10 Video Metrics That Will Help You Establish ROI
Many
marketers find tracking the ROI of their video campaigns to be tricky, but that
is often the result of poorly developed strategy and improper goal-setting.
Broadly speaking, all video
marketing will be looking to do one of three things: build brand awareness and
trust, increase sales, and educate and inform your customers and potential
customers.
Although there will inevitably be
overlap between those broad objectives (in the end, all marketing ultimately
hopes to increase revenue), you must first define what you want to achieve. If
you plan to produce content that targets all three objectives, then think about
how you can segment your content and assigning a weight to each
metric accordingly.
Once you've decided what it is
you want your marketing film to achieve, then you can start thinking about how
to properly measure success.
Here are 10 essential video
marketing metrics that fall into one of three broad measures of success.
A. Measuring Reach and Retention
1.
Views
Views are one of the easiest
metrics to track—and one of the most misleading. Tracking views gives you a
very basic idea of how many people are clicking play on your content, but
that's about it.
2.
Play Rate
Play rate gives you more context by dividing views by unique and
returning webpage visitors. By showing what proportion of visitors clicked play
on your video, this metric is a strong indicator of the effectiveness of
various elements, such as video thumbnail, accompanying text, and page
positioning. It still doesn't tell you anything about engagement, though.
3.
Watch Time
Unlike views and play rate, watch time hints at engagement
levels, and this is a far more valuable metric in establishing ROI. By
monitoring how long people are watching your video, you can conclude how many
are seeing your CTA (depending on how far in it appears) and, by extension, how
effective that CTA is. More generally, watch time will tell you how watchable
your brand film is and at what point people are losing interest, which is
useful data for producing new content.
B.
Measuring Engagement
4.
Shares
Social media shares are one of the most obvious and easiest ways
to track engagement. Of course, advertising, promotion, and PR also need to be
taken into account to accurately establish relative success. A video that's
been shared 1,000 times may appear more successful than one that's been shared
100 times, but if you've pumped significant sums into promoting the former and
nothing into the latter, the results aren't necessarily cut and dry.
5.
Comments and Feedback
So far we've talked about
quantitative data, but there's a significant role for qualitative data, too.
Commentary and feedback on your videos can vary wildly, from high praise to downright mockery and brutal critique. Consolidating
feedback information and trying to gauge general sentiment can be useful in
assessing how your content has been received. But such anecdotal information
comes with a warning: In general, certain people are more likely to comment
than others, which you're getting only one slice of public opinion. The
sentiments of the remainder could be very different indeed.
6.
Backlinks
Good brand films will travel, whether that's through social
media shares or links to them on blogs, forums, and other platforms. Backlinks
are a strong ranking signal to search engines, including Google and YouTube, so
although garnering backlinks might not be your goal, they are a strong
indicator of ongoing success and exposure.
7.
Heat maps
The availability of heat map software will depend on where people are
viewing your video and your choice of hosting platform (more on that later),
but, overall, heat maps are possibly one of the most insightful tools for
assessing engagement. They can give unique insight into user behavior, such as
whether users scroll while a video is being played.
C.
Goal Tracking
8.
Clickthrough Rate (CTR)
Depending on the goals of your campaign, CTR is perhaps one of
the most important metrics to monitor. Strong CTR will be driven in large part
by the efficacy of your video's CTA, so keeping a close eye on the former will
allow you to judge how and when to make improvements to the latter.
Often, however, the primary goal
of branded video content is to drive brand exposure and
trust; accordingly, CTR may prove a redundant or less telling statistic.
9.
Sales and Inquiries
Ultimately, the purpose of all
marketing is to increase inquiries and sales; and so, in order to measure ROI,
any increase in sales should be tracked. Of course, tracking sales and
inquiries is one thing, but attributing an increase in this metric to your
ongoing video output is another thing entirely. However, there are methods of
establishing correlation by, for example, asking customers how they discovered
your brand and using tools such as conversion tracking in Google
Analytics to track customer journeys.
10.
A/B-Testing
Although it's not a metric, I included A/B-testing in this list
because honing your video content and calls to action is an ongoing and
evolutionary process, and A/B testing is one of the most powerful marketing
methods to use on that journey. When you closely measure and analyze many of
the metrics listed here, A/B-testing allows you to compare efficacy and make
tactical tweaks to your content to improve retention and engagement. Over the
long term, it can also help you develop better insight into what kind of content
your audience responds to.
Considering
Paid Video Hosting
I want to end with a quick word
on choosing a hosting platform for your videos. This subject
is worthy of its own article, but it's worth mentioning here because opting for
a paid hosting service can unlock new metrics and integrations that will give
you a deeper knowledge and understanding of your video marketing.
For many people, YouTube or Vimeo will be the perfect platform,
allowing you to embed content on your site and access basic analytics. YouTube
is owned by Google, and so it has by far the greatest reach via organic search.
But
if you are looking for more control, improved reliability, CRM integration, and
better analytics, then services such as Wistia, Sprout Video, Vzaar, and
Vidyard are worth considering. Vimeo also has a paid option, but if you're
serious about your video marketing, then the services just mentioned provide more-robust choices.
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