Metrica Insights: Money, money, money

by Kristin Wadge 12/17/2009 12:28:00 PM

It’s that time of the year that we all look forward to.  Snow is falling and festivities flowing as we prepare to say goodbye to 2009.  It’s been quite a year.  Not least remembered for a heavy downward pressure on budgets; in turn fanning the flames of the eternal debate about how much should be spent on PR measurement.

Back in 1998, the CIPR, PRCA, Public Relations Standards Forum (PRSF) and AMEC put their heads together and produced best practice guidelines on the use of planning, research and evaluation within the industry.  The aim of the campaign, known as PR Week’s Proof campaign, was to encourage companies to allocate 10% of PR budget to measurement.  Over ten years on and, although the 10% figure is often cited, the reality is rather different.  Metrica Insights found that over half (52%) of respondents spend between 1-5% on measurement.  The respondents do, however, believe they should be spending more on evaluation: almost half the participants currently spending between 1-5% recognise that they should be spending between 6-10%.

 

So, herein lies the conundrum. When budgets are being squished and results are under close scrutiny does it pay to hold fast and continue dedicating 10% to measurement?  Here at Metrica (heavily vested interest aside!) we would argue that the answer is yes.  As long as it’s done properly.  There’s little point spending swathes of money on measurement if it doesn’t demonstrate PR’s contribution to the success of the business.  Counting clips and presenting AVEs won’t make the money spent worthwhile; generating ROI metrics that help prove and improve the effectiveness of PR will.  If you can use your measurement for well-informed planning, tweaking and improving then the budget really starts to sing hard for its supper. 

Interestingly, while more respondents’ 2009 PR budgets decreased (30%) than increased (20%), the majority (46%) stayed the same.  This was a very encouraging result during a global recession.  The widening remit of PR in the social media realm may well have had something to do with this.  Even more reassurance came as 28% of respondents were confident of an increase in overall PR budgets coming into 2010.  Is this result a reality?  Have your budgets been decided yet? And, most importantly, have you put aside a set amount for measurement? 

Next time we’re looking at opinions around ROI – the catch of the day, the phrase du jour, the Holy Grail. At long last there’s been increased demand for PR ROI.  How are our respondents satisfying this demand?  We’ll be back in the New Year to find out. Happy Christmas everyone!

Comments

12/18/2009 4:09:58 PM

My research on PR spending in the UK and other countries since 1992 has found that around 3% is the average budget for spending on PR evaluation. It has been very constant because as few, better practitioners spend more, the growing number of lumpen PR folks spend nil (but claim otherwise). I note that the spending ranges in this report were 1-5% and 6-10%. How many spent 0%? I left this option out in my first survey and found that the percentage was higher than in the second study four years later. Hope you haven't fallen into the same trap.

Tom Watson gb

12/20/2009 10:28:29 AM

So, that means 48% are spending 6%+? Would have been interesting to map your results against the 10%, and slice and dice the data differently.

ritornatoPR us

12/21/2009 2:35:29 PM

Thanks for the comments. I've updated the post with a graphical breakdown of the results -- gives a little more insight into the spread of responses.

Hi Tom -- around 3% does seem to be the standard. Tools such as Google alerts and free social media tracking tools seem to be driving the spend nothing trend. Although the need for the 'so what' of measurement keeps the need for proper evaluation very alive.

Kristin Wadge gb

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