The maximum state aid limits have been increased
本帖最後由 parvej64 於14:24 編輯Audience audience has always been a key indicator in traditional public relations. But the fact that we can actually measure things in the digital world right now is shaky. Audience metrics typically estimate the number of eyeballs that may be obscuring any website linking to you. If The Daily Mail links to you your audience metrics will skyrocket. Why because the Daily Mail is a popular website. Did you sell anything as a direct consequence of it? Did it have any trackable commercial impact on your business? That metric might still be relevant given expert commentary for media coverage.
But in many digital PR cases this metric is mostly irrelevant because in those cases the story is just irrelevant to the business. Domain Authority Domain Authority or Domain Rating metric aims to bring clarity to the murky world of link building. This metric doesn't tell you anything about ROI other photo retouching than the fact that these numbers don't take into account the relevance of the link and the fact that they're just metrics taken in a broader context. If you get links from getting links in the long run this might be good news for you and cause for celebration. But how will you measure its value? Domain authority metrics cannot provide meaningful answers. The Average Domain Authority metric is even stranger.
https://static.wixstatic.com/media/aaba84_355bb3052c10465eb1f2deaf2cbf2afe~mv2.jpg/v1/fill/w_704,h_455,al_c,lg_1,q_80,enc_auto/aaba84_355bb3052c10465eb1f2deaf2cbf2afe~mv2.jpg
By the logic of average domain authority a campaign is obviously less successful if it has a natural series of low links in addition to high links. In this respect the indicator runs counter to reality. Short-term spikes Short-term traffic spikes can be beneficial but should generally not be considered digital PR goals. A digital PR campaign might drive traffic to your website in the short term, but what are the intents of those users? A handful of well-executed product-focused digital PR campaigns do generate relevant conversions. Such sports are great but rare. The referral traffic behind digital PR in most cases is low-intent traffic.
頁:
[1]