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Attract, Engage, Convert – How to Better Measure and Optimize Content Marketing Performance

Posted on Jul 9th, 2014
Written by Lee Odden
  • Blog
  • Content Marketing
  • Attract, Engage, Convert – How to Better Measure and Optimize Content Marketing Performance
In this article

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    Safe is Risky - Tom Fishburne Cartoon

    The obstacle in front of most large, or mature companies of any size when it comes to digital and content marketing, is the battle with status quo. From strategy to tactics and especially measurement, change is often seen as interruptive and risky vs. adaptive. But without adaptation, we can hardly evolve, can we?

    As Tom Fishburne implies in the cartoon above, change isn’t risky, safe is risky.

    Companies evolving from Stasis to Production and into Utility and Storytelling modes of content marketing maturity begin to broaden the scope of what business goals content can deliver for a company.

    Because content touches all aspects of business communications, measurement amongst channels, between departments and across target audiences can get complex and even confusing. Part of my job is to simplify the explanation of the chaos that is digital and content marketing. For our readers that are in the midst of evolving their content marketing efforts from quantity to quality to creating better content experiences, here is an easy to understand model for keeping content marketing accountable and measurable.

    And heck, if Justin Cutroni, Analytics Evangelist at Google, likes it, it must be good right?

    Usually with content marketing, you get goals and measurement lists like this:

    Goals:

    • Brand awareness
    • Engagement
    • Lead Generation
    • Lead Nurturing
    • Sales
    • Customer Retention & Loyalty
    • Customer Evangelism
    • Upsell and Cross-Sell

    Measurement:

    • Benchmark lift of company awareness
    • Benchmark lift of product/service awareness
    • Cost savings
    • Higher conversion rates
    • Inbound links
    • Customer renewal rates
    • Qualitative feedback from customers
    • Sales
    • Sales lead quality (e.g., sales accepted leads)
    • Sales lead quantity
    • SEO ranking
    • Subscriber growth
    • Time spent on website
    • Website traffic

    These are great and certainly better than not knowing exactly what you’re trying to achieve with content marketing efforts beyond making more content to see what sticks. The thing about lists like those above is that they are not really organized according to the experience most companies are trying to create in combination with how buyers discover, consume and act on digital content.

    It’s not really a right or wrong thing, but I think organizing measurement closer to the activities that best represent buyer and brand interactions through content will help us better measure content performance. Such organization will also help keep content accountable and reveal performance indicators that allow us to optimize performance at any given time.

    Attract Engage Convert - TopRank Marketing

    That model I’m talking about is Attract, Engage Convert and it’s a way of seeing content marketing that I first introduced in the book Optimize back in 2012.  It’s like a simplified sales cycle really, because there are three essential questions that need to be answered whenever content is created with marketing intentions.

    1. How will our marketing attract the right audience, right time, right place?
    2. How will we engage members of that audience with the right message, right types of content, media, channels and devices as well as to interact and share?
    3. How will we convert engaged members of that audience to the next stage in the buying cycle, to a lead, a customer, an advocate?

    Organizing content marketing programs to be accountable through an Attract, Engage, Convert model answers these questions and empowers content marketers to be far more effective at achieving and communicating program results. What do I mean by Attract, Engage and Convert measurement?

    Attract: Any discovery touchpoint: search ranking, search referred traffic, social mentions, topic affinity with social references (concur + expense software or just “concur”), social referred traffic, direct link traffic, mentions on blogs, mentions on media, share of voice for target topics on search and social.

    Engage: Content consumption & interaction: page views, media views (image, video, audio), content of a certain type viewed, views of content segmented by topic, number of pages viewed, time on site, return visitors, comments on blog posts, social shares.

    Convert: Subscriptions, Sign ups, trials, inquiries – any micro conversion or explicit conversion involving a form that captures information.

    By organizing measurement of content marketing performance in this way, there’s a level of accountability and increased contribution that emerges – things that often get lost with content marketing operations with numerous moving parts, stakeholders and objectives.

    How are you organizing your content marketing performance? How far have you evolved through the content marketing maturity model?

    Content Marketing Maturity

    TopRank’s Content Marketing Maturity Model