Social media metrics: 4 that matter, 3 that distract
Don’t dwell on how much traffic your blog gets or how many followers you have. These are among the metrics you shouldn’t waste time measuring.
Over at {grow}, Srininvas Rao wrote a post about the three most dangerous social media metrics and the four that really matter. Because his advice is so excellent, I want to share it with you.
First, the three most dangerous metrics:
1. Traffic: You don’t just want visitors, you want the right visitors.
At The Measurement Standard, we had a StumbleUpon experience similar to the one Rao relates in his article. StumbleUpon picked up one of our interesting but somewhat off-topic articles and brought us tremendous traffic, but few visitors read anything else. That traffic was, and continues to be, a pain because it skews our statistics.
2. Tweets, likes, fans and followers: Do you want to be popular, or do you want to do business? They’re often not the same.
3. Comments: It’s tempting to think commenters are a focus group of your readers, but those who comment only represent a fraction of your readers. Most commenters leave comments because of something other than what the majority of your readers are interested in.
Second, the metrics you should measure:
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