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Meaningful Metrics – Understanding Engagement, Influence and Impact. Jim Macnamara PhD, FPRIA, FAMI, CPM, FAMEC Professor of Public Communication University of Technology Sydney. Engagement, influence and impact. International standards initiative.
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Meaningful Metrics –Understanding Engagement, Influence and Impact Jim Macnamara PhD, FPRIA, FAMI, CPM, FAMEC Professor of Public Communication University of Technology Sydney
International standards initiative • Coalition for Public Relations Research Standards • Established 2011 by AMEC, IPR and CPRF • #SMMStandardsConclave • Established 2012 by Coalition members + 8 other PR/communication organizations • Global Alliance, PRSA, CIPR, IABC, SNCR, FIBEP, WOMMA, DAA • Working in consultation with eight companies • Dell, Ford, General Motors, McDonalds, Proctor & Gamble, Thompson Reuters, South-West Airlines, SAS • Also consulting with • Media Ratings Council, AAAA, ANA, Web Analytics Association • US and European Measurement Summits 2011–2013 key role
Standards being developed to cover • Content sourcing and methods (outputs) • Interim Standards for Metrics in Traditional Media Analysis • #SMMStandards Sources and Methods Transparency Table • Reach and impressions (outputs) • Social Media Standard Definitions for Reach and Impressions • Engagement • Influence and relevance • Opinion and advocacy • Sentiment or tone (over-used and over-rated) • Impact and value http://www.smmstandards.org/
Engagement – some key characteristics • Happens after output distribution and after reach (outtake) • Involves interaction between the organization and stakeholders • Qualitative as well as quantitative (can be positive or negative) • Occurs both offline and online
Engagement • Commonly perceived (and counted) as including: • Visits • Page views • Clickthroughs • Likes • Follows • Shares • Retweets • Downloads • Comments • “Fragments of behavioural outcomes”
Engagement • Engagement is a deep psychological concept • Involves passion, commitment, investment of oneself in discretionary effort (Erickson, 2008) • Three key elements of engagement • Psychologicalbond – may be rational, based on information, experience • Emotional (affective) involvement • Empowerment through participation (Erickson, 2008; Macey & Schneider, 2008)
To influence behaviour Behaviour • Activism • Advocating • Voting • Getting fit, dieting, stop smoking, drive safely, etc • Buying a product or service • Trialling a product or service • Inquiry Social media Empowerment (e.g. participation, giving a say and listening) Affective/emotional response (e.g. joy, pleasure, fun, liking, etc) Psychological bond (e.g. pride) Satisfaction (product & relationship) Engagement Trust (key part of reputation) A “cornerstone” of all relationships Product or relationship satisfaction is essential, price of entry
Higher level engagement • Positive comments posted • Linking • Participation in events • Regular interaction • Collaboration Attendees at Australia Day celebrations to promote national pride and identity
Influence • Occurs beyond engagement (outtakes outcomes) • Occurs when someone is persuaded to change an opinion or behaviour that they otherwise would not have changed • Needs to be relevant • Occurs in relation to specific issues, topics • Manifests offline and online • A single ‘influence score’ unlikely • Influence tangibly seen in: • Joining, supporting, endorsing, seeking your advice, subscribing, trialling, etc
Impact and value (outcomes) • Occurs beyond influence – when desired behaviours are adopted • Value can be positive returns • Sales, reputation gain, membership increases, improved fitness, etc • Value can be negative returns • Risks avoided or costs saved • ROI is seen as problematic for PR/corporate communication • Predominantly used and seen as a financial/accounting measure • Wrongly calculated (ROI is $ return on capital expenditure/ total costs) • Not relevant to government, NGOs, non-profits • KPIs and scorecards can measure impacts and values • Impact must be linked to organization / business outcomes
The final connection • Linking PR outcomes to organization / business outcomes • Holy Grail of PR THE CHALLENGES: • Organization/business outcomes are: • Macro level v micro activities • Often well downstream from PR activities • May be long-term • Almost always the result of multiple inputs and outputs
Linking to organization/business outcomes Profit Sustainability People Planet Profit Sales Cost control Product development Staff retention Triple Bottom Line Customer retention Regulator support Audit systems Product quality Product quality Customer testing R&D Innovation Design Staff morale & culture Community relations Staff comms (newsletter, intranet) Community support Staff recognition Brand awareness Customer service Accounts review Meetings; consultation Staff award scheme Customer newsletter, social media Activist relations Pay & conditions Sales experience Customer communication • LOGIC MODEL: • Organization/business outcomes are high level with multiple contributors • PR (and many other functions) contribute indirectly • Identify the sub-outcomes unpinning business outcomes and which created by PR – a two-step or three-step flow of effects Product preference Product reviews/ publicity
Questions & Discussion