Becoming a Corporate Blogger: Reporting Key Performance Indicators
In this series, I’ll be writing about the challenges of becoming a corporate blogger, from choosing your company and building a community to getting the right technical setup and getting support from your board of directors.
You’ll find the full series here.
The best way to make your role as company blogger as productive and fruitful as possible is to have the support of your colleagues and management. Getting everyone internally on your side should make it easier to go ahead with wild and wonderful ideas, since they’ll be confident that you can be trusted and are measuring results of every new idea you put in place.
While we may be creative softies, those sitting across the table are likely to think in measurable terms and KPIs where every decision is backed by hard numbers, so it’s worth learning to speak their language.
In a future post, we’ll look at how to communicate the more subjective qualitative information you’ll encounter but first, let’s focus on the hard stuff.
These hard stats are easy numbers to acquire so once you’ve picked your analytics package (Lee Odden lists 20 tools for blogs, some of which are better than others - I recommend Google Analytics to get you started), these are the first numbers I suggest reporting to your team on a weekly or at least monthly basis.
- Unique visitors: How many people in total have visited your site during a given period? Note the difference between “visits” and “visitors” as a single visitor can come back for multiple visits. Count each visitor once for a better gauge of your readership.
- Loyalty: How often do readers come back in that period?
- Top content: Which articles, categories or tags have had the most readers?
- Referring sources: How many inbound links? What kind of traffic do they bring in?
- Keyword analysis: What keywords are leading users to your site? Are they relevant?
- Geography: If your product is limited geographically, are your readers in regions where they can act on their interest? Can they buy, order or visit it?
Note that if you can, find out the IP addresses used by your office and add them to the exclusion list in your analytics package. This will give you a more accurate figure of the “real” traffic to the blog, since it’ll filter out the many hits you create when pottering around maintaining the site.
In addition to these basic figures, I would suggest reporting the number of subscribers to your RSS feed if you’re using a service like Feedburner to manage your feeds, as well as Technorati score and authority ranking, on which you should register/claim your blog.
Next, we’ll look at reporting softer measures like opinion shift, discovering your evangelists and forecasting traffic, but this should get you started.