7 Ways to Easily Track Advertising and PR

Tracking advertising and measuring the effectiveness of publicity is tough.exec on keyboard and phone

I’m sure you have correctly guessed this from the difficulty you are having. If you’re wondering whether others are having the same problem, they are.

Here are seven easy ways to measure just how effective your campaigns are:

1. Just ask: The simplest way to track advertising is to ask every person who calls, “And how did you hear of our company?” in the beginning of each conversation. Write down the answer on a slip of paper and place it in a select drawer by the phone.

At the end of the month, you’ll have a pretty good idea of what’s working. In three months, you’ll have an in-depth understanding of what’s working and where. At six months, you’ll discover this is an excellent way to know exactly which ads work, and to what extent.

2. Use a tracking code: When you send out news releases, place a tracking code in the address. This tracking mechanism is similar to the one you use in your ads. You do use a tracking number in all your ads, don’t you?

A simple tracking device such as a department number may be placed in the address line of an ad or a news release. For example: P.O. BOX 100, Dept. HB. This HB stands for “House Beautiful.” HB1 may stand for “House Beautiful, January issue.” If your product is marketed to several industries, HHB1 may stand for the “Home market, House Beautiful, January.”

3. Get a new phone line: To test a particular phone book or an Internet website for effectiveness, make sure the number appears only in that phone book or your designated website. Buy the cheapest line, it will only be used for receiving calls.

When the phone rings, you’ll know where it came from. Just make sure to ask — right up in the front of the conversation — which phone book and what listing, or which site the caller is looking at. As with all tracking, write all the inquiries down and place the paper in the drawer you selected earlier.

This technique also works for all special markets you are entering. Assign a phone number only to that particular industry.

4. Code ads: When you request a response by telephone, code each publication or webpage with an operator number. “Ask for operator # such and such.” While all calls may wind up on your desk, you’ll know their point of origin.

5. When other methods aren’t attractive, or you’re releasing information to a few specific magazines or industries, place a person’s name — used as a code — in each ad or news release. When callers ask for that name, you’ll know where they saw the ad or press release, and which industry they’re calling from.

For example: all calls for “Jeffrey Warren” came from Popular Science, all calls for “Mr. Dobkin” came from Popular Mechanics.

LITE trade show panel booth display

LITE trade show panel booth display

6. Tracking direct mail is much easier: Since you control the response vehicle, it’s easy to place a “priority code” on all catalogs, order forms and post cards. Here, the tracking number can explicitly tell you the mailing list, the prices, the creative package, the offer, the mailing date and so forth. Larger mailers test everything and live by the numbers — measuring every element of each mailing.

7. Coupon codes: Tracking ads, direct mail and newsprint is easy if your ad contains a coupon — or better yet my favorite: a gift certificate. All the ad information you need can be placed in the coupon code.