Business events have an undeserved reputation for being hard to measure. In fact, business events are no less measurable than any other part of the marketing mix.

All it takes is discipline and prior planning. Here are five key metrics that will allow you to assess the value of your investment in business events:

  1. Cost per lead
  2. Cost per contact
  3. Expense-to-revenue ratio
  4. Activity-based metrics
  5. Business event ROI

Event managers should use these metrics to track performance year to year, and to compare events to other elements of the marketing toolkit. Each is discussed in turn below, with guidelines for application. Using these metrics appropriately will help you optimize and justify future resource allocation for demand generation.

1. Cost per Lead

Cost per lead (CPL) is perhaps the most fundamental unit of trade show and event measurement. It is generated by dividing total program cost by the number of qualified leads generated.

A few caveats are in order, however:

  • Use the fully loaded program investment number as the numerator.

  • Eliminate unqualified contacts from the denominator.

  • Add in to the denominator the number of contacts that are still in the qualification and nurturing process but are expected to convert to qualified leads—in effect, the pipeline revenue generated from the event.

The main benefit of tracking CPL is the ability to analyze costs on a consistent basis over time, and to compare the value of competing marketing investments. For example, ranking the annual trade show calendar by CPL results can serve as a benchmark for making future event-selection decisions.

2. Cost per Contact

Another useful number is the cost per contact, which is generated by dividing the entire program investment by the gross number of contacts generated. Only a percentage of these contacts will convert to sales revenue, of course, but the others can be qualified, nurtured and otherwise managed in the marketing database.

Cost per contact becomes an important benchmark for evaluating competing marketing investments. However, cost per contact can be dangerous if used on its own to evaluate the relative value of the business event. Better to combine it with a metric that emerges later in the selling process, like cost per qualified lead or ROI.

If left to stand on its own, the cost per contact metric can encourage such questionable trade show marketing practices as fish bowls and contests, in which marketers have mistakenly focused on contact quantity instead of quality.

Some exhibitors use cost per visitor reached, meaning the program cost divided by the number of potential prospects who visited your booth. According Exhibit Surveys, Inc., the national industry average for cost per visitor attracted is $116, and the cost per visitor reached, based on having had a meaningful face-to-face interaction at the exhibit, is $208.

3. Expense-to-Revenue Ratio (E:R)

Dividing the total revenue associated with the business event by the total expense incurred is a standard marketing communications metric in business marketing.

The benefit of using E:R is that it makes the relative cost of the marketing communications tactic easy to compare with other tactics of its sort. The company might impose an maximum E:R threshold—2.5%, or 6%—for example, to establish control of marketing communications expense.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

image of Ruth P. Stevens

Ruth P. Stevens consults on customer acquisition and retention; teaches marketing at business schools; and contributes to AdAge, Biznology, and Target Marketing Magazine. Crain's BtoB named her one of the Most Influential People in Business Marketing.