Online Community Metrics & Reporting- Another Viewpoint
Matthew Lees of the Patricia Seybold Group and Robert Dell’Immagine of VMWare presented the topic of Metrics and Reporting to the Santa Fe meeting last Monday morning. Several of Matthew’s comments were interesting from the perspective that it appears many organizations continue to have trouble measuring the true value from their communities. A couple of his comments from his research:
But the most important message from Matthew’s presentation was: What are you going to do once you’ve measured the impact of your site? Too often, organizational managers say “Great, our numbers are up or our metrics are okay.” instead of trying to understand why the metrics look the way they do and what they can do to improve them.
Measuring activity is easy. Measuring business value is hard.Out of the box platforms’ reporting tools will not give you value/impact metrics.
What are your customers using to measure their success vs. what does success mean to your organization?
(An example of using metrics for advancing a web site was demonstrated by our client SAP. In reviewing landing page metrics for multiple countries, we noticed that one country was not converting its visitors to registered members at anywhere near the same rate as our other country pages. Because of this data, SAP reviewed its page in the context of navigation and contextual language and discovered that the text was unclear as to the real benefits of registration for the targeted country’s population. The pages were then re-written with a different call to action and tested. Over time, as the metrics came in, further adjustments to the call to action text were made and the overall conversion improved.)
The process that Matthew recommends for measurement and action is as follows:
Hypothesis –>Baseline–>Action–>Evaluation–>Moving the Needle
Robert’s presentation was a good reminder for everyone that metrics evolve over time and that one set of metrics agreed upon at the outset of the community may not meet the needs of all stakeholders. For example, Robert’s community team reports to multiple stakeholders including the community team, support, product management, marketing, and executives. Each has their own requirement for information and metrics to back up their own ideas. As Robert stated, “our metrics viewed have evolved over time.” I couldn’t have put it better.
Are you interested in learning more about reporting and metrics? Impact Interactions is the leading online community strategy firm helping clients to measure the impact of their site offerings. From your pay-per-click campaigns through your ROI, we can help you understand how visitors/members are using your site and how it ties to your organizational/business goal. To learn more, please contact us.
Back to the blog
This entry was posted on Tuesday, April 22nd, 2008 at 11:20 am and is filed under Best Practices, Measurement & Reporting. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
