Conversions
Conversions occur when
visitors or customers take specific actions as a result of your digital
marketing. Unlike website behavior, conversions are more directly
linked to sales and revenues. Since your ultimate goal is increasing
profits, making sure your digital marketing converts is absolutely
essential.
Here are five types of
conversions that can indicate successful campaigns:
#1. Online sales
Online sales from your
website is perhaps the simplest conversion for gauging success.
Tracking your online sales is easy if you use Google Analytics or
another Web analytics platform.
After installing a
small snippet of code on your website, you’ll be able to see which of
your campaigns are driving the most online sales. This is the most
important conversion for strictly e-commerce business owners.
#2: Online-to-store
sales
Not everyone who finds
your business online will buy from your website. Local customers are
likely to visit your store and make in-person purchases. How do you
measure these conversions?
Don’t worry, there are
ways to gauge online-to-store sales.
For example, you can
collect information from prospective customers on your website, such as
email addresses, that can later be compared with data collected at the
cash register. Or, you can offer a special discount code on your
website so when customers redeem the discount you’ll be able to easily
match it back to the marketing campaign.
Or, you can be really
low tech and just ask customers whether they found your business
online. Clarify how they found you – such as via a PPC ad, Facebook or
a Google search — and record their answers in a spreadsheet. Then you
can see which campaigns drive more in-store conversions.
#3: Leads from Web
forms
Most websites have
forms that customers can use to request services, schedule appointments
or get more information. If you’re using Google Analytics, you’ll be
able to see which campaigns result in the most use of your various Web
forms.
Any visitor who
completes a Web form to request a quote could later convert into a customer.
Therefore, marketing campaign success can be measured by the number of
leads (Web form submissions) generated.
#4: Leads and sales
from phone calls
Tracking leads and
sales from phone calls is also important for businesses that drive
sales via the phone.
To track calls, you’ll
need to set up dynamic number insertion (DNI), which shows visitors
different phone numbers depending on how they arrived at your website.
You can then view your phone logs to see which campaigns result in the
most calls.
#5: Leads from live
chats
Does your website offer
live chat for visitors? If not, then you might consider adding it as
another way to engage your visitors.
Once you have chat
installed on your website, then you need to track which marketing
campaigns are driving the most chats. This can be done using the
built-in tracking in your chat program or by integrating Google
Analytics into your chat tool. In both cases, you’ll be able to see
which campaigns are driving more leads for your business via live chat.
Now that we’ve covered
5 ways to measure conversions from digital marketing, it’s time to move
on to tracking how visitors behave on your website. Just because a
visitor doesn’t convert right away, doesn’t mean she’s never going to.
For that reason, it’s not enough to only look at conversions. We must
also review website behavior metrics to measure digital marketing
success…
Website Behavior
Here are four ways to
determine digital marketing success based on website behavior:
#1: Website visits
This one is simple –
which of your digital marketing campaigns are putting the most eyes on
your website? Although this is a rather shallow metric compared to
e-commerce and web form conversions, it’s still important to measure
visits per marketing channel.
This is especially
helpful when you view traffic trends over time. For example, you’ll
want to measure traffic from Organic Search (SEO traffic) over time so
you know if your SEO efforts are working. Plus, you’ll be able to spot
potential problems early on if you see a sudden drop in SEO traffic.
#2: Page Views per
visit
Website visits are
important, but they don’t really indicate whether people are engaged by
your business. What if nobody who visits your sites clicks around to
your various products and pages?
Fortunately, Google
Analytics can show you how visitors click through your site while also
providing average numbers of page views per visit.
Pay close attention to
which webpages your customers are visiting most. You might find that
online customers are more attracted to certain aspects of your business
or specific products in your inventory. If you’re promoting your blog,
you can also get ideas about the topics your visitors find most
interesting.
#3: Time spent on the
website
How much time are
people spending on your blog or website, and which of your digital
marketing campaigns is bringing in the most engaged visitors?
Analytics can track
this, too. Again, time spent on your website doesn’t directly lead to
sales, but folks who spend more time browsing are more likely to later
buy.
#4: Bounce rates
In the world of digital
marketing, bouncing is bad for several reasons.
If any of your
campaigns have high bounce rates – meaning people hit their “back”
buttons as soon as they land on your website — then there’s probably a
serious disconnect between your marketing strategy and your landing
page. Just as bad, though, Google might interpret websites with high
bounce rates as low-quality or spam, resulting in an SEO penalty.
Use Google Analytics to
measure your bounce rates over time to spot trends in each of your
marketing campaigns.
Conclusion
Knowing how to measure
the success of your digital marketing campaigns will save you a lot of
stress down the road. You won’t need to guess whether you’re wasting
your time with various campaigns. You can adjust or turn off campaigns
that aren’t working, or you can sharpen campaigns to really hone in on
your goals.
And one more thing —
always know how you’ll measure a campaign’s success before you launch
it. Yes, this requires a more carefully constructed game plan for your
marketing efforts, but you should never launch a digital marketing
campaign that doesn’t have a specific goal.
Plan ahead, aim at your
target, and you’re more likely to get good news when measuring the
success of campaigns.
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