
According to a 2018 report by Content Marketing Institute, 86% of companies utilize content marketing to some degree. Of these, roughly 30% believe they are “mature” in their approach to content marketing. Still, even those with advanced content marketing functionality know that full integration into their overall strategies isn’t easy. One of the key challenges brands face is measuring the success of their content marketing efforts.
In fact, only 39% of respondents reported that their team was “growing inability to show results” from content marketing. Moreover, little more than half the survey’s participants reported having a “good,” “very good,” or “excellent” strategy in place for aligning their content marketing goals with their overall business metrics.

We’ll focus on how to determine the effectiveness of your content marketing initiatives.
Let’s dig in.
If you don’t have solidly quantifiable content marketing goals, you won’t know whether or not they were successful. While the ultimate goal of content marketing is to spur sales and generate revenues, not every piece of content will directly
Different content types and formats are best used for different purposes, such as:
The goal of the content at each of these stages is to get your audience to take the next step in their journey with your brand.
You should have clearly defined goals for every piece of content based on where it appears in the buyer’s journey.
Some examples:
You’ll also want to assess the qualitative aspects of your audience’s engagement levels. Some factors to consider include:
Now, none of this information matters without context. The accumulated qualitative data won’t mean much without being able to compare it against your benchmarks. So, how do you nail down your content marketing goals?
Simple:
For example, say you get a piece of content ranked #1 on Google, leading to an increase in impressions and site visitors. Clearly, this content accomplished the granular goals you set for your awareness stage. Though if you’d only considered the “ultimate” goal of your content marketing initiatives, you wouldn’t be able to tell whether this specific piece of content had succeeded or not.
It’s also important to know whether the success of one part of your content marketing strategy leads to overall success for your business. Unfortunately, tracing this
No one can know exactly what goes on throughout a customer’s path to purchase. But that doesn’t mean you can’t glean insight from the things you do know about their journey.
In the above scenario, for example, we can analyze the customer’s path to purchase after engaging with the initial content.
Did they:
The more evidence you have from touchpoints leading up to conversion, the easier it will be to know how significant an
Once you have a general understanding of your content marketing’s
(Net Revenues – Investment) / Investment
Here, investments may include:
Calculating the amount invested is the easy part; attributing revenues to your content marketing efforts is what’s difficult.
This is where Google Analytics—specifically, the Assisted Conversions metric—comes into play.
If a channel appears anywhere—except as the final interaction—on a conversion path, it is considered an assist for that conversion. The higher these numbers, the more important the assist role of the channel.
Note that your customers may engage with your content via different channels, and it’s vital that you have a decent idea of where and how that happens. Still, this method will allow you to automatically generate ballpark figures regarding the ROI of your content marketing efforts. There’s no need to spend time splitting hairs and coming up with the finite dollar amounts your content marketing initiatives generated.
What’s important is that you:
If you start seeing improvements to your bottom line after making specific improvements—and you can say with confidence that these improvements are related—then it’s safe to say the changes were worth the investment.
Taking the above into consideration, you don’t want to make the mistake of seeing ROI as the be-all-end-all of content marketing success.
Your sales and revenues numbers tell only part of the story in terms of whether your content marketing initiatives succeeded or not.
Say, for example, a prospect devours your ToFu and MoFu content, but never ends up taking the final step to becoming a paying customer. This doesn’t mean your content marketing strategy failed. In this case, your ToFu content successfully enticed the prospect to take the next step in their journey. Unfortunately, they dropped off once they reached the middle of your content funnel—indicating a potential issue with your MoFu- and BoFu-focused content.
If you were to just look at the end result, you’d see that the prospect didn’t end up converting. It’d be easy to assume that your content marketing efforts were unsuccessful. But this is shortsighted, and likely inaccurate. If your content in any way got the individual to engage further with your brand, then it wasn’t a failure at all.
Secondly, chalking up an entire campaign as a failure based solely on ROI precludes you from figuring out what the problem was—and from recognizing what worked well within the campaign.
It’s here that those more granular goals come back into play.
A few examples:
Content marketing success isn’t something to be experienced just once as a continuous plateau. Rather, success in content marketing is about continuously raising the bar to contribute to a lastingly strong funnel.
By looking at each piece of the puzzle separately and then working to see how they all fit together to form the bigger picture, you’ll be able to determine exactly where, how, and why your content marketing initiatives have succeeded—and what you need to do to start making improvements.
This article was originally published by our friends at PostFunnel.