Let's be real here, measuring your social efforts is a pain in the butt. I mean, there are tons of metrics to track, and data to look at, but actually knowing if you're making an impact to the organization, that's a bit trickier. Right? It's simple to track followers and see which platforms send you traffic, but how do you know that you're meeting your goals? How do you make sure everyone understands social's impact on the organization?
Follower counts are boooooooring.
These are the types of questions I often hear when people are grasping with "proving their worth" or getting management and other team members on board with making social a focus. It's so easy to get caught up in doing the things, that you sometimes forget to measure and understand why the things need to be done.
Today I want to walk you through the process we use here at Moz for measuring our social efforts. This is a process we're constantly working to improve, and we have just recently added new metrics and changed our goals a bit. It's something that you don't do once, then set aside.
Social Media Goals
Before I dig into the specific metrics, it's important to take a look at your business goals. At Moz, we use the OKR (Objectives and Key Results) system throughout the organization. This helps to ensure that we're all measuring things in a similar way and that we're all working toward meeting and impacting the company's overall objectives.
Since social media is pretty top-of-the-funnel, you'll often have goals around increasing engagement and traffic to your site, or growing community and improving customer service, and not as much around increasing sales or subscriber numbers. Moz has always been a very customer/community-centered organization, so while the community team will always be focused on customer service and expanding the community, on a quarterly basis we additionally focus on helping to meet the goals of the marketing team as a whole.
Let's take a look at one of these examples:
Marketing Objective: Increase Site Traffic, Engagement, and Customer Flow through Site Funnel
Key Result: Improve Non-paid traffic to the site from all sources by 25% by end of Q2
Social roadmap: Increase engagement with community by 5% on Social channels in order to increase traffic from social by 15%
Engagement Metrics That Matter
Ok, so you know how you want to use social media to reach goals for your organization. Engagement is a great goal, because it can impact the business by increasing traffic, growing brand awareness, talking with community members, showing your voice. But "engagement" isn't a simple number like followers. It's a fuzzy word we like to use to mean "interactions with your brand." Plus, every social channel is completely different, and engagement isn't the same for each, so how can you measure it? On top of that, how are you going to gather all the information? Which tools will you use, or do you have to go to each network to grab the info?
But what if I told you that actually all the social networks (including your blog!) really do have the same engagement metrics? Several years ago, Avinash Kaushik wrote a post where he touts the best social media metrics are Conversation, Amplification, Applause, and Economic value.
We've adopted this method of engagement tracking, and actually use this not only for our social sites, but also for engagement on the blog and in other areas of the site. Let me explain what each of these means for different platforms, and how they're really all the same. :)
Conversation rate – This one is fairly straightforward in that it's based on the number of conversations per post. On Twitter, this is replies to a tweet, or on Pinterest, Facebook, and Instagram, it's a comment on the pin, post, or photo.
Amplification rate – Any time a post is retweeted or re-shared, it's being amplified. All the networks allow you to do this, so think of this one as the number of re-pins, retweets, or reshares of a particular post.
Applause rate – Every social network out there has an "easy" touch point to show appreciation, or applause, if you will. Twitter has favorites, Facebook has likes, Google+ has plusses, heck even most blogs (such as our own) have thumbs up or up-votes. So the applause rate is based on the number of "likes" each post gets.
Economic value – This is the sum of short- and long-term revenue and cost savings. Now, I have to be honest, we don't have the economic value part all worked out yet for the community side of things yet. But it will be a focus over the next few months to have things set up correctly.
Relative Engagement Rates – This is something that actually gets me all giddy. :D So, you have all these engagement metrics, but what do those numbers even mean? How can you compare the conversation rate on Facebook with the conversation rate on Instagram? This is where the relative rates come in, think of it as the average number of conversations happening per post, per follower (fan, encircle, etc.).
Think about it this way, using the relative engagement rates, you can start to compare followers to followers on different networks. Now, Facebook and Twitter (or Pinterest, or G+, or Instagram, etc.) are obviously not the same, but if you can determine the engagement rate per follower, per channel, you can then work to improve those rates accordingly.
This way, when you increase your follower count, you can also focus on sustaining (which is actually an improvement all on its own) or improving the engagement rate per follower. So you can show your boss or client, that not only have you increased followers, you've also increased engagement per follower. And at this point, the traffic to the site from social has probably increased as well.
Ok, these numbers aren't rocket science, and honestly they're not that hard to get, I mean it's mostly math. But the very smart folks over at TrueSocialMetrics have made it super easy on all of us by essentially creating the tool that Avinash pleaded for in his initial post. (Also, bravo on seeing a need and making it happen!)
How to track them
As I mentioned previously, you could go about grabbing these numbers on your own and calculating them by hand… but why in the world would you do that when TrueSocialMetrics has already done all the work for you?
Your first step is to run over to TrueSocialMetrics and sign up for a free account. With the free plan you get 12 social networks and a month of data history. I personally prefer the "small" plan which is only $30/month and gives you a year of data history. (FYI, we have no affiliation with them, we're just a happy customer!)
Once you sign up, you'll add connections to all your social networks, including your blog, and then start calculating the data right away. The initial dashboard looks something like this:
Holy numbers, Batman! Remember, right now we're just at the point of tracking the data, we'll make this look a bit prettier in the next step.
Here at Moz, we capture our metrics on a weekly basis, and then send a monthly email to the entire staff, showing how we did during the previous month. We've toyed with a number of ways to show this data, and make it clear what's moving the needle.
Every Monday morning, Megan logs into TrueSocialMetrics and grabs the following numbers for each channel for the previous week, and adds them to our spreadsheet:
- Posts
- Replies
- Shares/RTs
- Favorites/Likes/Plusses
- Conversation Rate
- Amplification Rate
- Applause Rate
- Channel Growth
- Visits from each channel
What I like about this is that you're essentially using this for data storage, and anyone can do it. It's not a method that only one person knows how to do, it's a simple process of adding numbers to a spreadsheet. Then you'll make something a bit easier to digest that you send around to the rest of the team, or to your client.
How to report it
Having the data and doing something with the data are two different things. Not only do you need to use the information to help meet your goals, but there are always other folks who are dying to know the ROI of what you do each day. So how can you take these metrics, and report them to the team in a way that is easily digestible? In a way that shows performance over time and helps everyone understand what's going on from a social perspective.
Community action plan
The first thing we did, was to create a Community Action Plan, which is a quick and easy way to see where we're at with reaching our goals at any given time. It shows our weekly KPIs, the baseline for each metric, the percent increase for this current period, our goal by the end of the period, and where we're at with that goal.
On a weekly basis we grab the data, throw it in the spreadsheet, and then our action plan magically shows us how we're doing against our goals. I <3 magic.
You can download a sample version of spreadsheet that we use for this here:
Sample Social Media Action Plan
Monthly email
In addition to having this easy-to-read dashboard, we also send out a monthly email to the entire staff which shows our engagement rates over the past six months, traffic from the social channels, as well as a few other community metrics we look at that aren't social specific. We lovingly call this email the "Community Chronicle." :)
Here's a taste of what it looks like this:
Notice the downward spiral of Facebook engagement and traffic, while Twitter continues to soar? This is a trend we've been noticing for the past few months, ever since Facebook made some algo changes to their feeds that shows less and less updates from brands. *insert sad face here*
But this is exactly the kind of trend we want to know about, so we can react to it. We've been testing various ways of increasing engagement on Facebook, and we've seen a slight up-tick. We'll all surely be watching this over the next few months to see if we can get those numbers back up organically, or if we'll be forced to pay the man! The Facebook man that is.
What's next?
Well, now it's your turn to take action. Capturing the data is the easy part, the tough part is to do something with it. You'll need to decipher the trends, determine when to make changes, what works, and what doesn't work. Since it can be different for every organization, I'd love to see how you set up your action plans and if you add other metrics to it. If you do create one, send it over, I'll add a link in this post.
Social media can be a tough one to explain to the boss/client, but it doesn't have to be. Put it into simple terms and track it over time. Let me know how it goes!
This is really important. Proving the worth of social - or another channel - in an inbound marketing campaign where the focus was SEO but it wasn't performing that well yet, showing social growth and engagement metrics has kept the client happy in the past.
Really important post, Jen. Good stuff.
Similar posts coming for other inbound channels?
Ooh, now that's a great idea! Let me hook up with the rest of the team and see if we can do something similar for our other channels.
Nice! Looking forward to it.
And holy crap my grammar was poor in that paragraph of the original comment. Ha, early morning comments. Pre-coffee comments. :)
SUPERB post. We're sharing around DragonSearch.
I was rather taken with SimplyMeasured - but their pricing is not feasible - so delight to learn of TrueSocialMetrics.
Yes! Definitely check them out, we've been using them for about a year, but I'd say the past 6 months we've really dived in. Honestly I only touched the surface of all the data they have in there. I'd love to hear your feedback on it!
This is AWESOME!! Finally a straight forward report to track and monitor Social Engagement. Thank you
Great Post Jen! Thank you for the TrueSocialMetrics. Really useful :)
Nice to see someone actually taking the fluffiness out of social media...
There will always be some "fluffiness" when it comes to social, I think that's the fun of it. But you also need to figure out how to really measure it and make it work for you. ;)
This is awesome stuffs,thank you for sharing what the MOZ team does.
Great post!
The best article I've read on social metrics.
Is it possible to link these metrics with analytics goals? For example traffic driven to Moz blog from Facebook, absolute unique visitor, registered for the community. Or, same track, and subscribed for moz tools.
It would be interesting to see how deep the social rabbit hole goes.
Or not....
Thoughts?
Interesting post. All I need in tracking my social engagement are here. Thanks for sharing this TrueSocialMetrics, I'm not familiar with this plugin but I will check this out later and see what it could offer for the betterment of my campaign.
This is a fantastic post, thank you! Is there any way to get the spreadsheet emailed? I keep getting an error when I try to download it.
Oh no! I've had a couple other people tell me they've had issues as well, but others are fine. I wonder if it's a browser issue? Try using this link. Let me know if that works!
I love this article - I've revisited it several times since Feb. I have a problem, though: I downloaded the Sample SM Action Plan spreadsheet, and I can't figure it out for the life of me. I'd be crazy to ask for a walkthrough...or would I? :)
Haha, only slightly crazy. ;) First, you set the baseline data in the "2014 Twitter" sheet. Next, you fill out the TwitterBaselineAverages sheet based on the data from TrueSocialMetrics, then it auto-updates the 2014 Twitter sheet. You may need to update things slightly if you change it much. Then when you have Twitter set up, you'll need to build out Facebook, based on the Twitter one.
Sorry, I know that's not *super* helpful. Perhaps I can get a Moz Academy video up to help with it though. Here's one that's similar to my post but I don't go into much detail about the spreadsheet: https://moz.com/academy/measuring-engagement.
Let me know if this helped a bit!
Great post! We adapted a similar analytics strategy a few months back in order to track Avinash's metrics. True Social Metrics is an awesome tool with a lot of potential, but I've found the data to be not that accurate. One week we compared the tool's number of retweets, likes, shares etc. to a manual count and found a noticable discrepency (TSM's numbers were lower than what we found). We have continued to see strange numbers from them ocer the weeks. Has anyone else had this experience?
It ocurred to me that the Facebook numbers might be lower because TSM only counts public shares, liked and comments, but I'm not sure.
For us, we're looking to see trends over time, not necessarily the day to day specifics, we keep track of those slightly differently. We haven't noticed big discrepancies, but I'm sure if you asked about them, they could let you know how the data is gathered!
Hi there, like we already answered you via email, please send us account names which you are having troubles with and we'll investigate. It's quite hard to answer your question not seeing your data. Until then, you can take a look at how we collect data for each social network here.
Btw, quite interesting social media analytics tool you have of your own. It's always nice to see competitors being interested in our solution :)
One issue is that facebook's # of comment numbers aren't accurate, because truesocialmedia doesn't account for comments made on facebook shares. Many times people comment on things while also sharing them. Unfortunately, those comments aren't accounted for. They only show in the shares section
I wouldn't say it's inaccurate for FB, they all work that same way. If someone shares the G+ post, and then someone else comments on that, it's not getting tracked either. True Social Metrics is tracking only the posts that you make, and what the engagement is off of that. It's not tracking what happens from the shares of other people, and that's not just on FB, but on all networks.
I see what you're saying - they all work the same so it's comparable. It is interesting that initial comments are classified as shares rather than comments - e.g., if I comment on/share a post - it gets classified as a share. I can see how a comment/shared post or just a comment might be more valued than a share.
Hi there! Super helpful article. Any chance you can share your internal spreadsheet template? The one that appears with purple in it? After you say "Every Monday morning, Megan logs into TrueSocialMetrics and grabs the following numbers for each channel for the previous week, and adds them to our spreadsheet:" Thank you!
We are currently in the process of revising our reporting, and I think that you've given us some major insights for what to include within the social component. This is incredibly timely, and a great resource! Thank you!
Yay! Happy to help :)
Oh I love this and I'm going to get one of the team on to creating an action plan. With so many metrics to collate, this is an ideal approach to handling them effectively.
Loving your work
David
Thanks David! We've definitely found that it makes all our lives easier to have something to constantly refer back to.
Hey Jen,
We all know you guys always do a pretty solid management with Data and this post is the clear evidence of it.
I'd like to know the stats you're getting from the paid social media marketing, are they very aspiring or not? What is the conversion and new visitor's ratio? and how do you maintain that data and take decisions on the behalf of it.
Waiting for your response! :)
Great post. You have to inspect what you expect. Data is useless if you cannot quantify and qualify it. This seems like a very effective way to do that for social media. Proving ROI on social media can be a challenge due to the qualitative part of it.
If I'm reading the charts right, social engagement from Facebook, while dropping, is still roughly triple that of Twitter, but Twitter is pretty much providing equal amounts of traffic from that engagement. Just goes to highlight the importance of making sure you're measuring the outcomes you really want and not just mindlessly tracking activity.
Oh completely, and I've not even shown you the numbers from Google+ and LinkedIn. What we're finding is that the lower number of "followers" means a higher rate of engagement, for us at least. We have the least number of followers on our LinkedIn page, but we get crazy high engagement. It really does show that the more followers you get, doesn't mean more engagement. But if you can continue to grow the channel, and keep the engagement level, you're growing your channel with more engaged, and probably highly qualified users. Boom.
Is it possible to give a million thumbs up? Been exploring SocialReport.com as a tool to combine all our social media account metrics into one dashboard, but I'm definitely going to check out True Social Metrics!
Hi Janita,
This is awesome, thank you for sharing what the MOZ team does. I am familiar with Avinash Kaushik's social metrics, but it's really useful to see them in action. I am going to adapt this type of measurement plan for my company - Inside Social -as well. We just started our inbound marketing efforts a month ago, so this post is super timely).
Since we just started our inbound marketing efforts, we have a very small fan base on Facebook, and the reach of our Facebook posts is very limited. You mentioned your team is trying out a few things on Facebook recently to see if you can improve your reach, can you tell me more about what you've been doing?
Thank you,
JC
The tests we've been running are definitely worth a full blog post, but some of things we've tested are things like
But as you can see, in January our numbers started heading back up, however we'll be keeping a watch to see what happens there. Also, watch for a post (hopefully soon) about the specific tests and how each one worked out!
Thanks for this post. I have a question though, can the use of social media management tools like vWriter.com help me in bettering my social engagement and online presence? I have heard the tool allows pre-scheduled content and such. would purchasing this make all the difference?
Hi Jennita,
This is fantastic. I love the enthusiasm. How do you create your lovely graphs that you report in your monthly e-newsletter? I'd love to take a page from your expertise.
Thanks!
Cheers,
Alex
Thank you! This was just the clear direction on how to measure our social efforts that I was looking for.
I don't understand what the relative engagement rate is or how to measure it. I just watched and old webinar with Moz that mentioned followers per 1,000, but I don't know what that is or how to get that number. Can you help?
Hi,
This is a great help for me and I thank you.
On your spreadsheet, is there a reason why you've used the 'SUM' function on the REL CON, AMP, APP on the first tab, whereas on the baseline averages tab, you haven't?
They create slightly different results and I was wondering if there is a reason behind this?
Apologies if this is a relatively dumb question. :)
Daniel
Team - I am looking for some help here, how do we track activities of Instagram posts on other social media like twitter and facebook, example if I post on instagram and the post is linked to twitter and facebook if someone either makes a comment, likes the post or retweet how can we associate the post with overall engagement
Bit slow to the party with this one, but great article, thank you! You mentioned that economic value would be a focus over the next few months as part of your social media metrics analysis. Do you have any more info on that you could share? Would really appreciate it!
Thanks again!
Hi Jennita,
Best of luck for rest of the activity, you looking so amazing. keep forward this post gives us some insight report about social metric.
Thank you Jen for this post! I'm going to dig into social media engagement metrics using the Moz plan as a guide this Monday. Wish me luck!
Good Luck!
Best of Luck...
Nice post!
Great post. Extremely useful.
I can't wait to see how you tie in economic value. This is the real holy grail metric in my mind!
Yes! Hugely helpful - thanks jennita!!
Happy to help!
Hey Jen,
Definitely, this post gives us some insight report about social metric, how we can measure and perform well in social platforms. I also have seen that you guys always do a solid job regarding tracking, measurement and execution with data. Without any doubt this post clear evidence of it.
Here I’d like to ask about basic question regarding this social engagement tool. Suppose I purchase this tool so what kind of deep information it gives us as compared to MOZ social metric? Are users buying this tool for tracking their social engagement? Last not least are they suitable for small enterprise?
Hi Rameez,
So you can use their free version of the tool as well. This gives you completely different information about Social than you get from the Moz tool. You'll get deeper insights into engagement and such that you don't get with ours. I'd definitely say give the free version a try and see what you think!
Jen
Yes that worked, thank you!! Silly question: what's KPI? I'm new to this and getting my bearings. Thanks!
Not a silly question. :) A KPI is a key performance indicator, it's a measurement of performance. For example in that spreadsheet, the pieces that show how we're doing on social are follower increase, visits, conversation rate, etc. Hope that helps! :)
Great Stuff nice article I've read on social metrics. Its a real data management and tracking process - which can build a new way of followers and fans.
This is such a great article, thank you! We found it so helpful we wanted to help spread the word about what metrics matter most in social media as well! We came to the conclusion that engagement rates are one of the most important metrics. If you want to read more about our take on social media metrics that matter, check out the Incitrio blog: https://bit.ly/1lRmwp9
Incitrio is a branding and web design firm that specializes is social media branding, check them out: www.incitrio.com
Yes The truth About Social Media Special Twitter and Facebook.
Its a real data management and tracking process - which can build a new way of followers and fans.
As twitter have unique and very invisible algorithm of Following- Followers Scaling system And Facebook and other parts of Social Media process.
Jennita ! Thanks !
I wonder how a super user of the Moz community like me can "influence" the social metrics of Moz both in a positive or negative way.
Are you tracking also these kind of cases, in order to figure out stronger and most "useful" social peers?
Great post, Jen :)
Easily.Answer questions in the comments,give +1,like for comments.People are willing to comment if it involves dialogue, not so much if is monologue.You count as an expert in this field,people will be glad to talk with you.
Moz staff are often answering questions in comments,give +1's.Special credit to Dr Pete.