Top 8 Metrics to Measure for Effective Social Media Campaign
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4 years ago
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Let’s face it: If you’re running paid campaigns on social media, your boss is always going to be asking you about your social media metrics. “Are they improving?” “What are we tracking?” “What should we be tracking?” “Why?”
If all of these questions are making your head spin, you are not alone! With so many metrics out there, it can hard to decipher which ones are most critical to monitor.
For online advertisers, tracking your social media performance isn’t just important to your boss. It should be important to you too. Having a handle on the metrics that matter is not only going to make you look smart at work, but it’s also going to help you improve your social media advertising strategy so you can grow your fan base and potentially even your business through the power of social media marketing.
With most consumers spending several hours a day on platforms like Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter, it is key to have an effective strategy that is continuously evolving as the platforms release new features, tools, and improvements. The beast of social media is ever-changing, so your strategy needs to be as well. Tracking critical metrics effectively is the first step to taking over the social world, impressing your boss, and earning that raise you’ve been eyeing.
If you’re running paid campaigns on social media, here are the top eight social media metrics that you need to be tracking, as well as tips on how to track them and why you should be. Without further ado, let’s dive in!
#1: Social Media Reach
What Is Reach in Social Media?
Reach is a measure of how many people your brand and content are getting in front of. You can think of reach simply as the number of eyes your social media presence is exposed to. Of course, the more eyes, the better, and while reach does not always paint the full picture, it is a critical metric to monitor.Why Reach Matters
Reach is a top-of-funnel metric, but still, a metric that every social media marketer should be closely monitoring and continuously working to improve. Strong reach is an indication of strong brand awareness and without your brand, what are you, really? If you can build a recognizable, well-respected, and influential brand, the other goals you’ve set forth (like leads, subscribers, and conversions) will happen with more ease. The bottom line is that if your reach is not growing, this is a problem! You spend a lot of time working on social, so ensuring you are reaching a substantial audience is key.How to Measure Reach
You can track your reach on all your individual social media platforms. To track this metric, look at your follower growth, individual post reach, overall campaign reach, and your audience growth rate in your various social media platforms. Your campaigns should improve your reach over time. Here’s an example of how you can track reach on Instagram through your profile's Insights page. If this were my Instagram business account, I’d be quite concerned, because as you can see, my reach is down by -11 from the week before! #2: EngagementWhat Is Engagement?
Engagement is the social media metric that informs you how many people interact with the content you put out on social platforms. Engagement can come in several forms, such as comments, shares, likes, clicks, and saves.Why Engagement Matters
If your reach is spot on, but your engagement is missing, this is a problem. If people are not engaging with the content you shared, then what is the point of posting it in the first place? Your social media engagement rate tells you how interested your audience is, plus what content resonates and what content does not. Then you’ll be able to tweak your social media copy and overall strategy based on this information. For instance, if pictures of dogs receive 10X more engagement than pictures of cats, you would up the dog pictures and put the cats to bed.How to Measure Your Engagement Rate
So how do you know if your content is engaging enough? Each social media platform where you’re running ads should show you the individual ad's engagement rate. Run and test multiple ads so that you can determine a typical engagement rate for your account. Whenever an ad gets below-average engagement, change it or throw it out. When an ad gets above-average engagement, keep it running and figure out how you can create that magic again. Facebook, for example, lets you check on the engagement for each type of ad. Here are the options: If you want to take engagement tracking a step further, read on to metric #4… #3: Amplification Rate The more I’ve become familiar with amplification rate, the more I’ve realized how critical this metric should be for social media marketers to track.What is Amplification Rate?
Author and digital marketing evangelist first defined this metric at Google Avinash Kaushik as “the rate at which your followers take your content and share it through their networks.” Basically, you can think of amplification rate as the ratio of shares per social post.Why Amplification Rate Matters
While likes and comments are great to see, they don’t necessarily expand your reach. But when your followers amplify your content, it gets exposed to new audiences without you even paying for the additional exposure. A high amplification rate is a real indication that your followers have made the active choice to be tied to your brand among their own peers. They’re sharing your content for you, like brand ambassadors.How to Measure Amplification Rate
To measure your amplification rate, keep an eye on the number of times posts are shared or re-posted, divide that number by your total followers, and multiply by 100. (Unfortunately, this is one of the few worthwhile social media metrics that aren’t typically provided in the native platforms.) #4: Social Media ReferralsWhat Are Social Media Referrals?
Referrals, or referral traffic, are measuring how many visitors are coming to your site from social media. When someone clicks a link in a social media post, then lands on your site, that’s a referral visit. For many businesses, social media referrals are a significant source of website traffic.Why Social Referral Visits Matters
It’s great when people engage with your social posts, but even better if they come to your website, where you have complete control of their experience with your brand. If people take the time to leave their social profiles to explore your website, this really says something about how interested they are in your content and offerings. There are many ways to encourage followers to visit your website on social media. Whether it be through your Instagram story or a video advertisement with a website CTA at the end, it is critical to track who is taking advantage of these opportunities to leave social and come to your website. This will ensure you can understand what content is resonating the most with followers so you can leverage that knowledge to improve your social strategy.How to Measure Social Referrals
You can track this metric through Google Analytics. Go to Acquisition > Social to see which networks are driving traffic to your site and how much. Ideally, it would help if you were using UTM parameters on your social links to separate organic referrals from paid referrals and clearly see which campaigns drive the most traffic to your website. #5: Click-Through-RateWhat is Click-Through-Rate (CTR)?
Click-through-rate or CTR tracks how many people click your ad or content, typically directed to a page on your site where additional content lives. If you’re running ads on social media, your links should point to landing pages where users will hopefully go on to complete a conversion.Why CTR Matters
Clearly, if people are clicking, they are interested (unless their finger slipped, that is!). Tracking this metric is critical because if your CTR’s are very low, it’s clear the content does not resonate with your audience. But that’s not the only reason it’s important. As in Google Ads, your CTR affects your ad costs. Social platforms tend to favor ads with high click-through rates, so they get more impressions and better placements and are rewarded with lower costs per click.How to Measure CTR
CTR is defined as the number of clicks divided by the number of impressions, multiplied by 100. Lucky for you, all the major social platforms automatically calculate CTR for each of your ads, so you don’t have to calculate this manually. To see the CTR of a Facebook ad, you can check the “Ads” tab and select the “Performance and Clicks” #6: Bounce Rate Ah! One of the few metrics we want to below.What Is Bounce Rate?
Bounce rate measures the number of people who landed on your website or landing page and then immediately split. This could be due to various reasons, such as accidental clicks, but if the traffic coming to your site from social media has an unusually high bounce rate, it’s a sign that your site isn’t giving users what they hoped to find. Why Bounce Rate Matters A low bounce rate indicates that your site provides value to your users because once they reach it, they want to stick around a while and hopefully even convert. In contrast, a high bounce rate is typically an indication that something is awry. The nice thing about measuring bounce rate is that you can compare your social traffic to that of other traffic sources, like the search, for instance. If your bounce rate is much lower through Facebook than Bing, then you know your social strategy on that channel is quite effective.How to Measure Bounce Rate
To measure bounce rate, you can use tools like Google Analytics. Within Google Analytics, go to the Acquisition tab > All Traffic, then segment by Channels. You’ll then find a column labeled “Bounce Rate.” Click on the heading to sort your channels from lowest to highest bounce rate. #7: Conversions and Conversion Rate This one likely seems like a no-brainer, but is it something you’re effectively tracking with your social media efforts right now? Also, how are you defining social conversions?What Are Conversions in Social Media?
Conversions are quite specific to your individual business model, so this is something that you will need to define relative to your social media strategy and industry. To you, a conversion might be a direct website purchase; for other businesses, it might count as a conversion if someone subscribes to your newsletter, downloads gated content, or registers for your local event. Conversions are the business goals you’re ultimately trying to achieve, the goals that raise your bottom line. However, your specific conversions are defined; conversion rate is how many people who click your ad go on to complete the conversion process.Why Conversion Rate Matters
In social media advertising, the conversion rate is important because of its direct effect on your ROI (return on investment). It would help if you had a strong conversion rate, as well as a low cost per conversion, to make your ad investment worth it.How to Measure Conversions
After you’ve defined what a conversion is for you, you should work with your website team to properly track conversions to ensure you have conversion tracking properly configured through your website. Check out the below resources for tips on tracking conversions and conversion rate through specific social media platforms:- Using the Facebook Pixel to Track Conversions on Facebook (also applies to Instagram, since Instagram ads are run as a placement through Facebook)
- How to set up conversion tracking for Twitter ads