How to Measure Marketing Outreach

by Lily White
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Marketing outreach is essentially sending a message out into a target audience, to attract more people that our organisation or business exists to help. It can be time consuming and expensive, so we want to make sure it’s working. But what do you measure to find that out?

Marketing Outreach is a concept, not a goal. And it’s a weasely concept, at that. Before figuring out how to measure it, and especially before we figure out how to improve it, we must define it very specifically.

Like with most vague concepts that aren’t yet measurable, they usually comprise several specific results. In the marketing literature, you’ll see words like reach, engagement, conversion, and brand awareness. But these are really just more vague, weasely concepts. So I prefer to be much more specific.

Be specific about what Marketing Outreach means to you.

In growing my ezine tribe, marketing outreach means a few very specific results (you might notice that I prefer to word results as though they’re already true):

  • I make contact with many new audiences, to find out if they have the KPI struggles I can help with.
  • My message about practical performance measurement resonates with many people in these new audiences.
  • Lots of these people become new subscribers to my ezine as a result of sharing my message with them.
  • The subscribers to my ezine regularly read and enjoy the practical tips I write for them.
  • My ezine subscribers become clients that I can help and make a difference for.

There are plenty of marketing metrics (or KPIs or measures, whatever terminology you use) for specific results like those above. To mention a few: views, likes, clicks, hits, signups, opens, click-through rates, conversion rates.

But the answer isn’t to pick and choose your marketing measures from lists like these.

Don’t default to the standard marketing metrics.

Largely, the measures you choose will depend on the channels you use to reach new markets and attract them to your business, organisation, product, event or cause. That’s because of the types of data and how that data can be collected varies across the channels. Tracking “likes” on LinkedIn is much easier than tracking “likes” at live speaking events.

The measures I use for my five marketing outreach results, above, are designed based on the channels I use. Here are some of them:

  • Audience Size = the number of people in the LinkedIn search or conference audience or webcast audience (and so on) that I presented my message to
  • Landing Page Unique Visitors = the number of individual people who went to the webpage I invited them to when I presented my message to them
  • New Signups = the number of people who chose to subscribe to my ezine, on the webpage I invited them to
  • Engaged Subscribers = the proportion of my ezine subscribers who have opened at least one of the email newsletters in the last month
  • Subscriber Clients = the proportion of new clients that came from being an ezine subscriber

For some marketing campaigns, the first result, which is often referred to as ‘reach’, is a nightmare to gather data for. In this case, focusing on the return on investment is a reasonable proxy measure:

  • Return = number of new leads or clients that came from the new market
  • Investment = effort or cost to reach the new market

Of course, we all use a variety of methods to send a variety of messages out into a variety of markets. Each method-message-market combination will have its own contribution to our marketing outreach measures. So tracking just the totals isn’t going to give us any insight about which campaigns work best, and which are wasting our time and money.

Set up ways to track individual campaign contributions.

When most of marketing is online, it’s not that hard to uniquely track each campaign we run, to find out how well it works. Google Analytics and most email marketing apps these days make it super easy. Generally, it’s a word or a code that is unique to each campaign, and used on each campaign collateral along the journey from reaching a new audience through to someone from that audience ultimately becoming a customer.

Here’s how I use tracking codes in my campaigns to grow my ezine tribe:

  • In any post I share in LinkedIn, the only link I ever provide for people to click goes to a single webpage.
  • That webpage has “LinkedIn” in its name, so I can clearly identify from my Google Analytics data how many unique visitors land on that page each month.
  • There is a sign up form for my ezine on that page, and that form automatically passes the code “LinkedIn” to my newsletter list app, attaching it to each new subscriber that came from my LinkedIn activity.

I don’t get all hot and bothered about the perfection of this kind of data. Sure, a LinkedIn follower might not sign up on the landing page I invite them to; they might cruise around my website and sign up somewhere else. But as with all performance measurement, we’re trying to get a useful understanding of change over time, not a precise understanding of every bit of trivial minutiae.

There are plenty of marketing metrics around: views, likes, shares, clicks, hits, signups, opens, conversion rates. But don’t pick and choose yours from lists like these. Design them specifically for your marketing goals.

DISCUSSION:

How are you defining and tracking your marketing outreach? Do have some great ideas to add, or are you taking a great idea from this post?

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