Ad Conversion Rate %
The percentage of users who take a desired action after clicking on an ad.
Assess campaign success, brand awareness, and customer acquisition costs.
The percentage of users who take a desired action after clicking on an ad.
The percentage of users who engage with an ad, beyond just viewing it.
The average number of times a person is exposed to an advertisement.
The average position of an ad in search engine results or on a webpage.
A score provided by platforms like Google Ads, considering factors like CTR, relevance, and landing page quality.
The percentage of leads from affiliates that convert into sales or a desired action.
The total cost of running the affiliate program, including commissions, platform fees, and other related expenses.
The percentage of total revenue that is attributed to affiliate sales.
Average earnings generated from a single click on an affiliate's promotional link.
The average monetary value of orders placed through affiliate links.
Percentage of affiliates or partners who stop promoting your product or service.
The number of new partners or affiliates acquired in a given time frame.
The amount of revenue generated for every dollar spent on partnership campaigns.
Affiliates generating the highest number of leads or sales.
The total number of affiliates or partners promoting your product or service.
The average number of external websites linking to a blog post.
The average number of comments received per blog post.
The average number of views a blog post receives.
The percentage of blog visitors who take a desired action, such as subscribing, downloading a content offer, or making a purchase.
The total number of individuals subscribed to receive updates from the blog, either via email or RSS feeds.
How often new content is published on the blog.
The total number of visits to the blog over a specified period.
The average number of times a blog post is shared on social media platforms.
quantifies the total financial expenditure associated with maintaining and producing content for a blog over a month.
Measures the percentage of target market familiar with a brand.
Measures how uniformly a brand is presented across all channels and touchpoints.
Evaluates the portion of customers who make repeat purchases or show a strong preference for your brand over competitors.
The ability of consumers to recognize and remember a brand without any prompts.
Measures the perception and sentiment towards a brand in the market.
Rate of surveyed individuals who can recall your brand's slogan or tagline.
The average time taken for a prospect to become a customer from the initial touchpoint.
The percentage of individuals who move to the next stage of the funnel.
The cost incurred to acquire a customer at a specific stage of the funnel.
The total number of stages or steps in the customer's journey.
The average number of interactions a customer has with the brand before conversion.
The percentage of individuals who leave the funnel at a particular stage.
The percentage of top-funnel prospects who become customers.
The average score of leads based on their likelihood to convert.
The percentage of customers who make repeat purchases or stay loyal to the brand.
The amount of traffic or visitors at the initial stages of the customer journey.
The percentage of users who take a desired action after clicking on an ad.
The percentage of users who engage with an ad, beyond just viewing it.
The average position of an ad in search engine results or on a webpage.
A score provided by platforms like Google Ads, considering factors like CTR, relevance, and landing page quality.
The return gained from the advertising spend.
The percentage of impressions that resulted in a click.
Cost Per Click (CPC) represents the average amount of money spent for each click on an ad.
The average cost of each successful conversion from an ad.
The percentage of sent emails that couldn't be delivered.
The percentage of recipients who clicked on a link in the email out of those who opened the email.
The percentage of recipients who click on a link within the email.
The percentage of email recipients who take a desired action, such as making a purchase or signing up for a webinar.
The percentage of emails that reach the recipient's inbox without being filtered out.
The percentage of recipients who open the email newsletter.
Measures the profitability of your newsletter or email marketing campaigns.
The percentage of recipients who forward the email or share its content on social media.
The rate at which your email newsletter subscriber list is growing.
The percentage of recipients who opt-out of your email list.
The number of visitors to your website who arrived via a link in your email.
The average time attendees spend engaged with your booth, presentation, or session.
The number of times your brand or company is mentioned during presentations, in discussions, or on social media related to the event.
The percentage of leads from the event that convert into customers.
The total cost of the event divided by the number of attendees.
An average score from post-event surveys or feedback forms.
Measures the profitability of the event against its cost.
The number of potential clients or customers identified at the event.
Measures attendees' willingness to recommend the event to others.
The number of valuable business connections made during the event.
The total number of individuals who attend the event.
The average monetary expense incurred in promoting each episode.
The expense associated with transcribing each podcast episode.
The average number of downloads each episode receives.
The number of podcast episodes published within a specific timeframe.
The amount of time devoted to marketing activities specifically for each episode.
The change in total podcast downloads from one month to the next.
The total number of individual devices that have downloaded episodes of your podcast over a specific time frame.
The number of external websites linking back to your podcast's website or specific episode page.
The total hours spent recording content for each episode.
The number of separate content pieces derived or repurposed from a single podcast episode (e.
The total number of hours dedicated to researching topics, guests, and data for each podcast episode.
The number or value of sales attributed directly to podcast content, promotions, or mentions.
The total amount of time spent coordinating and scheduling guests for each podcast episode.
The number of times an episode has been shared across various social media platforms.
The amount of time spent on creating promotional materials like clips, ads, banners, or posts for each episode.
The number of hours spent on production and post-production editing for each podcast episode.
The total monthly costs associated with running the podcast, including all input costs.
The total revenue generated by the podcast in a given month.
The number of desired actions (such as sign-ups, purchases, or downloads) resulting from PR-related content or campaigns.
The duration it takes for a company to respond publicly to a negative event or crisis situation, in hours or minutes.
The number of likes, shares, comments, or interactions PR content receives on social media or other platforms.
The number of times a brand, product, or company representative is mentioned in the media.
The number of visitors coming to the brand's website from links in media articles or PR-related content.
The financial return generated from PR efforts compared to the cost of those efforts.
Measurement of the tone (positive, neutral, negative) of media mentions.
The percentage of media mentions a brand receives compared to its competitors.
Refers to the total number of external links from other websites pointing to your website.
The position of your website on search engine results pages (SERPs) for specific keywords.
Represents the percentage of total leads that are sourced from organic search.
The number of visitors that come to your site through unpaid search results.
Measures the percentage of visitors who enter the site through search and then leave ("bounce") rather than continuing to view other pages within the same site.
The ratio of clicks on your ad (for SEM) or link in organic results (for SEO) to the number of total views.
Measures the level of engagement that a piece of content is receiving from the audience.
Calculates the rate at which your social media profiles are gaining followers.
The number of unique users who have seen your post.
The percentage of social media users who take a desired action, such as signing up for a newsletter or making a purchase, after interacting with a post or ad.
Counts the number of times content has been displayed on someone's screen.
Measures how frequently the brand responds to audience engagements (like comments or direct messages) and how quickly.
Measures your brand mentions relative to your competitors.
The average number of times a person is exposed to an advertisement.
The total number of unique individuals exposed to an advertisement.
The percentage of audience members who can recall an advertisement after a certain period.
The ad's share of advertising exposure in its category.
The degree to which viewers/readers/listeners engage with the advertisement, often measured by direct responses, calls, or inquiries.
The cost of reaching 1,000 audience members with a particular advertisement.
The revenue generated for every dollar spent on advertising.
Reflects viewer engagement by showing the average percentage of the video that viewers watched.
The average length of time viewers spend watching the video.
The number of videos released in a specific timeframe.
The total amount of time taken to record the raw footage for a particular video.
Total income generated as a direct or indirect result of the video, from ads, sponsored content, or product sales in a timeframe.
The net return from the video after deducting the production and promotion costs.
The number of times the video has been shared across social platforms or through other mediums.
The percentage growth in the number of subscribers to a video channel over a specific period, compared to the previous period.
The duration spent creating promotional content like trailers, teasers, and snippets for the video.
The time dedicated to post-production tasks like editing, adding effects, sound mixing, etc.
Percentage of viewers who clicked on a CTA or link related to the video.
Percentage of viewers who take a desired action (e.
The total expenditure related to creating a video, including equipment, staff, locations, etc.
Funds allocated to promote the video through various channels.
The total number of times a video or all published videos have been watched.
The average amount of time a user spends on your site during a single session.
The percentage of visitors who navigate away from the site after viewing only one page.
The number or percentage of users accessing your site from mobile devices.
The rate at which users encounter 'Page Not Found 404' and other errors.
The average time it takes for a page to load fully.
Average number of pages viewed during a single session.
The ratio of repeat visitors to first-timers.
Pages from which users most frequently leave your website.
The percentage of visitors who take a desired action, like making a purchase or signing up for a newsletter.
Measures the total number of visits to your website.