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International association for the measurement and evaluation of communication
Every fast changing industry has its jargon.
The lexicon emerges to aid efficient communication, but that efficiency is only achieved when everyone knows what the words and phrases really mean, and uses them consistently.
This glossary aims to help secure that consistency sooner than otherwise.
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
Allows users of the Google+ social network to recommend websites and other things online; similar in use to Facebook’s like button.
the act of seeking third-party support for cause through the act of persuasion. Engagement with an agenda.
A step-by-step problem solving procedure; an established, recursive computational procedure for solving a problem in a finite number of steps.
The International Association for Measurement and Evaluation of Communication is the global trade body and professional institute for agencies and practitioners who provide media measurement, evaluation and communication research.
A specified group within a defined public targeted for influence.
Advertising value equivalence; a discredited approach to gauging the value of public relations (or media relations more precisely). See Barcelona Principles.
A series of statements to guide best practice in PR measurement that were endorsed after a vote of global delegates at the AMEC European Measurement Summit in 2010:
A series of content, typically text or image, published on a web page in sequential date order focused on a subject or issue and encouraging interaction. Also see vlog.
A software application that runs automated tasks over the Internet. Typically, bots perform tasks that are both simple and structurally repetitive, at a much higher rate than would be possible for a human alone.
A ‘bounce’ is when a visitor to a website only views a single page before leaving. Bounce rate is the percentage of visits to a webpage where this occurs. A high bounce rate indicates a lack of engagement.
Business Performance Management; the disciplined approach to management encompassing metric selection, measurement and organizational learning. The Balanced Scorecard is reportedly the dominant BPM framework amongst the Global 2000.
Chartered Institute of Public Relations. The CIPR is the professional body for the UK public relations industry, providing training and events, news and research.
Each instance when a visitor follows a hyperlink from one page to another, or expects some other action.
Council of Public Relations Firms, the trade association for public relations firms in the US.
Canadian Public Relations Society.
A copy of a document or other digital file is pulled from a web server to the user’s Internet connected device. When a user accesses a web page, it’s actually downloaded from a web server to the user’s browser, but this isn’t usually what’s meant when the word is invoked.
Third-party media coverage secured through a relationship or news worthy event, rather than paid-for advertising or other means of securing media. Includes on- and off-line media. Often used synonymously with public relations, but public relations is not defined by media.
Occupy or attract someone’s interest or attention; involve someone in a conversation or discussion.
The making of a judgement about the amount, number, or value of something.
The aggregated published or acknowledged readership numbers for all content in which a brand or organisation receive published content. (See impressions, and opportunities to see.)
An online site hosted by a community to discuss and interact about its area of interest.
The amount of times that an event occurs. Often used in conjunction with reach (see Reach and Frequency).
The logged request for a file on a webpage and images and other digital assets on that page made by a browser, a search engine or a webcrawler. Commonly confused as a count of the number of times that the page has been viewed in its entirety. Also, see media hits.
International Communications Consultancy Association.
Commonly used when analysing how much visual presence and ‘wow factor’ a piece of content carries. Is often measured in a number of different ways by different companies and commonly results in the use of a scoring system. Component impact measures might include size of headline, font, article, presence of imagery, position in publication etc.
The aggregated published or acknowledged readership numbers for all content in which a brand or organisation receives earned content (see eyeballs and opportunities to see). For web content, an impression is counted as each time some content is loaded into a browser.
You have been influenced when you think in a way you wouldn’t otherwise have thought or do something you wouldn’t otherwise have done. There is currently no scalable facility to ascertain or infer who or what caused someone to change their mind or behaviour. Metrics often presented as measuring influence (eg. Klout) do not measure influence, rather the propensity for an individual’s social media contributions to be shared, and the reach of that sharing, and this idea is increasingly being rechristened social capital.
The Institute for Public Relations, a US based independent non-profit foundation dedicated to the science beneath the art of public relations.
A matter, typically in dispute, between two or more interested parties.
A well-known service that purports to measure influence.
Key performance indicator(s); define a set of values against which to measure success. KPIs must be defined to reflect objectives and strategy, and will be sufficiently robust for the measurement to be repeatable. Quantitative KPIs can be presented as a number, ratio or percentage. KPI’s tend to be:
Allows users of the Facebook social network to recommend websites and other things online; similar in use to Google+’s +1 facility.
Someone who reads social media content but doesn’t actively participate in debate and communication.
Content that is automatically discovered, presented and published by machines for humans. May be considered alongside paid, owned and earned media.
The action of measuring something; ascertaining the size, amount, or degree of something by using an instrument or device; assessing the importance, effect, or value of something.
An item or piece of content to be counted or measured. Not to be confused with hits.
A component of public relations focused on journalists and bloggers as intermediaries to the audience you wish to reach.
A script on a website with a submission form that allows visitors to post messages (called “threads” or “posts”) on your website for others to read. These messages are usually sorted within discussion categories, or topics, chosen by the host, or possibly the visitor. A messageboard is also called a web board or a forum.
A system or standard of measurement; (in business) a set of figures or statistics that measure results.
Online short form communication services that facilitate the public exchange of text, video and image links. Popular microblogs include Plurk, Twitter, Tumblr, Posterous, identi.ca, Yammer, and Jaiku. China tends to have its own popular microblogging sites that include Sina Weibo and Tencent Wiebo.
A statement of why an organisation exists; often described alongside the organisation’s vision and values.
Reason(s) for acting or behaving in a particular way.
The Media Rating Council (→) is a USA based industry-funded organisation established in the early 1960s at the behest of the US Congress after the Harris Hearings on Broadcast Ratings with the remit to review and accredit audience rating services. It exists to improve the quality of audience measurement by rating services and to provide a better undertstanding of the applications and limitations of rating information. It does this through three main activities:
Modified tweet (see RT); when a Twitter user lightly edits or appends another Twitter user’s tweet before forwarding it to their network.
(NPS) – an approach to quantifying customer loyalty and advocacy based on customers’ answers to the question: ‘Would you feel comfortable recommending us to others?’ →
A specific aim of an organisation.
Opportunities to see. The aggregated published or acknowledged readership numbers for all content in which a brand or organisation receives earned content. See also eyeballs and impressions.)
Something that has happened as the result of a campaign. In public relations this would typically be defined as a measurable change in awareness, knowledge, attitude, opinion, behaviour or reputation metrics.
In PR terms, the material and activity that the PR professional generates such as a press release, email, events etc. as well as the ensuing media coverage that is generated. Outputs will also include proactive communication by an organisation on its owned media channels and properties.
What an audience now understands having been exposed to content about an organisation or a brand. Out-take occurs before an outcome, although some pundits ignore out-take and just discuss outputs and outcomes.
Media channels that are owned by or in the control of an organisation or a brand. Typically these will include websites, company blogs, newsletters and brand accounts in social media.
A request for a file from a webserver whose type has been defined as a page in the log analysis of the web server. One page view may account for many web hits.
According to Google: ‘PageRank reflects our view of the importance of web pages by considering more than 500 million variables and 2 billion terms. Pages that we believe are important receive a higher PageRank and are more likely to appear at the top of the search results.’ →
Content that has been generated as a result of a purchase such as an advert or an advertorial.
An audio or video clip that is available for download online to listen to or watch at a time of the recipients choosing. Originally used to describe a series of content, the term is often now used to describe a single piece of content.
The Public Relations Consultants Association is the professional body that represents UK PR consultancies, in-house communications teams, PR freelancers and individuals. The PRCA promotes all aspects of public relations and internal communications work, helping teams and individuals maximise the value they deliver to clients and organisations. →
The Public Relations Society of America is the world’s largest organisation of public relations professionals with more than 21,000 members across the United States. →
The Public Relations Student Society of America has 10,000 members at colleges and universities internationally. →
A management function that focuses on two-way communication and fostering of mutually beneficial relationships between an organisation and its publics. Public relations is often defined in terms of earned media, but all approaches to media are valid.
A dis-aggregated number of people (or percentage of an audience) that have been exposed to content. ‘Reach’ differs from impressions, opportunities to see and eyeballs in that it counts the actual number of people exposed to coverage rather than the number of ‘opportunities’ to see the coverage. It is a widely mis-used term in the industry and should only be used when readership data has been dis-aggregated to take account of cross readership patterns.
A common metric quantifying campaign success predominantly used and accepted in advertising. It couples the reach metric with frequency which is the average number of times that each person has been reached, or exposed, to the content.
When a bloger effectively endorses another blogger’s post by posting it facsimile to their own.
The way in which two or more people or things are connected, or the state of being connected.
Closely connected or appropriate to the matter in hand.
A subset of the total data pool that accurately reflects the findings of the whole; defined mathematically.
The beliefs or opinions that are generally held about someone or something.
The power to evoke enduring images, memories, and emotions.
A performance measure used to evaluate the efficiency of an investment or to compare the efficiency of a number of different investments. To calculate ROI, the benefit (return) of an investment is divided by the cost of the investment; the result is expressed as a percentage or a ratio. For the avoidance of doubt, there is no such thing as ‘non-financial ROI’. If this phrase is invoked it may be to convey the importance of non-financial metrics and their vital role in business performance management.
Retweet; when a Twitter user endorses another Twitter users’ tweet by forwarding it to their network.
Computationally trying to determine the meaning of language, of a corpus.
Often used interchangeably with tone, but more precisely refers to the feelings the author is trying to convey.
A subtopic of semantic analysis; computationally trying to determine the author’s emotional regard for or attitude towards something from the text alone; usually expressed on a 3- or 5-point ordinal scale (eg, very unfavourable, unfavourable, neutral, favourable, very favourable).
Search engine optimization; the process of editing a webpage to help maximize its PageRank and similar quantifications of its relevance to particular search terms.
The quality of being worthy of attention; importance.
Websites that collect content from multiple sources and re-presents it in one location.
The application of search, indexing, semantic analysis and business intelligence technologies to the task of identifying, tracking, listening to and participating in the distributed conversations about a particular brand, product or issue, with emphasis on quantifying the trend in each conversation’s sentiment and influence.
Websites and services that allow users to store, manage, organise and share links of content from across the web. Examples include Delicious, Reddit, Stumbleupon, Digg, Pinterest.
A phrase growing in use to substitute for the inappropriate use of the word influence when it comes to services such as Klout, PeerIndex, PeopleBrowsr and Traackr. Social capital is often taken to mean the frequency with which a source’s social media contributions are shared, and the reach of that sharing. Not every social share is accretive to social capital. Social capital is destroyed when stuff is shared in disagreement, disgust or mockery for example.
Media that isn’t traditional / ‘industrial’ / ‘mass’ media; media that is interactive.
Can be either content or user accounts (for example on Twitter and Facebook). The content is often auto-generated and designed solely to promote a sale, a fraud or often to promote porn. The content is mass distributed and has no element of a conversation to it.
Consists of social media, applications, services and the network of devices.
A ‘spam blog’ is a blog used to promote affiliate websites with the intention of increasing search engine ranking or to sell products or adverts.
A person or organisation with an interest or concern in our organisation or something our organisation is involved in. (Whilst this definition includes competitors, they’re not normally classified as stakeholders.)
Michael Porter defines strategy to be about selecting the set of activities in which an organisation will excel to create a sustainable difference in the marketplace, and thereby creating sustained value for its shareholders (or sustainable value in the case of non-profits).
A group of PR trade bodies working together to lead the profession towards measuring social media in a meaningful and credible manner. The coalition includes AMEC, CPRF and the IPR.
A loose body of interested parties looking to extend the work of The Coalition to include other marketing disciplines which social media also touches.
Often used interchangeably with sentiment, but more accurately refers to the general character and attitude the words convey.
Open to public scrutiny.
A person that lurks on message boards and social media properties making inflammatory comments.
Firm belief in the reliability, truth, or ability of someone or something.
Describes what’s important to an organisation; often described alongside the organisation’s mission and vision.
Describes what an organisation wants to be; often described alongside the organisation’s mission and values.
A series of web page requests from the same uniquely identified client (eg, laptop or smartphone) with a time limit of 30 minutes between each page request.
A blog created using video content, typically focussed on a cause or special interest.
A website facilitating collaborative editing. The best known wiki is Wikipedia.
The Word of Mouth Marketing Association is a non-profit organisation dedicated to advancing and advocating the discipline of credible word of mouth marketing. →
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