BrandTherapy Notes #4: Measuring the Right Thing With Social Media
Social media feels ineffective when goals are unclear. Small businesses often measure the wrong metrics instead of tracking what drives real business outcomes.
BrandTherapy Notes - Brenits Creative, Andy Brenits

I get this question a lot:
“How can small businesses measure the effectiveness of their social media marketing?”

Here’s the short answer:

You don’t.

You don’t measure social media.
You measure whether it’s doing what you asked it to do.

Consider This

Social media isn’t a single activity. It’s a channel. And channels don’t have success metrics on their own.

What does have metrics are goals.

Before you look at likes, reach, or engagement, you need to answer one simple question:

What is this supposed to accomplish?

  • Was the goal to:
  • Grow your email list?
  • Drive traffic to a specific page?
  • Increase awareness for a new offer?
  • Start more conversations or inquiries?
  • Build credibility over time?

Each of those goals requires different content and different measurements.

  • If your goal was email subscribers, follower growth doesn’t matter.
  • If your goal was awareness, website conversions aren’t the right metric yet.
  • If your goal was conversations, impressions alone won’t tell you anything useful.

Why this matters

Most small businesses feel frustrated with social media because they’re trying to evaluate it after the fact.

  • They post consistently.
  • They look at the numbers.
  • And then they ask, “Is this working?”

But without a defined goal, there’s nothing to evaluate against. Just noise.

That’s when social media starts to feel like a waste of time instead of a strategic tool.

Here’s the thing:
When social media feels ineffective, it’s usually not a content problem.
It’s a clarity problem.

My advice going forward

Before your next post or campaign, slow down and answer these three questions:

What is the primary goal of this content?
One goal. Not three.

What action would signal success?
Clicks, signups, replies, saves, inquiries. Be specific.

What metric actually reflects that action?
Not what’s easiest to see, but what matters.

Once the goal is clear, measurement becomes obvious.
And social media starts to feel a lot less mysterious.

If you want to be more intentional before you post, AI can be a useful thinking partner.

If it’s helpful, here’s a simple prompt you can copy and paste into your AI tool:

I run a small business and want to use social media more strategically.

My business is: [brief description]
My primary audience is: [who you are trying to reach]

I am planning a social media post or short campaign with this goal: [choose one specific goal]

Help me:
– Clarify whether this goal is realistic for social media
– Suggest the most appropriate metric to track
– Explain what success would reasonably look like over 30–60 days
– Point out common mistakes businesses make when trying to achieve this goal on social media

Keep the advice practical and focused on small businesses with limited time and resources.

If you’re posting to social media but not sure what’s working or why, that’s usually a sign it’s time to realign activity with real business objectives.

That’s where clarity changes everything.

That’s all we have time for today.

Until your next BrandTherapy session,

Andy

P.S. I’m celebrating 10 years in business this month, and I’m extending a preferred anniversary rate on BrandTherapy to current clients and VIPs. If ongoing advisory support would be helpful in 2026, you can find the details here:
https://brenits.com/brandtherapy10/

P.P.S. If someone in your world is feeling stuck or overwhelmed by brand, marketing, or business decisions, an IdeaStorm is a simple way to get clarity. Details here:
https://brenits.com/ideastorm/

BrandTherapy Notes are short, private insights shared with clients and a small, intentionally chosen group. They’re quick check-ins from your brand and business advisor—useful, thought-provoking ideas to help keep momentum moving.

I’m Andy Brenits, a brand and business growth strategy advisor. I work with business owners and leaders who want clearer thinking around brand, marketing, and growth—before time, money, or momentum are wasted.

My perspective is shaped by nearly 30 years across brand strategy, creative leadership, teaching, and in-house roles inside complex organizations. I write about how strategy actually works in the real world, with a focus on clarity, judgment, and better decision-making over tactics or trends.

These insights are for people responsible for meaningful decisions and long-term outcomes, building thoughtful brands and sustainable businesses one clear move at a time.

If that sounds useful, you’re welcome to subscribe to The Creative Brief.

Looking for focused clarity? An IdeaStorm is a strategic session designed to help you get unstuck and see your next move clearly.

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