Measuring Your Website ROI

Measure your website ROI
Analytics / Inbound Marketing / Lead Generation / Web Design

Measuring Your Website ROI

Key data points helps with measuring your website ROI

When it comes to marketing for catering companies and small businesses, there are many commonalities across the board.

Over the years, we’ve found that these have been your marketing goals (as they frequently have been our marketing goals for you, too):

  • Increase in brand awareness
  • Growth in brand engagement/interaction
  • Increase in qualified leads
  • Growth in revenue and sales

In fact, all of these match the goals that most marketers have in general for their companies and clients—not just catering companies.

Obviously, as marketing goals, they should all drive your marketing efforts. However, it’s sometimes difficult to determine if your specific efforts are contributing to your results or not.

Measuring Your Website ROI

Throughout this article, we are going to walk you through some of our favorite tools to measure your return on marketing investment—specifically your website.

You will find ways to calculate your return on website investment, or your website’s value. However, we would like to point out that, as with many marketing tools, there is no perfect way to measure the value of a website, because in reality, it really does much more than what this calculator determines. (Your website is key in building and promoting your brand identity.)

The first two goals listed above certainly are heavily impacted by your website’s design, navigation, messaging, etc., but those goals aren’t easily traceable. Please keep in mind that if your website is outdated, or inefficient, or does not accurately reflect your brand identity, then it will probably negatively impact your first two (perhaps most important baseline) goals.

Measuring Return on Website Investment

Now that we prepared you on what you can expect to find in this article, below are the five numbers you’ll need to determine your current website’s ROI.

  1. Website traffic
  2. Website conversions
  3. Closing ratio on website leads
  4. Average catering sale (in dollars)
  5. Profit per event

Don’t worry if some of these numbers sound scary or difficult to find. We will help you find all of this information.

Step 1: Measuring Return on Website Investment

For this step, it’s simple to find this number by accessing your Google Analytics account. We suggest calculating your average monthly number of visitors by adjusting the dates of the analytics based on how long you have had your website.

For example, if you launched on March 1, 2015, take the statistics from March 1, 2015, through March 1, 2016. For these 24 months average out the traffic per month with this calculation.

Total Visitors / Total Months = Monthly Traffic

Measuring your website ROI discover your website traffic

Step 2: Determine Your Current Conversion Rates

How many website visitors do you get to act on your website’s calls to action each month? Calls to action, in this case, would include things such as:

  • Contact form submissions
  • Live chat conversations
  • Emails
  • Phone calls
  • Menu downloads

There are no formulas to determine this number; it’s simple addition using the information you would collect via your catering software (i.e., Caterease) or sales/marketing team.

BONUS TIP:
As a side note and something of which you should be aware, the average web conversion rates among all industries are two to five percent.

To help you determine where your website stands in comparison to others, we suggest using this formula:

(Conversions per Month) / (Monthly Website Visitors) = Conversion Rate
If your conversion rate is in the upper tier of that two to five percent, your website is doing a good job converting visitors into leads. Where you might want to look for growth, then, is through generating traffic so that you can increase those leads (a higher amount of visitors with the same conversion rate means more leads!). Learn how to increase website conversions rate.

Measuring your website ROI determine your current conversion rates

Step 3: Determine Your Closing Ratio

The next step is to determine your closing ratio on website leads. How many sales inquiries do you turn into actual sales? Find out using this formula:

[(Total Signed Contracts) / (Total Proposals)] = Closing Ratio
Now, take your closing ratio and complete this calculation:

(Website Leads per Month) x (Closing Ratio) = Number of Website-Generated Events per Month

How to Measure Your Web Site ROI

Step 4: Calculate Your Average Catering Sale

The next bit of information can also be found within your own team, or via your catering software.

Simply complete this formula:

Total Number of Sales / Total Number of Events = Average Sale

Measuring your website ROI calculate your average sale

Step 5: Calculate Your Average Gross Profit Per Event

The final piece of information to determine your return on website investment is to quantify the profit on your average catering job/event (including food, labor, transportation, outside rentals, services and venue fees, etc.).

Now, conduct this simple formula:

(Avg. Catering Sale) – (Avg. COGS) = Gross Profit per Event

Now you have everything you need to determine your website’s ROI.

Our example shows us that Company A’s website should bring in $10,000 in new business each month.
If it costs $30,000 to build Company A’s website, and the above targets are met each month, then in just three months, Company A will experience a full return on its investment, and everything from there will be sheer profit!

Measuring your website ROI calculate your average gross profit per event

Now you have everything you need to determine your website’s ROI.

Our example shows us that Company A’s website should bring in $10,000 in new business each month.
If it costs $30,000 to build Company A’s website, and the above targets are met each month, then in just three months, Company A will experience a full return on its investment, and everything from there will be sheer profit!

*Companies don’t always use the same numbers when calculating ROI. Often times, companies are only concerned about covering variable expenses; therefore use gross profit (as we have used in the example). Other companies believe all expenses should be considered (and covered) when calculating; therefore use net profit. If you would rather use net profit, simple substitute the numbers in step five.

Before we finish, we certainly have a disclaimer (which deals with average profit per event):

Measuring your website ROI

The moral of the story

Does your website rank well? Is it well-optimized and fully functional based on your target markets, geographical region, brand, etc.?

Now that you have your calculations and numbers, you should be able to see where a really dynamite website will not only pay for itself, but where it will really help drive in the hard numbers.

If you already have a dynamite website, then your marketing plan should involve tactics that help drive up those very first numbers we discovered: website traffic. That number is the beginning of all of these calculations and directly affects the outcome of your final number: $$ you get from your website each month.

Hire ThePixel to build your next website!

Since our founding in 2008, we’ve created and launched many types of business websites. Over the last decade and we’ve learned a thing or two! That’s why we’re masters of our craft, let us help you build the website of your dreams – one that generates traffic, leads and conversions.

Cedar Rapids Iowa Digital Agency Services

Are you ready to start? If yes, contact ThePixel and one of our representatives will guide you through the website phases and how the process works either by a Zoom Meeting or phone.