Here are some stupid marketing metrics and reasons they're probably doing your campaigns more harm than good.

This post, written by Larry Kim, originally appeared on Wordstream, and is re-published with permission.

Way too often—at least several times a week—I'm amazed by the things that some marketers are still measuring.

Maybe they don't know any better. Maybe some are just married to legacy metrics that were once logical but now just need to die.

Inspired by Rachel Sprung's recent post on pointless marketing metrics, I've come up with my own list of pet-peeve marketing metrics and reasons they're probably doing your campaigns more harm than good.

1. Facebook Likes

Once upon a time, even rational marketers considered buying Facebook fans. The opportunity to get in front of such an audience—they would see your organic content over and over and over again—was just too tempting.

Those days are long over.

Last spring, the alarm was sounded for brands: organic Facebook reach for Pages was rapidly trending toward zero. And that's exactly what happened. Many brands are now reporting less than 1% engagement with their fan base via organic content.

What's the point in measuring people who Liked your page at some point if they aren't even seeing your content? There could be 100 or 1 million of them... you still need ads or ridiculously powerful content marketing to reach them now on Facebook.

Still, some marketers point to increases in fan count as a social media KPI as though it will make a comeback. And someone must be buying those Page Likes, because an awful lot of people are still selling them. Just stop... Stick a fork in it, this one's done.

2. Display Ad Impressions

It's important to understand how many people actually saw your ads, right?

Unfortunately, impressions—the metric that display ad marketers relied on for so long—doesn't give you a clue about how many people actually viewed your ad.

Way back in November 2013, we learned that about one-third of your ad impressions weren't actually viewable. That's pretty bad, right? Now it's over 56%!

Source: Google

That's right, over half of your ad "impressions" aren't even being seen by anyone.

So stop using impressions as a yardstick for campaign reach. Instead, measure lower-funnel metrics, such as actual clicks and conversions.

3. Keyword Rankings

Keyword rankings are the insatiable, brain-munching zombie of marketing metrics. They just won't stay dead.

So many factors have made keyword rankings completely useless—personalization, geo-location, changes in the search algorithm, etc. And those aren't even new!

This shift has been happening over a period of years, yet some marketers still march out rankings for specific keywords at reporting time like they actually mean something.

Ditch the security blanket. Keyword rankings are done.

4. Anything to Do With Referred vs. Direct vs. Organic Segmented Traffic

This whole notion of segmenting referred, direct, and organic traffic, and using it as some kind of performance indicator, needs to die.

If you're in SEO, you're basically shooting yourself in the foot by using those metrics.

Rand Fishkin wrote and talked about this extensively in 2013, and what he predicted has played out pretty much as he said it would. In a keyword referral-less world, where both mobile traffic and organic search traffic are characterized as direct, attempting to use these metrics to measure or validate SEO efforts is just silly.

There are a lot of logical reasons why browsers won't report exactly where traffic came from, but the bottom line is you can't rely on the segmentation of referral data as a KPI. At all.

Groupon showed the extent of this problem in an experiment it ran last summer. The company deindexed its entire site for six hours—and instead ended up losing 60% of its supposedly "direct" site traffic!

Image from SearchEngineLand.com

So you still think SEO isn't working? Understand that much of what you attribute to direct navigation is probably SEO and content marketing efforts at work. Don't sabotage your own efforts by discrediting them with what is crappy segmentation reporting.

5. PageRank

Are we even still talking about this? Why are we still talking about this?!

The last time Google updated the PageRank toolbar (in 2013), it was by accident. That alone should give you a pretty good idea of how high it is on Google's priority list.

Once upon a time, PageRank was probably a pretty good indicator of site quality, but the search algorithm has moved so far beyond this archaic metric that it's crazy anyone still takes it seriously.

(I'm thinking of starting a support group for people who can't get over PageRank. You don't want to be in it, trust me...)

6. Most of Google Webmaster Tools

Google Webmaster Tools is great for some purposes, but really awful for others; getting any kind of real numbers for the metrics there falls under the latter category.

The numbers in Google Webmaster Tools are all based on estimates that are accurate to +/- 500%, according to my own internal analysis.

How do I know? Because you can compare some of the numbers with what is actually in your Google Analytics or Google AdWords account. When you do, you'll see that the two sets are totally different.

It works in the same way as the Google AdWords Keyword Planner. The volumes and CPCs are just estimates and are similarly accurate to within +/- 500%.

Why would you put any stock in those numbers? It's OK to use the data for trending purposes, but don't make the mistake of thinking of the numbers are real and accurate in an absolute sense. They're just estimates.

Why These Metrics Are So Silly (and Dangerous)

Aside from being irritating, these metrics (and the attention many marketers give them) are dangerous. Why? Because the more you focus on metrics that simply don't matter, the less attention you're paying to metrics that will yield actionable insights into your marketing efforts.

Think of it this way. If a marketer is obsessed with "improving" their impression volume, but most of their ads aren't even being seen, they're going to miss opportunities because they're looking the wrong way. In time, this leads to a "death spiral" of misplaced attention; the longer you focus on irrelevant metrics like those above, the further and further away you move from the metrics that do matter. Before you know it, you're trying desperately to justify content or advertising that isn't doing anything simply because you've spent too long looking at the wrong benchmarks for success. By this point, it might be too late to reverse course.

So that’s it. My pet-peeve marketing metrics. Which metrics do you wish the industry would kick to the curb? Share your thoughts in the comments.

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