How do you measure effectiveness of your marketing campaigns?

Gaurav Goyal
11 replies
This is generally a tricky one since there are attribution troubles. What ways have worked for you?

Replies

Alexis Khvatov
When it comes to measuring the effectiveness of your marketing campaigns, you'll want to get strategic. After all, obtaining your desired results is why you put in the effort in the first place! Taking a Tony Robbins-esque approach and infusing some positive energy into the equation, you'll need to ensure that your KPIs are suitably aligned to accurately measure successes and challenges. Once those are established, decide which metrics will be most valuable for measuring progress. Getting clear on what needs to happen each step along the way, you should have no problem checking your campaign's efficiency in a meaningful manner. Now that's what I call effective!
Gaurav Goyal
@alekswatch Thanks. What challenges do you face in doing this?
Alexis Khvatov
@gauravgoyal_gg The challenges of measuring Return on Investment (ROI) of marketing campaigns include difficulty in attributing profit and revenue growth to the impact of marketing initiatives, integrating ROI into overall business line calculations, and accurately measuring the return of each program based on variable campaign investments
Depends on what stage of the funnel it is!
Nick Mazikov
The arrival of new startups that need our help. By the way, if your startup is also facing the problem of financing, feel free to contact us. We'll help you close the deal
Sherry Xena
It mainly depends on whether the marketing activities bring actual income, and mainly depends on the input-output ratio
Anastasia C
it's tricky. I believe it depends on your goal. for example, if we use KOL for impression, then the number of page views is important. if we use it for sales, then revenue is important. if we use it to train AI, then conversion rate matters. don't think there is a magic formula
Nikhil Mehra
There are several metrics that can be used to measure the effectiveness of marketing campaigns, including: Conversion Rate: the percentage of individuals who take a desired action, such as making a purchase or filling out a form. Return on Investment (ROI): the financial return on the money invested in a marketing campaign, calculated by dividing the revenue generated by the cost of the campaign. Click-Through Rate (CTR): the percentage of clicks on an advertisement or link compared to the number of times the ad was displayed.
Ksenia Khriptovich
The more leads, the better 😁 Google Analytics and UTMs help greatly to track where they come from!