Content metrics used by publishers

Our Content Marketing Survey Report found a focus on the page view among respondents. The most common metrics for publishers are unique visitors (88%), page views per visitor (76%) and page views (71%).

Only a third (33%) stated that ad clicks were used as a metric.

Q: Which metrics do you use to measure performance and engagement with your web property or web properties?

 

What can pageviews tell us?

The obvious thing is the popularity of various types of content, which can be very useful. In our case, it can help us to identify what our readers see as hot topics / areas of concern. 

For example, posts published on Pinterest a year or so ago (when the platform was new) were very popular, which told us that people wanted to know how to use it for marketing. 

This may prompt us to delve deeper into a subject on the blog, or perhaps to produce reports or incorporate this into training and events. In the case of Pinterest, we have written a gazillion blog posts and a best practice guide

It’s also important for advertisers. We don’t rely on advertising as much as some other publishers may do, as we have various revenue streams, but we do have ads and, in this case, pageviews do matter. 

I think the danger explored in the paidcontent article is the focus on pageviews at the expense of metrics which can actually tell you a lot more about your audience. 

Then there’s the risk of putting pageviews ahead of decent content and going the Daily Mail route of producing tons of articles on Miley Cyrus:

Measuring engagement

Our aim is to keep people on site for as long as we can, browsing blog content, and hopefully exploring the rest of the site to find useful reports, training courses or events. 

To this end, I look at how effective different articles are for keeping the visitor on site and sending them elsewhere. To achieve this we try to give people ideas for where to go next, with internal links, mentions of reports at the foot of articles, as well as list of tags and most visited / most commented articles. 

To measure this, I pay close attention to metrics like bounce rates and average time on page. In the stats below, the post on blogger relations seems to have hit the sweet spot in terms of time on page. 

Another metric to look at is the number of pages per visit, to see whether people are browsing around after reading the first article. If you have a good proportion of visitors doing this, it suggests a segment of loyal and engaged readers. 

For this, I use a custom segment (which you can find in the previous link) that looks at visits where people view more than three pages.

The same can be done for less or more than this number, or it can be combined with dimensions such as traffic sources, or the location of the visitor. For example, I can use this to compare the level of engagement of UK and US visitors (the former are more engaged according to this). 

Monetising content

While the blog is there to inform and entertain, we do also need to build awareness of the other areas of the site/business. We want to promote awareness of our subscription packages, report content and events. 

So, we do produce posts which are designed to promote our report content, but they should also be useful in their own right so that, even if readers don’t go on to download the full report, they can take something useful from the post. 

First and foremost the content has to be good. In a way, we’re showing a bit of leg to encourage people to explore further…

I do look at how successful these sorts of posts are at promoting our paid content, so I measure how many visitors are referred to report pages with a handy advanced segment. 

In this shot, it shows which posts sent viewers to report pages, and I can delve deeper into this to see if visitors downloaded reports or bought subscriptions after viewing a blog post. 

 

Setting goals

We don’t obsess over pageviews, but we do set targets for writers, and these do include number of impressions. These are achievable targets given the typical traffic we receive on the blog. 

This is more about encouraging writers to use analytics to see what works and what doesn’t, and that their content is popular with readers. Also, a little bit of competition between writers doesn’t hurt. 

For this one, I use a custom report created by Ben Barass, our resident analytics guru, which uses a custom variable so we can view stats by author.

This allows us to see pageviews by each author, which of their posts are most popular, which have the lowest bounce rates etc, while the page value is a measure of how many conversions followed posts by a given author. 

We can also look deeper into the conversions that come from authors’ posts, and look to see what lessons can be learned.

For example, we can look at things like placement of links in posts, types of post that ‘inspire’ people to join up or download a report and use this to inform the way we write and present future articles. 

Measuring ‘evergreen’ content

Evergreen is my favourite type of content, and it’s what we try to do as much as we can. News can be found in many different places online, and it’s often basically the same article with subtle differences. 

This is why it’s so hard for news sites to attract paying customers, and why they need extra hooks such as the Premier league goals app offered by The Sun, but that’s a topic for another post. 

News articles tend to be popular for a day or so, then this tails off very quickly, with perhaps just a trickle of views thereafter. We know because we tried news and it didn’t really work so well for us. 

Our aim is to produce content that is valuable for our readers, and that will keep people coming back again and again. This means the article is useful beyond the first few days after publishing, and is also likely to produce better results in terms of SEO and promotion of our site. 

If an article is consistently popular, it also tells us that we have done something right, and we can learn from this. 

We manage to do this with reasonable success, so if you look at the top posts for August, you can bet that a good percentage weren’t published in that month. 50% in this case:

To take one example on that list, Chris Lake’s post on scrolling websites, this shows the value of evergreen content. It was published in March 2012, but still brings in around 5,000 visitors every month.  

So, for publishers, it’s worth identifying these posts, as they may well be bringing in the most engaged visitors, meaning they may have greater potential for monetisation.

In our case, we try to ensure that they have some links to relevant reports and events, as well as to other posts. 

In the case of a large news site, whose visitor numbers are far higher than ours, these posts could be used for targeting contextual ads, or links to ecommerce areas of the site. 

Social traffic

This is something that our Social Media Manager Matt Owen looks at regularly and, as he explains, measuring social media via Google Analytics isn’t always straightforward

For a quick overview, you can use a social media dashboard like this one, which you can download here (when logged in to GA). 

In summary

It’s not all about the pageview, but the most important thing is that publishers are using analytics tools. There is much to be learned by studying the behaviour of visitors and how different types of articles perform. 

I would add that there is extra value in providing the whole writing team with access to analytics, and this is what we do at Econsultancy. The writers can see the various reports, custom reports, segments and dashboards I’ve mentioned here. We also provide analytics training if required. 

It makes them more aware of how their work is performing, so they can absorb the lessons themselves. 

If they write a post and it doesn’t go so well, they know and can address any issues, or they can see how changes they make to style and layout affects things like bounce rates and time on page.

This has the added benefit that our writers become more clued up on the use of analytics, a vital skill for writers and marketers today. 

Have I missed any key metrics for publishers and others? Please let me know below.