More followers, more traffic, more engagement, more, more, more…What does all of this actually mean for your business?Many brands fall into the trap of chasing the metrics. They obsess over vanity numbers that distract us from what really matters.Of course, what really matters will differ from brand to brand. But when you’re constructing a marketing plan and defining the metrics of success, it’s all pointless if you can’t trace activity back to a meaningful business outcome - your goals.Instead of doing things that help us reach a goal, we sporadically implement an array of somewhat unrelated activities that add up to what? A good feeling inside?Take a moment to really think about that…What is your marketing activity trying to achieve? Is everything you do contributing?Your business goals need to be a clearly articulated destination. A future state that you wish to arrive at. Something you can work towards and anchor your efforts around.So, let’s start there...
Knowing what your business goals are can help you turn them into something quantifiable and measurable. They help guide your marketing decisions and keep things on track.If you don’t have a set of goals to work towards, and a way to measure them, then you’ll never know if you are succeeding. The metrics you track then become a way to systematically move toward these greater goals.Academic research shows that by writing down goals and creating a plan to reach them, you are 76% more likely to achieve them.Business goals vary depending on the situation of your brand, the nature of the industry, and an array of external economic factors. But, for the most part, they will center around profitability, growth, market share, customer success, innovation, employee attraction, and retention.The sheer nature of a business goal makes it high-level. It’s essential to translate your goals into a string of Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) that measure your progress towards them. The table below from Curata shows a list of KPIs and how they relate to business objectives:
KPI examples for business objectives. If you are confident that the goals of your business are succinctly articulated, measurable, and associated with a list of leading KPIs, the next step is to audit your marketing activity to ensure it aligns with these components.
If you want to align your marketing efforts with the goals of the business, audits are a necessity. Put simply, a marketing audit is a review of the strategies you use to reach your goals.If you conduct regular inspections of your marketing practices, it’s easy to identify areas where time and money are wasted, as well as the tactics that are driving real business outcomes.The audit workflow looks something like this:Plan > Implement > Audit > Change > RepeatThe success of a marketing audit comes down to data. If you track the right data, you will be able to make meaningful decisions about what to change, where to keep pushing on, and when a tactic needs to be discontinued.Yes, every marketing audit will be different depending on your KPIs, however; here are some areas that you should be monitoring:
This is by no means an exhaustive list of areas you could audit - it will depend on your business goals and KPIs.
Now it’s time to do something with the findings of your marketing audit.What needs to stop? What needs to change? And what should continue as business-as-usual?Here are some areas of your marketing plan that could be under question:
The top marketing challenges. Sometimes all it takes is a few small tweaks to your marketing strategy to get it back on track and chugging along towards your business goals.
If I revert to the headline of this article, are you content that your marketing plan aligns with the goals and objectives of the business?It’s easy to get lost in a sea of metrics that don’t mean a whole lot. They may look exciting, such as your follower count on social media, but they lack depth.At the end of the day, your executive team doesn’t care about followers. They care about market share, growth, profitability, customer experience, and shareholder value. It’s your job, as a marketer, to adjust your activity in a way that satisfies the objectives of the business as a whole.Take some time on a regular cadence, at least quarterly, to audit your marketing activity and adapt accordingly.