How to Measure the Value of Your Article Marketing Campaign
By Garrett French
It's not enough to scatter your articles across the internet - you've
got to measure what you're doing so you can be sure that you're getting
value from your effort.
Here are some of my preliminary thoughts on what's measurable in regards
to article marketing, (and what you measure should depend on your predefined
article marketing goals, but you knew that already):
Number of new of links to your site
This is a big one of course, and just about the easiest to measure with
a simple "link:" search in the major engines.
Since I submitted "Build Links and Your Brand: Article Marketing
Delivers" to 8 directories on January 26th Google has logged 24 instances
of my article (I did have a little help from search engine expert Andy
Beal's mention in his blog), MSN search shows 59 instances and Yahoo has
me down for 10.
Now, all those mentions aren't links... just instances of my article
title.
Google currently shows no links to my main blog site. Yahoo and MSN both
show 14 to http://articlemarketing.blogspot.com.
I'm also currently ranked 3rd in Yahoo for the term article marketing
- woo hoo! Not bad for only 3 days. We'll see how long I stay there -
things may change dramatically after an update.
I'm currently nowhere to be found in MSN. Ditto for Google, except the
post from Andy's blog about my article marketing blog that puts me at
4th for "article marketing."
To give some idea of scale, here are the number of millions of results
for article marketing per engine:
12 million in Yahoo;
17 million in MSN;
27 million in Google.
I don't think Article Marketing is a phrase that currently generates
much competition.
Article submission sites like EzineArticles
get the freshbot treatment because of their regularly updated content
and I think that speeds indexing.
Article submitted 1-26-05, searches conducted 1-29-05.
Number of readers/impressions
To borrow a bit from the world of online advertising you can measure
impressions, that is, the estimated number of readers/site visitors who
had the opportunity to at least read your article title and, let's hope,
associate it with your business name.
To get an idea of how many impressions your article may have gotten talk
with those who republish your article. If you submit to EzineArticles
you can see how many writers and editors have viewed your article's page.
It's great to have your impressions high, but it's better to have them
targeted to your audience (and by audience I mean customers... here are
my thoughts on client as audience). The more care you give your content
creation process the more your content will appeal to your target audience.
Which brings us to...
Placement in previously identified key industry media
If at the beginning of your article marketing campaign you identify key
industry publications you'd like to be published in... and you get published
or don't get published, that's something you can measure.
This is more of a branding initiative than a linking initiative, though
it can certainly generate at least one solid link. And once your article's
been published and your editor says "go" you can submit it to
your article submission directories of choice. And then measure links.
Lead generation through reader inquiries
This is a fun one. There are specific industries and products that are
likely to sell well through article marketing... namely information products.
If your primary goal for article marketing is sales though you should
construct your article campaign in a particular way. Many of the same
rules still apply, but the strategy needs to be a little different. Let
me know if you have questions about creating sales generating articles.
And you still have to follow responsible article writing guidelines.
Email addresses gathered for newsletter signup/downloads/free service
Yeah you're being published in someone else's email newsletter but that
doesn't mean you can't try to drive signups to your own newsletter! We
had this happen when I worked at WebProNews, where we published all free
content. One author's article marketing strategy focused on driving subscribers
to her newsletter. I think, but I'm not sure, that it was Dianna Huff,
who specializes in B2B article marketing. As an aside, be sure to check
out her site.
Pageviews to info pages on your site
If you link out of your article to more info pages on your site you can
measure for an increase in traffic on those pages. Have some kind of call
to action on these pages though. Don't just boost page views for the sake
of having higher page views. Get them to do something on that page, such
as give you an email address or visit your products or services page.
Requests from editors for articles
If it's your goal to have more involvement with your target market then
be sure to accept all requests from editors for new articles. In fact,
cultivate any relationship with an editor you can. This is one fantastic
way of staying in front of your target audience and getting new ideas
for articles.
How can you increase this likelihood? Contact editors from publications
within your target market. In addition, include a mention in your author
bio that you'd like to work with editors to help them have happier, more
engaged readers.
Audience involvement/questions
This is another fun one, and something I tried to promote during my time
at WPN. The level of reader feedback I received led to my creation of
the "Ask the Expert" section of WPN (now untended) as well as
my proposal for the WebProWorld forums, now with over 50,000 members.
(To be fair iEntry had rolled out forums before - they were just scattered
across all our publications rather than targetted on the flagship. WebProWorld
was definitely a home run.)
So if you'd like to establish more of a relationship with the online
audience in your publications contact their editor and see if you can
field audience questions.
What else is measurable?
Those are a few of my thoughts for article marketing measurables. Did
I miss any? Let me know your measurable ideas and if I use them in an
upcoming article I'll throw you a link with your link text of choice.
Want to build links to your site and enhance your
brand? Send article marketing questions to GFrench@gmail.com for free
article marketing brainstorm, including article topic suggestions and
key industry media identification. Garrett French is a search engine
engineer for Websourced.com
and conducts branding and link building research with his article
marketing blog. You may republish this article if you include all
links.