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Measurement Mistakes
You Don't Want To Make

How To Really Mess Up Your PR Measurement Program
Ten fatal PR research mistakes and how to avoid them.

Despite the best laid plans, public relations measurement programs can sometimes go awry. You can't always anticipate how everything will go, and your elegant research design rarely seems to play out quite like you planned. Let's face it, unforeseen problems and errors can creep in here and there and part of your job is to figure out how to get the job done anyway.

But there are certain errors your program just won't survive. These mistakes will ruin your data or analysis and leave you with no options but to learn an expensive lesson and to start over. Here are ten fatal research errors that now you won't have to learn about the hard way (and, yes, these will be on the exam):

1. Clipping systems that miss clips
We won't name names, but you should regularly test your provider. Do what we call a "Pub/Month" check: Look back over the stats for the last year and see on average how many articles you get in your key publications. If you are below that for the current month, or if you have zero clips for the month, someone's probably missing your clips.

2. Dirty data from your content provider
This means errors like not differentiating between nytimes.com and The New York Times. Again, check the data on a monthly basis to make sure that it includes what it's supposed to.

3. Bad circulation figures (impressions)
It really doesn't matter if it's off by 10 or even 100. But we've seen cases where providers have moved commas and made the NY Times circulation 14 million instead of 1.4 million. Do a reality check.

4. Corporate articles that end up in product categories and vice versa
This needs to be checked monthly or even weekly for the first six months to make sure that it reflects reality.

5. An unclear definition of tonality
Ask three people what a positive article is and you'll get three different answers. We define it as "leaves the reader more likely to do business with, invest in, or go to work for the company." How you define it is your own business, just make sure it's consistent.

6. An unclear understanding of key messages
Again, do a monthly reality check.

7. Not comparing apples to apples in a competitive analysis
This includes errors like looking at your own local coverage but not the local coverage of your competition.

8. Not being clear about the universe of publications
Make up a written list of search terms as well as a list of the publications/universe to be covered.

9. Not having total control of the names and mailing list for your survey
Beware of merging lists: You can end up with two surveys in one household just because the middle initial is left off one name but not the other.

10. Not being clear about what social media you want to measure
Are you interested in user reviews, Facebook, MySpace, list serves, blogs, or all of the above?

 

 

 

You know you need to measure your results, but chances are there’s never been enough money in your budget for evaluation. Until now.
KDPaine & Partners’ new Do-It-Yourself Dashboard system combines a Web-based application with professional consulting to enable PR professionals to customize their own PR dashboards. Look here for more information.

 

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Struggling to set up your measurement system?
Katie Delahaye Paine can help you at measuresofsuccess.com

 

 

 

 
 

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