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17th March 2020

Why You Should Stop Focusing On Clicks To Measure Your Marketing

9
minute read

Online advertising as we know it is about 25 years old. For most of this time people have interpreted the success of their digital ads by the number of clicks they get, and subsequent click through rate - the ratio of users who click on the ad to the total number of its viewers. 

However, the online advertising industry is starting to worry about the over-reliance on clicks. Each February, the Internet Advertising Bureau UK marks National Anti-Click-Through Rate Day, with the wry tagline ‘Don’t be a clickhead’ calling for a better set of metrics. 

At JPIMedia, we agree with the IAB wholeheartedly. Here are 5 reasons why clicks don’t really tell you your marketing’s whole story, and why you shouldn’t put them at the centre of how you measure results. 

1. You’re focusing on too few of the right people 

In terms of understanding your audience, the problem with being a clickhead isn’t that you’re focusing on the wrong people. It’s that you’re pouring all your attention onto a tiny number of the right people. 

The average click through rate for a display ad is about 0.05%. Don’t waste time, energy and money figuring out the actions of such a small proportion of your actual audience. The vast majority of people who see your ad won’t click, but that doesn’t mean your message hasn’t left an impression in their mind that you can build on. 

As Search Engine Land say, “click-through rates sort of, kinda don’t matter”.

2. The clicks you do get are probably not useful 

So we now know that, proportionally, not many clicks are even happening anymore. Well, the ones that are happening are frequently either accidental or fake.

It’s been estimated that a staggering 60% of ad clicks on mobile devices happen accidentally as a result of ‘fat thumbs’. These clicks tell you nothing about your audience other than their fine motor skills (or lack thereof). 

A more pressing problem is click fraud - when clicks are generated by automated bots looking to drain advertisers’ budgets, rather than human beings. Such traffic is growing at around 50% per year, and while the percentage of fraudulent ad clicks is hard to gauge, we can be confident that it’s swelling. 

So, many clicks on any given ad will be either accidental or fraudulent. You have to ask, what is the point of assessing this?

3. Clicks don’t correlate with your objectives

Even if clicks were generated deliberately, and in good faith, they aren’t necessarily what you actually want your display advertising to motivate anyway. 

Your advertising campaign will be looking to achieve all or some combination of the following tasks: raising awareness of your business, showing off what you sell, becoming your target market’s business of choice, and directly generating sales. 

The number of people who have clicked an ad does not tell you anything about how you’re achieving any of these goals. Clicks don’t match up to how much people are spending, nor to the impression that your products or services have left on your target market. They don’t even indicate how many people have been made aware of your business. 

As Nielsen explained back in 2011, ‘virtually no relationship exists between clicks and brand metrics or offline sales’. Yet the focus on click rates has, somehow, carried on since.

4. Clicks are an active distraction 

One attraction of clicks is their immediacy - they give marketers a tangible number that can be watched changing in real time. 

Psychologically, this delivers a little hit of validation. Seeing your ad get clicks feels good, and gives the impression that what you’re doing is working. 

This is why they’re a classic vanity metric: ‘a metric that makes you feel good without telling you anything about your business’. Vanity metrics are intoxicating, which is why they’re hazardous to your chances of achieving important results for your business. Don’t be a clickhead, forever chasing that hit. 

5. There are better things to measure out there

So, if not clicks, then what? 

It took a while for alternatives to click-centric measurement to really emerge and gain ground. But in the last few years, savvy businesses have used ‘brand lift’ reports, which give a fuller, more cohesive account of how your online campaigns have added value to your business at each critical stage of the marketing process. 

These comprehensive reports were once only accessible to big businesses with in-house marketing departments and considerable budgets to invest in niche, new technology. 

We thought it was time that changed. We’ve partnered with independent analytics providers Brand Metrics to make brand lift reports available to small businesses too. We are now the only local news publisher in the UK to offer brand lift studies as standard to all customers at the end of their online campaigns. 

These reports are created by the simple act of surveying users who have seen an ad and asking them for their impression of the company behind them: whether they remember it, feel positively towards it or intend to purchase from it. The results are quantified and, through some clever statistical wizardry, compared to a calculated baseline. This gives far more sophisticated, useful insights than a box telling you that your most recent ad got a CTR of 0.12% (if you’re lucky). 

Click here for more advice on getting the true picture of your marketing with a brand lift report

For too long, click rates have served as the go-to for marketers in search of a quick metric to justify their work with. Now it’s time to kick the habit. 

You need to know the effect of your marketing on your brand awareness, your reputation and people’s real likelihood of buying from you. That’s something clicks won’t give you, but a brand lift report will. 

Want to know more? Watch this short video on brand measurement:

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