics. General CRM tools like Salesforce or HubSpot can also track RPS across all channels.
Forget customer acquisition cost — it's all about the followers now. (Okay, slight exaggeration; they're both critical.)
SAC measures the money you spend to acquire each new subscriber or follower (on email, SMS, social media, etc.). Keeping track of this metric is essential to ensure your marketing investments are paying off and that you're not spending too much on unproductive campaigns.
In an age where content is king, you want to ensure your SMS/email marketing/social media spend brings in the right amount of traffic, views, or follows. If your marketing strategy is primarily driven by content marketing, SAC is a marketing metric you absolutely need to track.
To determine your SAC, you can divide your content marketing or SMM spend by the number of new followers it generated over a given period. Some tools that can do this for you include HubSpot, Google Analytics, and Twitter Ads.
Customer lifetime value (CLV) measures how much a customer will be worth over their entire relationship with your company. This metric helps you determine the return on investment for marketing campaigns since it tracks how much revenue each customer generates long-term.
Whether you run a SaaS company or are simply trying to build a brand with longevity, CLV is just one of those marketing metrics every executive needs to be aware of.
You can use tools like Klaviyo to track CLV and ensure you're getting the most out of your customers. It's also possible to extrapolate an estimated CLV for your current customers based on previous customer trends using tools like Salesforce and HubSpot.
Understanding and tracking marketing metrics is essential for any executive looking to maximize their return on investment.
By leveraging tools such as Salesforce, Marketo, and HubSpot to track these numbers, executives can gain valuable insights into their customers’ behavior that can then inform decisions about targeting parameters, content strategies, loyalty rewards programs, and more.
Ultimately, with the advanced analytics we've discussed, executives can get maximum ROI from every campaign they launch.
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Metrics in marketing refer to the key performance indicators that businesses use to measure the success of their campaigns. Common metrics include cost per acquisition (CPA), return on investment (ROI), customer lifetime value (CLV), and click reach.
You can track your marketing efforts using tools like Salesforce, Marketo, and HubSpot to get detailed insights into how customers engage with your content and which campaigns bring the most ROI.
When tracking marketing metrics, look out for high CLV customers and reward them with discounts, free shipping, or exclusive access to products/services.
Additionally, focus on increasing customer loyalty by providing incentives and offers that cater to your current customers.
Finally, use marketing metrics like click reach, average weekly frequency, velocity, and MQLs to optimize your marketing investment on the campaign level.
To maximize ROI from campaigns, tracking key marketing metrics such as SAC, RPS, and CLV is vital to understanding which campaigns bring in the most leads, followers, and revenue.
Additionally, use tools like Salesforce and Marketo to get insights into how customers are engaging with your content so you can optimize parameters as needed.
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