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If your website is getting a lot of monthly users, it's easy to assume that you're doing something right and begin the celebration. But if very few of those users are converting, your company won't last long. Luckily,  (Operating Director at GoDaddy Belgrade and friend of the Founder Institute) has written an article that helps startups identify which metrics to measure and which to avoid.

The article, "Run Away from Vanity Metrics", originally appeared at MVP Workshop, and has been republished below with permission.

If the phrase “What gets measured, gets managed” is the first thing you think about while managing your business and growing your customer base you should read this article. It means you are ready to become truly data-driven and it probably means that you read Peter Drucker one time too many.

Good for feeling Awesome, Bad for Action

While all business owners now know that they must measure their results in order to know how effective their marketing efforts are, too many measures the wrong things. The first thing a first-time entrepreneur that wants to measure his company success does is to download a template or find a SaaS tool that is going to show him how his business stands.

I am guilty of this too. We probably all are. It’s the easiest thing to do and it gives you more certainty and a feeling you know where you are going. However, your path is probably wrong as you are now really close to falling into the trap of your vanity.

One million downloads, one million registered users, one million tweets per day. These growth metrics can often be signs of traction and we all love to see them. But are they really actionable? What can you really do with them? Even if you think about your MRR (Monthly Recurring Revenue) – are you really going to make business decisions based just on that?

Sure. You want more money. That is the end goal. But revenue is not the metric you should be looking for.

Let’s say you have 10,000 “hits” to your website. Now, what? Do you really know what actions you took in the past that drove those visitors to you, and do you really know which actions to take next?

The Theory of The 3 Whys

You would be amazed how powerful and decisive simple question Why? can be. In Aristotelian philosophy, the word ’cause’ is used to mean ‘explanation’ or ‘answer to a Why question’.  It’s an important realization that we all need to go a few layers deeper before doing important things. Whether is building a product, adding a new feature, hiring new people, having a tough conversation with a loved one, etc.

Let’s try asking ourselves three Whys in a row about our revenue. 

  1. What is the cause of our revenue? Let’s say it’s the number of sales.
  2. What are these sales caused by? Let’s say they are caused by the active usage of our product.
  3. What causes active product usage? Let’s say it’s the high success rate of your main feature.

So let’s primarily measure the success rate of this feature and stop worrying about revenue. Our revenue should be known. We should not be surprised when we find out how much money do we have, but let’s not act upon revenue find out what is causing it.

Measure What Matters

It is essential for a startup to properly instrument the data they track so that they can get a handle on the true health of their business so the only metrics that entrepreneurs should invest energy in collecting are those that help them make decisions.

The number of your visitors, subscribers, and followers is often meaningless. Track only metrics that are truly aligned with your goals.

When you measure things, you want to measure things you can test, improve, and simplify in order to build the company’s business. Driving more page views without noticing the high bounce rate doesn’t do that. Neither does having 10,000 followers – none of whom like, comment, or share your content.

You Don’t Fool Me

So, you may have a lot of followers, high page views, or a great follower ratio, and still be ineffective when it comes to social media marketing. And unfortunately, you won’t be able to discover the underlying issues that need to be addressed if you’re focusing your attention on the wrong information.

It’s tempting to think that because having metrics is good having more metrics is better. That’s why vendors routinely list the thousands of ‘especially relevant’ reports they are capable of generating as a feature.

The truth is, the key to actionable metrics is having as few as possible.

Detailed reports are useful when we’ve diagnosed a problem and are looking for clues as to what’s gone wrong. But where does that diagnosis come from in the first place? Actionable metrics help us realize we have a problem and point us in the right direction to start solving it.

The vanity metrics aren’t completely useless, just don’t be fooled by them!

Conclusion

Therefore, these are some of the metrics that can typically matter to you as you progress through each stage of company maturity:

  • Early Days – traffic, followers, subscribers, reviews, social media shares;
  • Growth and Retention – number of sales, revenue, conversion rate, time on site, customer satisfaction;
  • Fully Grown – profit, retention length, churn rate, revenue per customer, costs of good sold, impact…

Startups that focus on the real metrics can make their products better, attract more customers, and make them happier. Keep an eye on the target. Set your goals early. Execute based on meaningful and actionable data.

So I’d like to issue this challenge to all of you reading this post today: share your stories of actionable metrics and how you track them. If there are good tools that you have used, let us know.

Do you want even more expert startup help? The Founder Institute is looking for aspiring entrepreneurs. Apply today!

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