Content uploaded by Jagdeep Singh
Author content
All content in this area was uploaded by Jagdeep Singh on Nov 08, 2019
Content may be subject to copyright.
Volume-04 ISSN: 2455-3085 (Online)
Issue-01 RESEARCH REVIEW International Journal of Multidisciplinary
January -2019 www.rrjournals.com [UGC Listed Journal]
RRIJM 2015, All Rights Reserved 1053 | P a g e
The Role of KPIs and Metrics in Digital Marketing
*1Jagdeep Singh, 2Dr. Gyaneshwar Singh Kushwaha & 3Dr. Mamta Kumari
1PhD Scholar, PAHER University, Udaipur (India)
2Assistant Professor, MANIT, Bhopal (India)
3Assistant Professor, JAU, Junagadh, Amreli (India)
ARTICLE DETAILS
ABSTRACT
Article History
Published Online: 20 January 2019
Digital disruption is happening all across the companies and industries all over the world.
India is not behind and most of the industries are going to be affected in the way they think,
design the processes & SOPs, monitor and manage the work. Even though the products &
services are world class, if you could not let your customers know, you could be behind or
have to bind-up the business. In India, most of the people have smart phones and they
spend much time comparatively five years back on social media and many other related
digital mediums and hence it creates a huge virtual market and potential customer base.
Different channels will have their own pros & cons however companies & industries are
using digital medium for many kind of business purposes such as customers engagements,
products & services reviews, acquisition of customers (existing as well as new), Selling the
products & services, feedback management, and many more. Now, it is challenging to track
& manage all things to evaluate & monitor the business goals continuously (24x7). Goals
may vary company to company and industry to industry and hence Key Performance
Indicators (KPIs) & metrics play an important role. The KPIs & metrics what you learnt,
managed, monitored and reviewed earlier may seems little different what you see today
however they have the similar goals what we had for normal KPIs & metrics. This paper
aims to understand in details about digital KPIs & metrics and why are these required &
important in digital era. Digital KPIs & metrics are the backbone of web analytics. Many
digital KPIs & metrics are explained with their specific objectives to understand and these
could be used for business purpose to optimize & achieve the bottom line of the
organization in the digitally adopted social world.
Keywords
KPI, Digital KPI, Social Media
Marketing, Virtual Market, Digital
Marketing, Customer engagement,
Business, Feedback Management,
Web Analytics.
1. Introduction
What is KPI? KPI is defined as a measurable value that
demonstrates how well & effectively organization is achieving
key business objectives. As per Oxford's dictionary, KPI is
defined as a quantifiable measure used to evaluate the
success of an organization, employee, etc. in meeting
objectives for performance. According to Wikipedia, KPI is a
type of performance measurement as KPIs evaluates the
success of an organization or of a particular activity (such as
projects, programs, products and other initiatives) in which it
engages. It is used at multiple levels to assess its
accomplishment at reaching objectives. Different level KPIs
have different objectives like high-level KPIs may focus on
overall performance of the business while low-level may
spotlight on the processes & procedures in the various
departments like Marketing & Sales, supply chain, logistics,
Human Resource, and Services etc.
What is Metrics? The dictionary meaning of metric is - a
system or standard of measurement. According to
Investopedia.com, Metrics are measures of quantitative
assessment commonly used for assessing, comparing, and
tracking performance or production. Generally, a group of
metrics will typically be used to build a dashboard that
management or analysts review on a regular basis to maintain
performance assessments, opinions, and business strategies
KPIs/Metrics in digital era are used to evaluate the
organization‟s performance & success across all digital
channels whether it is Social Media Marketing via social
network channels such as YouTube, Facebook, Instagram,
Twitter, LinkedIn etc., Mobile Marketing via auto-calling, SMS
or WhatsApp etc, Search Engine Marketing via SEO (Public
Relations, Collateral Material, Guest Blogging, Direct Mail),
Google Advertising, E-mail Marketing, or Content Marketing (It
could be video, poster, blog, story or any other relevant content
on digital form for self, companies or any affiliates via social
media platforms or websites) etc. In other words, Digital
marketing KPIs are used to measure & evaluate the
performance of digital marketing goals.
2. What are digital KPIs & metrics and why are these
required?
Digital KPIs/Metrics are nothing but the similar kind of
KPIs/Metrics with same goals to evaluate & monitor the
success of the business. However, digital KPIs/Metrics as
name suggests are 100% rely on digital channels such as
social media, SEO etc. Industrial revolution 4.0 has been
started and most of the businesses have started to adapt them
sooner to compete in the market place. It is very essential for
all industries and companies to have presence on digital
market place some form or other. It could be website to
optimize it through SEO, social media presence etc. It helps to
monitor your business objectives quick & instant.
Volume-04, Issue-01, January-2019 RESEARCH REVIEW International Journal of Multidisciplinary
RRIJM 2015, All Rights Reserved 1054 | Page
3. What to measure? Got confused? Don’t worry!!
Now, question arises, what to measure? What is/are right
KPIs for you? Every company has its individual goals and
hence KPIs may be different for every company. For example,
a new start-up may have an objective to make awareness
about the company & its products or brand awareness while a
well established company may have a target of increasing
sales etc. Some KPIs and metrics are given below which are
used globally to measure company‟s digital marketing goals.
4. Important KPIs and Metrics are given below and explained
Website Traffic
Bounce Rate
Website Visits Per Marketing Channel
Conversion Rate (CR)
Average Session Duration
Click-Through Rate (CTR)
Page Views
Social Reach
Traffic by Source
Email Open Rate
Sessions
Impressions
Highest Visited Pages
Social Engagement
Exit Rate
Cost Per Click (CPC)
Cost Per Acquisition (CPA)
Sales qualified leads (SQL)
Cost Per Lead (CPL)
Marketing Qualified Leads (MQL)
1. Website Traffic
According to yourdictionary.com, the definition of
a website is a page or collection of pages on the World
Wide Web that contains specific information which was all
provided by one person or entity and traces back to a common
Uniform Resource Locator (URL). It could be treated as a
virtual office & information center where prospective customer
could visit and interact with your products & services and
hence all your efforts through digital marketing should be
focused to drive traffic here. The traffic could be brought by
running individual campaigns or through by ads, digital banners
etc. Website Traffic metric may provide insights such as how is
your campaign performing, on what channel and at what time.
In case, you see a steady decline in traffic while conducting
steady marketing efforts, think troubleshooting your website.
You may find broken links, a Google algorithm penalty, or any
other technical issues which discouraging visitors to reach on
your website. Few guidelines which may encourage traffic to
your website:
SEO - Optimise website pages with relevant keywords
Promotion: Promote your content through social
media channels
Blogging: Constantly publish your blog with depth &
relevant content for your target viewers
Offers/Discounts: Create targeted ads to a landing
page with some offer or discounts
2. Website Visits Per Marketing Channel
Let us understand what is Website Monitoring? And why
do you need it? Website monitoring is the act of tracking the
availability and performance of websites to minimize downtime,
optimize performance and ensure smooth user experience.
Maintaining website uptime is essential to any business and
website application monitoring is a thus a serious challenge for
most businesses. Applications Manager website application
monitoring service enables businesses to keep up with the
health, availability and performance stats of your websites and
get notified before it's too late
Why do you need Website Monitoring Tools and how does
it work? Response time of three seconds or lower is an
indicator of ideal website performance and any downtime may
directly lead to loss of profit & customer disappointment that is
why a real time website monitoring tool is absolutely essential
for business. Website monitoring tools measure response
times of all important dealings on the website and tracks the
elements accountable for the delays to help troubleshoot
issues much faster before it affects end users. Website
monitoring tool such as Applications Manager helps to:
Monitor the health & availability of a single webpage
or an entire series of web pages.
Use synthetic transaction monitoring to analyze end
user experience with your website.
Monitor critical page workflows and test application
Track unauthorized changes, if any, made to the
content elements of the website.
Measure web application performance from
anywhere.
3. Session and Average Session Duration
Sessions refer to the number of visits your websites
receives. Google specifically counts this in 30-minute
increments, meaning it triggers this website traffic metric only
once every half hour for each individual user. Think of as an
example: Users may trigger a session in the morning to shop,
and then visit again later in the day to add something new to
their cart. Each of those are considered unique sessions.
Depending on your website‟s function (informational,
ecommerce, etc.) or the industry, the time on site metric can
vary in its relevance to your campaigns.
Average Session Duration is a general indicator of how
long visitors spend on your site entirely. This helps you to
understand how your site performs from a user experience
standpoint.
Is your website easy to navigate?
Are users finding what they‟re looking for quickly?
Is the content valuable and worth reviewing at length?
Volume-04, Issue-01, January-2019 RESEARCH REVIEW International Journal of Multidisciplinary
RRIJM 2015, All Rights Reserved 1055 | Page
Points to enhance average session duration:
Use Bucket Brigades to help readers stay engaged
Add a video content
Increase the readability of your copy
4. Page Views (PVs)
This is the total number of pages viewed. A user who
repeatedly visits the same page will trigger this metric, so it‟s
the broadest of all page-related measurements for digital
marketing success.
However, it‟s one of the most important website traffic
metrics.
It‟s relevant to know how many pages are visited on your
website in a given time period. This helps you to understand if
your entire site is of value or if only certain pages are.
5. Traffic by Source
This metric tells precisely where your website visitors are
coming from. Being huge no of digital marketing platforms and
limited time & resources, it is important to monitor „Traffic by
source metric‟ as it helps to decide which source is doing good
as desired and which one needs a little more concentration. It
also helps to narrow down where you will spend your important
time & money creating content.
Organic Search: These users clicked a link on a
search engine result that brought them to your
website.
Direct Visitors: These users typed your URL directly
into the search bar, or perhaps have it bookmarked
and returned to visit.
Referrals: These users were sent to your website
when they clicked a link from another website.
Social: These users came to your website after
finding your social media profile or content posts.
6. Highest Visited Pages
To further determine which areas of your website are most
valuable, look at this metric. You can find it in the “Behaviors”
section of Google Analytics.
The Most Visited Pages metric uncovers all sorts of
information about exactly where your site‟s visitors are going
and for how long. For a deeper analysis, check out the
Behavior Flow.
7. Exit Rate (ER)
Here‟s a metric that is very specific and reveals quite a bit
about your website design and user experience.
If your campaign is meant to drive new users to your
website for a more general “learn more” branding effort, the
Exit Rate metric will show you exactly where they left after they
reviewed your content.
Unlike Bounce Rate which triggers when someone views
only one page, Exit Rate tells you where the user lost interest
after spending some time exploring.
Make sure they don‟t lose interest in your brand!
8. Cost Per Conversion / Cost Per Acquisition (CPA)
Your Cost Per Acquisition (CPA) is only relevant when you
have returning customers. This doesn‟t just apply to
subscription-based businesses or even ecommerce sites.
Consider how a private golf community calculates CPA
knowing that their members pay monthly dues.
Understanding the lifetime value of a customer helps you
back into the proper amount you should spend to acquire a
new one.
This marketing KPI shows how much it cost to acquire a
lead that also converted to paying customer. While an
advertising campaign can generate hundreds of leads for you,
often only fewer than 2% of them turn to a client.
If the cost-per-conversion is lower than your customer
lifetime value, your marketing strategy is wasting resources
instead of generating profit.
9. Cost Per Click
Cost per Click applies to both pay-per-click marketing and
a number of social media platforms that offer the clicks-to-site
ad type. These online metrics reflect the amount you pay for
each individual click a user performs. This is relevant as it
directly relates to your overall marketing budget in this area.
Your budget can only go so far; the lower your CPC that farther
it goes.
10. Cost Per Lead (CPL)
Every single marketer should monitor this lead generation
KPI. Cost-per-lead shows the cost of acquiring a new prospect.
Complemented with cost-per-conversion metric, you can
evaluate whether various marketing activities pay off the effort,
time, and resources spent to attract new leads.
11. Bounce Rate (BR)
Different from Exit Rate, the Bounce Rate metric is the
percentage of users who leave (bounce away) from your
website after viewing only one page.
This metric can help reveal that visitors may be leaving
because
The site takes too long to load
They did not immediately find what they were looking
for
They found relevant content but were not compelled
to click further
An error page loaded
Unless your website is set up to send users to a separate
URL for conversion, you should look to the Bounce Rate
number to determine if your campaign is effective.
If you are marketing a new product but your link sends
users to the website‟s Home page, you‟re likely to have a high
bounce rate. Therefore, combat this by sending them to a page
that is highly relevant to the path you want them on.
Here are some tips which help in reducing bounce
rate on your website:
Use a compelling call-to-action button
Decrease your page load time
Volume-04, Issue-01, January-2019 RESEARCH REVIEW International Journal of Multidisciplinary
RRIJM 2015, All Rights Reserved 1056 | Page
Add internal links to your page copy
Include images, videos or any other visuals in your
content
12. Conversion Rate (CR)
Google Analytics can help measure the number of
conversions made on your site. However, conversions may
mean different things depending on the campaign. For
example, conversions might be an actual sale, a subscriber, a
completed download, a lead entry etc.
Oftentimes, the number crunchers only look to this digital
marketing metric to determine if your campaign is effective.
However, it‟s only one piece of the puzzle and should be part of
your overall digital marketing strategy.
Guess what: there are even more digital marketing metrics
you need to measure.
Below, take a look at some others related to your online
strategy such as Social media metrics, Advertising metrics, and
Email marketing metrics
13. Average time of conversion
Monitoring the time for leads to convert into paying users
shows the effectiveness of your sales process. In case, the
conversion time is too long, your prospects might lose interest
in your products or services, and you might end up losing them
to a competitor.
14. Retention rate
This key performance indicator shows the number of
customers who keep using your product over an extended time
period and makes repeat purchases. Retention rate provides
the information about customer engagement with your products
and services and hence it is important to measure it.
Furthermore, you can evaluate whether your customer support
and user experience help to build and maintain customer
loyalty. Here is a formula to calculate the Retention Rate:
Retention Rate = ((CE-CN)/CS)) X 100
CE = number of customers at end of period
CN = number of new customers acquired during period
CS = number of clients at start of period
15. Attrition rate / Churn Rate
This metric shows the percentage of customers no longer
buying your products or services. Increased churn rate could
be a sign of poor user experience or slow service performance.
16. Returning vs. new visitors
By measuring the percentage of returning visitors, you see
how engaged your audience is. For example, a low return rate
on a blog page might indicate that your content isn‟t compelling
enough for people to come back for more.
17. Visits per channel
Understanding your inbound traffic sources helps to
determine the most profitable marketing channels. If you have
recently run a paid ad campaign, you can assess it is
performance by looking how much traffic (and leads) it has
brought.
18. Average time on page
This metric is especially important for organic search traffic
as Google ranks pages based on their relevance. If a visitor
leaves your website immediate after appearance, search
engines will know that the content they saw was not as per
his/her expectations. The higher your website‟s average time
on site, the more likely you rank well on search results and
convert more visitors to leads.
19. Website conversion rate
A web page might be visited hundred times. But if it does
not convert, there is no use in directing paid traffic to this site.
20. Conversion rate for call-to-action content
In case, you have created web pages or content with a
clear call-to-action, you should measure whether these convert.
This marketing metric is especially useful if you are using pay-
per-click campaigns to drive traffic to specific pages. By
comparing the price per conversion and customer lifetime
value, you‟re able to evaluate the sustainability of your CTA
content.
21. Click-through rate on web pages
CTR shows how effectively your website‟s call-to-actions
attract user‟s attention and make them click for more
information. It may be a CTA button or a link to another piece
of content that‟s click through rate to be increased.
22. Traffic from organic search
This SEO metric shows the number of monthly website
visits that come through search engine results from Google,
Bing, etc. Organic search is highly beneficial as it‟s free and
generates targeted leads.
23. Conversions from organic search
See how many leads from organic search convert into
paying customers.
This KPI shows whether your keywords that rank high in
search engine results are linked to your value proposal Low
organic conversion rate indicates that you might have high-
ranking keywords that confuse the audience and deliver wrong
messages about your service or product offer.
24. Leads & conversions from paid advertising
Monitor the number of monthly leads and conversions from
cost-per-click advertising as a percentage of overall results. It
gives an overview of your non-paid marketing performance.
25. Cost per acquisition (CPA) & cost per conversion
Acquiring leads and customers through cost-per-click
advertising may be quite expensive, it is extremely imperative
to monitor the return on investment (ROI). Evaluate the number
of cost-per-conversion with customer lifetime value to ensure
campaigns are profitable in long term. You can also monitor the
cost per acquisition, but it is cost-per-conversion that reflects
the actual profitability of paid campaigns.
Volume-04, Issue-01, January-2019 RESEARCH REVIEW International Journal of Multidisciplinary
RRIJM 2015, All Rights Reserved 1057 | Page
26. Click-Through Rate (CTR)
CTR metric may be applied to email marketing and paid
advertisements as well. Clicks on email blasts are often some
of the highest conversion drivers across the board. CTR relates
to pay-per-click helps to determine relevance score and affects
Cost per Click.
27. Social Reach
The posts you make on your social media platforms are
meant to reach a wide number of users. This social media
metric tells you exactly how many people were reached (i.e.
saw your content).
Now, the number of people reached is always much larger
than the number who engage. A benchmark aim is to see 2-5%
engagement based on your overall reach.
Social media reach may be increased using below tips:
Fully brand all your social media profiles
Post curate and original content consistently
Engage with your formed community. Be active in the
community.
28. Email Open Rate (EOR)
Email Open Rate measures the number of users who open
your email campaign as compared to the overall number of
those who received it. High open rate indicates that proper
segmented list, subject line might be attractive, and time of
sending the mail was appropriate.
29. Impressions
Sometimes confused with reach, an impression is the
larger overall number of views your content or advertisement
receives. Your content on social media or a pay-per-click ad
may be shown multiple times to the same person. Each time is
counted as an individual impression. This number will always
be higher than reach because the reach metric is only triggered
once per user.
30. Social Engagement (SE)
Social Engagement reflects the total number of
interactions made on any given social media post. Engagement
could be in any form such as likes, shares, clicks, comments,
etc. To track & analyze social engagements are important as
user directly chooses to interact with your content. Because of
this, you can easily rank your content types based on how
much engagement they receive. It helps to guide your
upcoming content creation
31. Cost Per Click (CPC)
CPC applies to both pay-per-click marketing and a number
of social media platforms that offer the clicks-to-site ad type.
These metrics reflect the amount you pay for each individual
click a user performs. It is essential as it directly relates to your
overall marketing budget in this area.
32. Marketing Qualified Leads (MQL)
MQLs are those leads which marketing team has
evaluated and decided to forward to the sales team.
33. Sales qualified leads (SQL)
SQLs are those leads which sales people believe
prospective customers, leading to focused concentration and
moving the leads further into the sales cycle.
34. Sales-accepted leads (SAL)
SALs are those leads which Prospects that the sales team
has accepted and will follow henceforth.
5. Web analytics
According to Techopedia.com, Web analytics is a set of
strategic methodologies implemented to maximize online and
e-commerce activities. Web analytics extracts and categorizes
qualitative and quantitative data to identify and analyze on-site
and off-site patterns and trends. Analytic techniques
and requirements vary as per business requirements. Web
analytics services may be supplemented with correlated
sources, including email marketing response rates, direct mail,
sales and website performance data. Web analytics is the
measurement, collection, analysis and reporting of web data for
purposes of understanding and optimizing web usage.
However, Web analytics is not just a process for measuring
web traffic but can be used as a tool for business and market
research, and to judge and improve the effectiveness of a
website. Web analytics applications could also help
organizations measure the results of conventional print or
broadcast advertising campaigns. It helps one to estimate how
changes traffic to a website after the launch of a new
advertising campaign. Web analytics provides information
about the number of visitors to a website and the number of
page views. It helps determine traffic and attractiveness trends
which is useful for market research.
Basis Steps of Web Analytics Process: There are four
crucial steps in the majority web analytics processes and which
are as follows:
1. Data Collection: This stage is the collection of basic &
elementary data. Generally, these data are counts of
things. The aim of this stage is to gather the data.
2. Extracting Information out of Data (Data
Processing): This stage usually takes counts and
makes them ratios, though there still might be some
counts. The objective of this stage is to take the data
and conform it into information, particularly metrics.
3. Developing KPI: This stage focuses on using the ratios
/ counts and infusing them with organization
strategies, known as key performance
indicators (KPIs). Normally, The KPIs deal with
conversion aspects, but not always which depends on
the organization.
4. Formulating online strategy: This stage is concerned
with the online goals & standards for the business.
These strategies are usually related to making money,
saving money, or increasing market share.
There is also a special type of step as stated below:
Volume-04, Issue-01, January-2019 RESEARCH REVIEW International Journal of Multidisciplinary
RRIJM 2015, All Rights Reserved 1058 | Page
Experiment and testing which is called A/B
testing: The aim of A/B testing is to identify and recommend
changes to web pages that increase or maximize the outcome
of a statistically tested result of interest. Each stage impacts or
can drives the stage preceding. Therefore, sometimes the data
that is available for collection impacts the online strategy and
others the online strategy affects the data collected.
Source: Wikipedia
6. Conclusion
In the digital era, most activities & goals are measured by
key performance indicators (KPIs) directly or indirectly to have
better control on business. These are used widely in almost
every companies & industries now a day as these are quicker
and effective in tracking whether the company is on track to
achieve its goals. If you have key performance indicators in
your company, remember that the processes & technologies
are constantly evolving and hence you may need to update
your current KPI framework more rapidly than you think. Keep
self updated & upgraded with digital tools. You have to be very
cautious while setting up digital key performance indicators for
any business as there are multiple things to consider. Choose
suitable key performance indicators is a key skill for digital
marketers and social entrepreneurs. You may not be get it right
every time however taking the time to predict what you can
achieve and then measure your performance will help you to
grow as a digital marketer.
References
1. WAA Standards Committee. "Web analytics definitions."
Washington DC: Web Analytics Association (2008).
2. Jansen, B. J. (2009). Understanding user-web interactions via
web analytics. Synthesis Lectures on Information Concepts,
Retrieval, and Services, 1(1), 1-102.
3. https://freshsparks.com/digital-marketing-success/
4. https://www.yourdictionary.com/website
5. ..https://www.manageengine.com/products/applications_mana
ger/website-
monitoring.html?network=g&device=c&keyword=monitor%20
website&campaignid=1689686871&creative=328221821249&
matchtype=p&adposition=1t2&placement=&adgroup=651532
22639&targetid=kwd-
11252781&location=20457&gclid=CjwKCAjw3c_tBRA4EiwAI
Cs8Cmo5TrCuofjoz5-zFkmcyr-
i4yeAzSdzE4gG9cBkIdQWMSXvPhWkJxoCN58QAvD_BwE
6. https://www.techopedia.com/definition/1619/web-analytics
7. https://www.investopedia.com/terms/m/metrics.asp