In 2020, social media is engrained in our lives.
For many, the first thing they do after open their eyes is opening their Instagram, Facebook, or Twitter app to see what happened over night.
Because of this, it is a valuable tool for communicating and building personal relationships with your audience, but it can also be a very helpful factor in increasing your revenue, reach, and overall ROI.
The only way to ensure this, however, is by looking beyond your fan, follower, or "like" counts to track the right social media KPIs.
Your social media KPIs (key performance indicators) need to be circled around generating new traffic to your site, increasing lead generation, and expanding your brand. These are what ultimately impact your bottom line and make any initiative worth it.
You can measure dozens of different metrics on social media, but with ROI in mind, you really only need to worry about those that answer the following questions:
- Are you reaching qualified people?
- Are you engaging with qualified people?
- How many of your social media fans are inquiring about your product or service?
- How many of them actually become customers?
Everything else is really just a vanity metric. That being said, there are four main areas your social media KPIs should be focusing on: engagement, reach, leads, and customers.
Focus area #1: engagement
Engagement is, hands down, the #1 area that you should be concerned with on social media. It is the catalyst for improvement in all of the other social media KPIs we'll discuss.
Simply put, engagement measures the amount of likes, shares, and comments that your social updates receive.
Having a large reach with low engagement is a bad sign because it shows that you don't have a marketing message or content that resonates. Reaching millions of people means nothing if they aren't interested in what you offer.
As long as your audience is engaged, no matter how small that audience is, it will grow organically and generate more leads.
Plus, on platforms like Facebook and Twitter, engagement plays a major role in how many people actually even ever see your update (a.k.a. your reach — see focus area #2).
Facebook and Twitter see engagement as a sign of quality and popularity.
The more interactions your content receives, the more newsfeeds Facebook will filter it out to. Similarly, the more retweets or likes a tweet gets, the larger it will appear (in font size) on your Twitter profile.
The actual KPIs that you can measure will vary by social media platform, but typically include the following:
1. Clicks:
Link clicks are reflective of the quality of the title and image included on your post. Of course, your raving fans will click on everything you share, but the majority of people (especially new people) are only going to click on posts that interest them.
A large number of clicks with very few likes and shares shows that your post got their attention but didn't deliver the exceptional quality needed for the viewer to engage.
Great overall engagement with a low amount of clicks indicates that you need to work on how you pitch your content by testing different titles or visuals.
2. Likes:
Likes lead to more attention because people naturally gravitate towards things that are popular. More likes also signal to most platform algorithms that this particular content deserves a higher spot in search results.
3. Shares:
These days hitting "like" on a post is a passive, mindless action. Likes are good and you definitely want them, but sharing is a conscious decision. When someone shares your post (or retweets, re-vines, etc.) they are giving a personal recommendation to their friends, colleagues, and family. Because of this, shares are a great indication of the quality of your work.
4. Comments:
The point of being on social media is to be — well, social.
Interesting, relevant content sparks a conversation. Even if people leave critical comments, you're better off than having no comments at all. Praise, criticism, and general discussion are all helpful for improving your marketing, but silence is not. Getting comments on your comments is a reliable sign that your content is hitting all the right points of interest.
5. Brand mentions:
Tags or mentions show that people are having a conversation about your brand even when you're not even in the room. This is another social media KPI that really focuses on your relevance because it shows that you are maintaining top-of-mind awareness.
6. Profile visits:
Not all social media platforms will provide this metric, but if it's there, it's worth your attention. Many social media websites are used as search engines for brand research today. There will be plenty of people that follow you, but they may never visit your profile.
The people that are just starting to scope out your business, however, will definitely visit your profile. This KPI isn't as important as the others, as you can't really measure intent to buy, but profile visits do indicate interest in your brand beyond your latest post.
7. Active followers:
An active follower is considered to be someone who has logged in and interacted with your content within the past 30 days; unfortunately, for most brands, the majority of people who "like" or follower your page are unlikely to visit it regularly let along check out its content.
Doing this on most networks may be a challenge, but thanks to tools like MangeFlitter, it's a lot easier on Twitter. ManageFlitter is a handy free tool for identifying any individuals that are inactive or are fake. It takes seconds to sign-up and you will be removing any irrelevant followers in no time.
Focus area #2: reach
Reach is an old-school marketing metric that still remains important today. It indicates how far your message is actually traveling — how many eyes it's getting in front of.
Measuring reach on social media can be misleading at times as it only shows how many people potentially saw your post or that it was made available. Unlike engagement, which has definitive answers such as x amount of likes, reach is really just an estimate.
You can measure reach by tracking the following KPIs:
1. Followers or fans:
The total number of people following your brand on social media indicate your reach without any engagement. This is the total amount of people that could see your post and have actively said they want to.
2. Impressions:
Impressions show how many times your post showed up in someone's newsfeed or timeline, either because they are already following you or because someone they know has liked or shared your content.
This doesn't mean that for every impression someone actually looked at your post or even noticed it — this just means that they had a chance to. Though vague, a higher number is always better.
3. Traffic data
This is a huge one. What percentage of the traffic to your website is coming from social media? If you're investing a good amount of time and effort into your social media content, you'll want to make sure that this number reflects that.
You can easily identify this number if you’re using HubSpot. All you have to do is visit the sources section of reports. See if a good chunk of your traffic is coming from social media. If not, you might just have to expand the reach of your posts. Consider using a social media publishing tool like SproutSocial or Hootsuite.
Focus area #3: leads
Once your social media accounts start gaining traction, it's easy to get caught up in how many likes and shares you're getting. It feels good to see people enjoying your content, but what about the bottomline?
To ensure you are getting the best ROI from your social media, you have to ask the tough question: How many of these engaged fans are actually interested in making a purchase from my company?
You might have an enormous following on Instagram because people love your photos, but how does that translate to new sales? To put it another way, say you have a small following on LinkedIn, but it consistently generates new leads. Which one deserves more attention?
You can't answer that question if you aren't measuring lead generation from social media.
If you aren't generating leads, you're either on the wrong platform or your content isn't engaging to your buyer persona.
The sooner you identify the problem, the better — but you have to start tracking to find out. You can also gain valuable insight by looking into the demographics of the people who are seeing and responding to your content:
Focus area #4: customers
No Inbound strategy would be complete without measuring the number of acquired customers.
Most of your social media posts should be focused on providing content for your audience and having a conversation with them — but when the time comes for you to ask for something in return, you want to know how many of those fans actually end up making it to the finish line.
This is the ultimate measurement of your success in social media marketing. If you've truly found the right people and kept them engaged, they'll be interested in buying your product or service (if they haven't already).
You shouldn't expect to have high new customer rates from social media because a lot of your followers will be current customers and another significant portion are only interested in the content. That's just the way it goes.
However, you want to pay attention to which social media channels produce the highest and lowest numbers. This shows you where to focus more time and it shows you where your best leads are coming from.
Some people might think tracking customer acquisition and conversion rates from social media isn't necessary, but how else are you going to honestly measure the ROI from social media?
Engagement and reach are fun to measure because they make your brand look good, but you have to track the KPIs that paint the full picture. The goal of measuring social media KPIs isn't to justify your marketing strategy, it's to improve it.
Keep Trucking Social Media gurus
Keep in mind that while all of these are smart choices, you should focus on the social media KPIs that are relevant to the platforms that your brand is active on and that have the most relevance to the audience's behavior you are looking to influence.
Every audience is different, and if your ideal buyer is not inclined to hitting the "like" button, but is still converting, then you should not focus too much on that metric. Track things that make the most sense and actually reflect success for your brand.