How to Forecast & Measure Your Marketing ROI with a Scorecard

A marketing scorecard is a single spreadsheet that compares the potential or actual ROI from all channels. It’s easy to get lost in marketing data. A marketing scorecard is a simple tool that is easily communicated throughout the organization.

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Date published
October 25, 2011 Categories

No marketing department has infinite time or money. We are constantly refining our answer to the question “What is the best way to spend our time and money?” And we do that:

Essentially, we need a single way to:

We can go all of those with a marketing scorecard.

Creating a Marketing Scorecard

A marketing scorecard is a single spreadsheet that compares the potential or actual return on investment from all channels. Yours might look something like this:

A scorecard has 8 different components:

  1. Channel – The various campaigns broken down by channel and source. For example, banner ads are separated by site where you purchased. 
  2. Spend – The total spent on the campaign buy 
  3. Visits – The number of people who came to your site as a result of the campaign 
  4. CPC – the cost per click, or visit, calculated as Spend/Visits 
  5. Conversions – The number of orders or leads generated 
  6. Cost-Per-Sale – Cost/Sales 
  7. Other Conversion Metrics – Your specific business model may require other data to compare ROI 
  • Any Additional Costs – You may want to include costs associated with running campaigns 
  • Using a Marketing Scorecard

    The marketing scorecard is a template that you can fill in with:

    The Simplicity of a Scorecard

    It’s easy to get lost in the data in marketing. A marketing scorecard is a simple tool that is easily communicated throughout the organization and simple to understand. It’s the first step in democratizing data for your company.

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