This document discusses strategies for linking public relations (PR) measurement to sales outcomes. It emphasizes the importance of integrating PR measurement with other communication disciplines and business metrics like sales, market share, and profitability. The document recommends moving beyond traditional PR metrics like media impressions and ad value equivalents, and focusing on measurable outcomes. It also addresses challenges in measuring new and social media, as well as the need to evaluate communication efforts across multiple channels and disciplines through integrated dashboards and frameworks.
Linking PR to Sales: Next Practices for Measurement Integration
1. Integrated Measurement:
Linking PR to Sales
Next Practices for Evaluation + Strategy
May 26, 2010
Tim Marklein
Executive VP, Measurement & Strategy
tmarklein@webershandwick.com
Twitter: @tmarklein
Slide 1 -- May 26, 2010
2. The Long, Winding Road
Go to the wrong airport
Wait in line 45 minutes to rebook
“We can’t get you to Aspen today”
“The last bus leaves before 6:00”
Ignore signs: “Independence Pass CLOSED”
Backtrack 2.5 hours to Aspen
Slide 2 -- May 26, 2010
5. Industry snapshot:
Current state of PR measurement
THE GOOD Everyone agrees: Measurement is important
Basic standards, tools in place for measuring media
CMOs, CFOs and CEOs are asking for more
THE BAD
Still lots of lip service without investment
“What tool should I use?” – wrong question
Quarterly reports are shelfware, don’t drive decisions
THE UGLY
PR metrics aren’t translated into executive terms
Not enough definition or accountability for outcomes
“Random acts of measurement” – not enough integration
Source: Weber Shandwick
Slide 5 -- May 26, 2010 Measurement & Strategy practice
6. Watershed moment: Moving beyond AVE
• Oct’09: IPR Measurement Commission “condemns the
name, concept and practice of ad value equivalencies”
• No evidence that earned media space = paid media space
• Simply measures media “cost,” doesn’t measure the “value”
• Misused as a cheap proxy for ROI – distracts from outcomes
• IPR and AMEC working on alternatives, transition plans
• Shift focus to business outcomes – awareness, understanding,
attitudes, behaviors, engagement, sales, market share, etc.
• Always evaluate media quality and message, not just quantity
• Options for comparative “cost” evaluation: CPM, targeted reach,
“weighted media cost,” engagement/CPE, market mix analysis
Slide 6 -- May 26, 2010
7. Proving PR’s value: Watch your language
Typical PR metrics Key business metrics
• Total clips • Contribution to sales
• Total clips in top-tier media • Contribution to market share
• Total circulation/impressions • Contribution to profitability
• Share of voice • Influence on stock performance
• Media sentiment • Influence on stakeholder awareness
• Message pull-through • Influence on stakeholder opinion
• Ad equivalency • Influence on employee attitudes
• Cost per thousand • Influence on customer consid/pref
• Influence on stakeholder awareness • Influence on customer satisfaction
• Influence on stakeholder opinion • Influence on customer loyalty
• Influence on employee attitudes • Influence on brand equity
• Influence on corporate reputation
“It will be difficult for PR to get a larger share of the total
communications expenditure without quantitative means that
go well beyond measurement of media outputs.”
Source: Adapted from GAP V report, Annenberg
Slide 7 -- May 26, 2010 School of Communication, “Fifth Annual Public Relations
Generally Accepted Practices” study, Q1’08
8. Proving PR’s value: Focus on outcomes
• Define clear, precise and
measurable goals in business
or marketing terms
• Borrow from outcomes inventory
published by PRSA and IPR (left)
• Don’t worry whether you can
prove PR’s impact – assume
you can, and then work
http://comprehension.prsa.org/?p=628 backwards to determine how
• Anecdotal evidence
• Data-based evidence
• Correlation
• Contribution
• Causation
Slide 8 -- May 26, 2010
9. Anecdotal evidence
The customer said they read a magazine
review, and that’s why they called us to
buy the product.
Slide 9 -- May 26, 2010
10. Data-based evidence
9.7% of the customers we surveyed last
quarter said they called us because they
read a magazine review.
Slide 10 -- May 26, 2010
11. Correlation
Every time our competitive media share
goes up, our sales in that region go up for
the next two months.
Slide 11 -- May 26, 2010
12. Contribution
Based on our marketing mix model, we
determined that PR contributed 2.7% to
our sales goal last quarter.
Slide 12 -- May 26, 2010
13. Causation
720 customers that read about us online,
then went to our site, bought the product
at an average sales price of $675.
Slide 13 -- May 26, 2010
14. Proving PR’s value: Integration is critical
• Old world, meet new world
• Integration of traditional, digital and social media
• Integrating WOM and other new influence patterns
• Silo #1, meet silo #2, silo #3, etc.
• Integration of PR with other communication disciplines
• Integration of PR with other marketing disciplines
• Integration across business units, products, geographies
• Measurement, meet strategy
• Integration of metrics, data sources, tools, dashboards
• Integration of data and insights into decision-making flow
Slide 14 -- May 26, 2010
15. Old world, meet new world:
New metrics, data sources, concepts
measures: Assess how content is accessed, shared,
adapted, amplified across various sites and media properties
measures: Assess the volume, engagement, sentiment
and reach of content shared via the web.
measures: Assess the paid and organic search rankings for
company content, brands and keyword associations
measures: Assess the volume, engagement, feedback and
reach of content shared via company’s web properties
measures: Analyze volume, content, sentiment
of conversations about company/brands across sites, media
measures: Assess audience, reach and “touch
points” of company content/conversations across sites, media
• Outcome measures: Assess how the content, conversation
and community measures correlate with desired outcomes
Source: Weber Shandwick Measurement & Strategy
Slide 15 -- May 26, 2010 practice, “Inline” measurement framework
16. Old world, new world:
Digital/social outcomes
Source: Altimeter Group and Web Analytics
Demystified, http://bit.ly/dldIHf
Slide 16 -- May 26, 2010
17. Old world, meet new world:
Analyzing WOM conversation volume, quality
Low Volume / High Quality High Volume / High Quality
Nationwide
Prudential
Industry
All State Average
Quality of Advocacy (%)
State Farm
Metric Score Industry
Share of Conversation 10% 4%
Net Favorability -62% 18%
Net Recommendation -24% 29%
Propensity to Relay 31% 50%
AIG
Low Volume / Low Quality High Volume / Low Quality
Share of Conversation (%)
Source: Weber Shandwick Measurement & Strategy analysis,
Slide 17 -- May 26, 2010 based on Keller Fay TalkTrackTM survey data Jan’08-Dec’08
18. Old world, meet new world:
Shifting media changes criteria and scale
• What’s more valuable?
• Chicago Tribune print story
• WSJ.com online story
• Industry blog post with lots of comments
• Customer recommendation via Twitter
• Depends on objective, audience, message, tone, influence
• Not all easily measured or compared across media channels
• Key considerations
• Total impressions vs. targeted impressions – efficiency matters
• Earned CPM vs. Social CPM – very different scales, don’t equate
• Engagement, CPE and Conversion – varies by channel, outlet
• Comparative Media Cost – inconsistency of source data
Slide 18 -- May 26, 2010
20. Silo #1, meet silo #2, silo #3, etc.:
Cross-discipline metrics are key to insight
Media Media Web Keyword
Analysis Analysis Analytics Analysis
(traditional) (social) (site) (search)
WOM Brand Customer Employee
Analysis Tracking Satisfaction Satisfaction
(surveys) (surveys) (surveys) (surveys)
Lead Gen Events & Analyst Data & Ind. Awards
& Sales data DM data Reports & Scorecards
(CRM) (CRM) (third party) (third party)
Source: Weber Shandwick Measurement & Strategy practice –
Slide 20 -- March 23, 2010 ARROW Measurement Suite, February 2009
21. Measurement, meet strategy:
Flexible + repeatable + integrated metrics
activities reach relevance outcomes worth
What activities Did you reach Were you What business What is the
were performed your audience? relevant to your results did you estimated dollar
to achieve How many audience? Were achieve? value of your
results? impressions, you credible? Awareness? communication
web visits, Did your ideas Engagement? efforts? What
reports, and messages Reputation? was the ROI?
attendees, etc. resonate? Did Leads? Sales?
were you drive Loyalty?
generated? conversation? Advocacy?
Quantity/Output Quality/Outtakes Business Impact Value/Efficiency
Communications Team Marketing Team Executive Team
Source: Weber Shandwick Measurement &
Slide 21 -- May 26, 2010 Strategy practice, “ARROW” measurement model
22. Measurement, meet strategy:
Sample dashboard for “inline” programs
Activities
47 Media, Blogger & Influencer Interviews
94 Facebook, YouTube, Blog & Twitter Posts
Reach
170 Earned & Social Media Placements
3.9M Earned & Social Media Impressions
Relevance
64% Earned & Social Message Penetration
27% Earned & Social Media Share
Outcomes
14% Increase in Brand Engagement (via web data)
27% Category Sales Share (source TBD)
Worth
$4.72 Earned CPM (Cost Per 1K Impressions)
$8.22 Social CPE (Cost Per Engagement)
Slide 22 -- May 26, 2010
24. Measurement, meet strategy:
Advocacy drives sales
Advocates can
help a company grow an
average rate of
their competitors
Slide 24 -- May 26, 2010 Source: Bain & Company