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1. Number of Fans Inceasing day by day
2. Engagement rate ( Share/retweets , Likes/fav , comments & number of people reach or saw your post or tweet)
3. Traffic to the website and conversion rate from Social Media
4. Avg duration of the visitors from Social Media
Hi melory
In order to track the performance of your efforts, you need to have an analytics program in place. Marketing analyticstie to your CRM solution and reveal astonishing data not only on traffic and leads, but also on new customers acquired from various channels and campaigns.
To get a good report you need to monitor several key factors.
Traffic-
Overall, how many people are coming to your website? Look
into what channel drove the most and least visits.
Leads-
How much of this traffic are you converting into leads and potential customers? This number should be constantly growing to ensure a steady flow of revenue.
Customers-
You should always be mapping your campaigns and channels
to customer acquisition. How many sales did you close this
month?
Traffic, Leads and Sales by Keywords
you need to know which keywords are drawing in the most visitors to your
site. This is actually data that Google Analytics can provide you with easily. However, you should
go deeper than that. Which keywords brought in the most sales?
Customer Acquisition Cost
How much are you investing to draw in each new customer? If you rely primarily on outbound Marketing methods, like trade shows and direct mail, your cost per customer is probably pretty high.
Effectiveness by Chanel
What promotional channels or referring sources are sending you the most traffic?
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There are certain indicators you can track such as website traffic, sales and brand awareness, website traffic is easy to compare and usually the data is available for free, you don't need to a special tools to export the data and compare results, and same goes for sale, you can track how well your sales numbers are before and after starting the social media campaign, as for brand awareness which is a very important factor, especially if you're introducing a new product or even a company, social media plays a major role in spreading awareness about it.
There are plenty of social media analytics tools out there that calculates your engagement and bounce rate percentages which will reflect the impact of your social media efforts on your sales and evidently as an ROI.
The ROI with Social Media Marketing is directly proportional to the engagement with your target audience. Number of 'likes' , 'shares', 'vote ups', 'comments', '+1s', 'tweets' and 'pins' etc. also help you find if the channel is working for you and getting returns.
With social media marketing you don't just calculate the dollar value the campaigns are returning, but you also identify the themes and patterns as to how your product/service is being conceived by the consumers or potential consumers out there. Considering these patterns to align with your marketing strategy or product development strategy will surely help.
The returns with social media marketing are more of intangible nature. That's why it's considered a must for brand awareness and recognition type of campaigns.
Hi Melory
From my10 years experience I learned a lot about online marketing and still learning! I helped various concerns using the simple social media - ROI strategy and I shared the same in this section.
Like any business endeavor, you naturally want to have a fair idea on the return of your investment in social media and not simply jump right in just because it’s the popular thing.
The ROI cycle of social media can be separated into three stages.
LAUNCH ------------------ MANAGEMENT ----------------- OPTIMIZATION
Stage1: The Launch
At this stage,100% of your focus is on setting up accounts on the FIVE Social Packs: Facebook, Twitter, Google+, LinkedIn and YouTube.
While there are a number of other popular social networking sites, the5 are considered to be the critically important ones. You simply can’t afford not to have presence on all5 platforms.
The Launch stage is more of executional with the primary goal of getting started. Here are the details of this stage:
Approach: Executional
Objectives: Social Media Presence
Focus: Short-Term
Results: Negligible
At this point, you won’t be able to expect any significant impact or derive results.
Stage2: Management
At this stage, about60% of your company’s efforts will be focused on developing the5 social media sites. About10% of the focus is directed towards the creative and brand offer and20% on setting up quantitative metrics like inbound links, traffic, Facebook “likes”, etc. The remaining 10% will be focused on qualitative metrics such as survey results, pools and studying brand sentiment.
Approach: Tactical
Objectives: Customer Engagement
Focus: Mid-Term
Results: Increase in Traffic
Stage3: Optimization
During the Optimization stage,25% of the focus is on gaining more leverage on all5 social media platforms, and 30% will be distributed to creative and brand offer development, as well as the quantitative and qualitative metrics. The other25% of the focus will be directed to improving the conversion rate and the optimization of campaigns. The remaining20% will be used to measure success of the campaign which will be the basis of your ROI.
Approach: Strategic
Objectives: Social Media ROI
Focus: Long-Term
Results: Increase in Revenue
Despite what many social experts claim that ROI of social media cannot be measured, there is actually a way to measure it. This process will require a better understanding of your customer lifetime value (CLV) or the average revenue generated by a customer during their entire engagement period with your products and services. This figure will be used to compare the results that have been generated on your campaign in social media.
For example:
If a typical customer spends about $10 every month on a particular product and has been a loyal patron of a certain brand for about 3 years, this equates to the average customer lifetime value of $360.00.
Most companies are willing to spend about 10% of their CLV for the acquisition of new customers. This means, they are willing to spend $36 to acquire a new customer who is expected to spend $360 all throughout her engagement with the brand.
So if your social media efforts will cost you $36,000 for one full year, and your campaign will be able to generate1,000 new customers every year, then you definitely have a clear winner in your hands.
I hope my answer would help you in understanding the stages of social media ROI.
Your comments are most welcome.
Thanks and Regards
Feroz Khan Saleem
Social media is a channel, not an activity. You can’t measure a channel, you have to measure the activity (or content) which you communicate on that channel.