Pardot Reporting: How To Justify Your Marketing Spend
Posted: Mon Dec 23, 2024 4:16 am
This blog was written before Pardot was renamed to Marketing Cloud Account Engagement. You can read more about the name change and what it means here.
The goal for any marketer is to be able to build marketing campaigns, track performance and show leads generated as a direct result of marketing to the rest of the business. In doing so, it justifies marketing spend and helps the team obtain more budget for future marketing campaigns as ROI has clearly been demonstrated.
Pardot reporting empowers the marketing team by automatically updating these key reports, which is pretty useful because exporting stats and creating reports in Excel/Google Sheets is such a ball-ache!
Using the reporting in Pardot isn’t just a massive france telephone number time saver, it is a living and breathing part of the system that updates in real time which means you can be confident that the stats you bring into your meetings are completely up to date.
How do Pardot campaigns work?
Cost
It all begins with a new campaign. An often overlooked part of this campaign creation is the Cost’ option. Here, you should input the campaign budget (you can always come back and reduce this once the campaign spending has stopped, to update the real figure). This is important because this lets Pardot figure out the cost per prospect, cost per opportunity and ROI % of the campaign.
Tip: A campaign in Pardot should be created when you want to track the performance of a new thematic touchpoint. For example, an event you attend would have it’s own campaign created as there will be emails, lists, landing pages, forms and other assets linked to this event/campaign.
Tracking code
Once the campaign is created, it will generate a campaign tracking code which you can place on your website or 3rd party landing page. You’ll want to add this tracking code to pages that you’re promoting through paid ads, events, direct mail and any other offline marketing. For example, you might want to track how many new prospects each salesperson has found by setting up landing pages with a unique tracking code on each and having a unique URL on their business cards. Campaign Tom Ryan Business Cards’ could be set up and so on.
For landing pages hosted within Pardot, you do not need to add the tracking code as Pardot will automatically add this when you assign the landing page to the campaign in the editor.
Creating/assigning assets to the campaign
I mentioned this above and if you’ve ever created an asset in Pardot, you’ll know that you need to assign all assets to a campaign. It’s a compulsory setting for a reason, it let’s Pardot know where to attribute ROI. If a brand new prospect views your landing page from an event 6 months ago and then converts today, you can attribute the value back to the event and make a data driven decision as to whether you should attend next year.
Understanding Visitors, Prospects, MQL’s, SQL’s and won deals
To learn more about the terminology in the Pardot reports, check out our quick reference Pardot terminology infographic (If anyone has a better/shorter/cooler name for this, please send me your suggestion).
Synchronisation with Salesforce Opportunities
The best part about all of this closed loop Pardot reporting is the integration with Salesforce opportunities. Once an opportunity is created and subsequently closed won, this updated the ROI figures and campaign stats. Remember you updated the cost of the campaign? This is where it ties in.
Important: To tell Pardot which prospect is assigned to the opportunity, you need to update the contact role in the opportunity. This then updates the reporting in Pardot, attributing the opportunity back to the prospect record.
The goal for any marketer is to be able to build marketing campaigns, track performance and show leads generated as a direct result of marketing to the rest of the business. In doing so, it justifies marketing spend and helps the team obtain more budget for future marketing campaigns as ROI has clearly been demonstrated.
Pardot reporting empowers the marketing team by automatically updating these key reports, which is pretty useful because exporting stats and creating reports in Excel/Google Sheets is such a ball-ache!
Using the reporting in Pardot isn’t just a massive france telephone number time saver, it is a living and breathing part of the system that updates in real time which means you can be confident that the stats you bring into your meetings are completely up to date.
How do Pardot campaigns work?
Cost
It all begins with a new campaign. An often overlooked part of this campaign creation is the Cost’ option. Here, you should input the campaign budget (you can always come back and reduce this once the campaign spending has stopped, to update the real figure). This is important because this lets Pardot figure out the cost per prospect, cost per opportunity and ROI % of the campaign.
Tip: A campaign in Pardot should be created when you want to track the performance of a new thematic touchpoint. For example, an event you attend would have it’s own campaign created as there will be emails, lists, landing pages, forms and other assets linked to this event/campaign.
Tracking code
Once the campaign is created, it will generate a campaign tracking code which you can place on your website or 3rd party landing page. You’ll want to add this tracking code to pages that you’re promoting through paid ads, events, direct mail and any other offline marketing. For example, you might want to track how many new prospects each salesperson has found by setting up landing pages with a unique tracking code on each and having a unique URL on their business cards. Campaign Tom Ryan Business Cards’ could be set up and so on.
For landing pages hosted within Pardot, you do not need to add the tracking code as Pardot will automatically add this when you assign the landing page to the campaign in the editor.
Creating/assigning assets to the campaign
I mentioned this above and if you’ve ever created an asset in Pardot, you’ll know that you need to assign all assets to a campaign. It’s a compulsory setting for a reason, it let’s Pardot know where to attribute ROI. If a brand new prospect views your landing page from an event 6 months ago and then converts today, you can attribute the value back to the event and make a data driven decision as to whether you should attend next year.
Understanding Visitors, Prospects, MQL’s, SQL’s and won deals
To learn more about the terminology in the Pardot reports, check out our quick reference Pardot terminology infographic (If anyone has a better/shorter/cooler name for this, please send me your suggestion).
Synchronisation with Salesforce Opportunities
The best part about all of this closed loop Pardot reporting is the integration with Salesforce opportunities. Once an opportunity is created and subsequently closed won, this updated the ROI figures and campaign stats. Remember you updated the cost of the campaign? This is where it ties in.
Important: To tell Pardot which prospect is assigned to the opportunity, you need to update the contact role in the opportunity. This then updates the reporting in Pardot, attributing the opportunity back to the prospect record.