Let me cut right to the chase. Do you want to know the value of your content marketing efforts? Want this report?
Read on and I'll tell ya!
Calculating the real ROI
With so much emphasis often put on the traffic generation potential of a good content marketing strategy, I want to focus this post on measuring and increasing the return on the (sometimes sneakily large) investment. Some common goals you'll hear surrounding a content marketing strategy include generating traffic for generic terms, increasing social shares, and developing the brand's authority (measured by increases in branded traffic, or some other indicator). In the right circumstances, all of these are nice metrics for the relevant stakeholders in the organization, but they're all just proxies for measuring the growth of a business. They're measurements of the means, not the end.
The impetus for a lot of what I'll be talking about in this post comes from Josh Braaten's post on the Google Analytics Blog a few months ago titled "How to Prove the Value of Content Marketing with Multi-Channel Funnels". Josh talks practically about how to measure the business impact of traffic that first experiences your site via a page that isn't directly selling a product or service to a consumer. Think: the "How to get into fly-fishing" article written by the outdoors retailer that sells fly-fishing poles, or even the "How to measure the effectiveness of content marketing" article written by the guy working for a company that's doing a two day kick-ass web marketing conference in Boston on May 20th & 21st :). Indeed, these content pages aren't selling a product or service, but they are selling the brand, the "purchase" made by the consumer is everlasting trust; and it has a really low conversion rate.
The necessary analysis for this gets difficult because it is so rare for a user to make the jump from discovery/informational stage to transactional stage in one sitting. Hence the need for multi-channel analysis: we need to take a conversion, look back at all of the interactions that have taken place leading up to that conversion, and assign some amount of credit to those channels that often show up toward the beginning of the conversion path. Social networks and the content that usually ranks for generic keywords are most often found in these early interactions. They are inherently 'openers' or 'exposers'.
So, now that we've covered the theory, let's look at measuring that ROI.
Expanding upon Josh Braaten's multi-content funnels
Everyone interested in what I've covered above should absolutely read Josh's post. In it, Josh walks you through how to create a report within Google Analytics' Multi-Channel Funnels that classifies users by the page type for which they first interacted (based upon landing page).
Custom channel creation is a lot like creating an advanced segment in GA
The top conversions path report - seen here displaying a pretty convoluted conversion path for one particular conversion.
I'm going to offer a slightly different direction, but they both accomplish the goal of getting value out of our visit data. Instead of comparing content sections against each other, let's instead compare it against our other channels like direct, referral, organic, and paid.
Let's do a step-by-step walkthrough
Head on down to the multi-channel funnels reports.
Make a copy of the basic channel grouping template.
Include traffic based on landing page URL. Hopefully you've got your resource center, blog, or content home on a neatly identifiable path in the URL. If you don't, you may have to go the route of declaring page-level custom variables.
Drag it to the top. The order at which you put these channels is important because GA will go down the line until a match is found, then stop. If we leave our Resource Center channel at the bottom, the channels above will take a ton of visitors first because our rules aren't mutually exclusive.
Though not completely related to this topic, I'd also suggest separating your organic channel into branded, unbranded, and (not provided).
Because of that importance of ordering, if you put (not provided) first and branded second, the final organic group will necessarily consist of unbranded traffic.
You can create this segment with a neatly crafted regex of your brand name and other branded terms.
Finally, let GA calculate things out, and voila!
What can we learn from the above?
Well, it should be pretty clear that under the traditional model of last click analysis, our resource center is under-valued. This much is obvious by the disparity in last click conversions and conversion value compared with assisted conversions and conversion value. Not only that, but the "Assisted/Last Click or Direct Conversions" ratio (6.62 in the screenshot) tells us that this content is acting in an assist role more than any other channel we have (the higher the number, the more likely it's an 'opener', not a 'closer' - those trend toward zero).
When we look at assisted conversion numbers, we CANNOT say that our resource center content is now directly responsible for $26k in revenue; that would not be quite fair using this model. But our content did have its hand in a lot more conversions than we may have originally assumed.
Now, as for this channel's relative contribution to the bottom line compared with other channels, well, yes, it's still a lot smaller. But consider that this particular website's resource center is actually quite small, especially compared with the size of the rest of the site. Knowing how many pages are in a resource center makes it pretty easy to apply simple math to determine what each new page is roughly worth. Or you could choose to do deeper analysis into specific pages or sections within. Again, I point to Josh Braaten's post for more on that.
But at the end of the day if you know that each new page added to the resource center has an assist in $X worth of conversions per year, justifying expansion becomes a lot easier.
A bonus tip for content marketers
So that was measuring the ROI of a content marketing strategy. But I've actually got a tip for increasing ROI that I'd like to share.
Our content strategies are targeted at the generic keywords that more often than not are queries that align with the user's information-seeking intent. If we had our way, the path would go like this:
Kitten mittens purchasing decision
A user searches "my cat's too noisy" and lands on your site's blog post "10 ways to deal with a noisy cat."
The user reads and is very happy with your content. In that content, you suggest "kitten mittens," a product that you sell.
The seed is planted in the user's mind, and upon deciding that they're ready to buy, the user either searches for your brand name, that post again, or the "kitten mittens" product, all of which lead back to your site.
Nightmare scenario time: what if they searched for "kitten mittens" and you don't rank for that term? Well, your content has done all the hard work, but your high-ranking competitor swoops in and gets the purchase. This must be corrected. But how?
Remarketing
It doesn't matter what remarketing tool you use (this would be super easy with GA's remarketing tool - here I wrote a post on it!), put the user above in a "noisy cat owner" list, and target them with "kitten mitten" ads around the web.
Thanks for reading, I hoped you learned something!
Let me know what you think in the comments or on Twitter, @MikeCP. Don't forget that Distilled is running our search marketing conference, SearchLove, in Boston on May 20th and 21st!
Thanks for making multi-content funnels so accessible for everyone, Mike. We're starting to find some really unlikely contributors to new student growth and enrollment in the form of content marketing. Your article does a good job to outline the infinite use cases for attribution in content marketing. Thanks for the shout-out to my GA post!
Great Post. I am trying out this in my analytics right now!
Nice work mike, I really need to get back to spending some time in GA better tracking this in more detail. But my question is do you have any experience with external platforms outside of Google Analytics for tracking content marketing activities?
Great Write Mike. Its always important to measure the user engagement, the quality traffic, conversions and the ROI of the content & content resources to improvise the campaign and the content strategy. Google analytics has certainly come a long way in helping the marketers to track the right metrics at the right time & the marketing efforts inch by inch.
Sorry, personally, I do not. But this would be a good place for anyone that does to swoop in!
"The seed is planted in the user's mind, and upon deciding that they're ready to buy, the user either searches for your brand name, that post again, or the "kitten mittens" product, all of which lead back to your site."
This can also skew how effective your content marketing efforts look. If someone finds your content organically one time, then remembers your brand by name the second time around that doesn't mean your content didn't influence that direct visitor. But it's hard to track those multiple interactions over time, which can make your content marketing efforts seemingly less effective than they actually are!
it is an another great post of you, thanks mate
Hey
Really very good post on measuring your return on investment with help of content.
Hardik
Awesome, I am going to run this tomorrow and see what we get...
Hey Mike, well done and thorough explanation. However, I'd like to point out that we're not talking about ROI but Conversion Value. If you wanted to measure ROI, you'll have to consider the purchase price or manufacturing costs of the products you sell online. Otherwise, you'll get a distorted measure.I reckon this isn't possible using the Google Analytics ECommerce API. Is there any solution out there that allows you to track real ROI, i.e. a solution considering product costs?Thanks, Fabian
Fabian, GA has added a cost data upload feature recently which might serve the need. But in truth, I'd really just use Excel for considering costs. Get the R in ROI from GA, track the I in ROI in Excel, calculate there.
Hi Mike,
Thank you for this information. It will be helpful to measure our newest project. We read a post by Aleyda Solis about "superhero slides" and, following her advice, created a blog, press release, and slideshare about our product. (We would appreciate any feedback https://nomorecreditcards.com/how-to-pay-off-credit-card-debt-fast/). Our team put in over 36 hours to complete this project and it is truly the biggest we have ever done. Measuring the ROI is imperative so we know whether to use our time creating another such project. Thanks again Mike for your post.
Warm Regards,
Karla Twomey
First, how did kittens with mittens ever fail? Probably because the mega banks would not give poor Charlie a loan.
Good article and it sheds light on a common problem SEO's have, and that is is justifying expense based on ROI. Anything that can help you show value for a particular investment is golden come raise or revue time.
This was a really inspiring post, thanks so much! It really helps demonstrate ROI on those less direct activities.
I have a question though: I've split out organic for branded v unbranded, how do you add a filter for (not provided) ? Thanks!
Hey Gary,
Just create an additional channel in the multi-channel funnels report that includes keyword exactly matching (not provided).
As simple as that! The irony of filtering (not provided) as a "keyword" is not lost on Google I hope...
Thanks for the help.
Thanks for this tutorial. Looks better than the set-up I currently use.
Interesting post thanks for sharing, I've been trying this out for a while after reading Avanash's web analytic's book and doing the Google Analytic's training. I would recommend it to anyone.
Not sure that cat likes those mittens.
This is a great post. Bookmarked (and tweeted).
Nice job Mike. I've already implemented for our content efforts. Will be a great way to evaluate ROI on an on-going basis.
What a thorough post! I will pass it to the marketers to see if they can use the tips on measuring and increasing ROI which is the most important aspect on marketing campaigns! Thanks for sharing!
A well researched article I must say. Although there are areas which needed more clarifications but I think the overall objective of the post has been achieved - to instruct and educate on the strategies and tools need to improve the return on investments made on content marketing. Nice metrics and analysis!
[promotional signature line removed by editor]
So...HERE's a question:
If we're B2B and sales do not come through the site but are large jobs bid through an offline process...am I doomed to a dark future of never knowing?
I can't think of a way to connect the two, but also know I'm in a sea of clever people here.
Am I totes missing the obvious here?
Thanks guys—I just wanna play too...!!
Yeah, this is incredibly difficult. You could work on tying those offline conversions to on-site behavior with custom variables or the new Universal Analytics. Or implement a call tracking solution. But yeah, I feel your pain!
How do they enter the offline sales process?
Using Marketo Automation to track leads and connecting it with your sales CRM is the only way I am aware of to track an offline B2B sale.
Hi Mike.... great stuff defined with perfect examples.
Thanks mike for such a informative post..
Great article with awesome examples! Thank you so much for your writings and the superb step-by-step examples! This must be promoted to the homepage!
This is great stuff Mike. I'm anxious to see how this turns out for our clients. Any chance this can be incorporated into custom dashboards?
They'd have to be super custom, as in, it takes place outside of GA using their API. This level of granularity isn't available in stock custom dashboards within GA. But the data's all there, and there's a multi-channel funnel API, so I see no reason why it can't be exported and repurposed for a dashboarding tool.
Awesome, thanks for the clarification Mike.
I was wondering the same thing. But you're right Mike, the data is all there.
That's incredibly useful, thanks! Also, loving the Kitten Mittens - You'll be Smitten.
Great piece Mike. Good thinks. Our challenge at news.wsu.edu is adapting this to measure ROI on a site that is a news site, with no "product" as such to sell. We abound in good content. So, a fun challenge.
Great post Mike. It's sometimes tough to see how certain channels assist in the conversion process. It sure is nice to be able to attach some monetary value to assists. Heck! If professional sports does it, why shouldn't we. Thanks for the walk-through.
Heh. Content marketing is the Jason Kidd of online marketing.
I would have to say it is the John Stockton/Chirs Paul of online marketing.
Great article!
Larry Carillo
Mike - for a second I wonder how you got a screenshot of my incremental revenue ;o)
Your pal,
Chenzo
Great walk through Mike. Ive bookmarked for future reference.
Thanks for your tutorial, im going to do it
Great post.. thanks for sharing Mike..
Great job Mike. i really get the useful information about this post. Today content is more important. Thanks for sharing.