[ Summary ] Key takeaways
- Reach and impressions show how far your content travels.
- Saves, shares, and comments signal real engagement quality.
- Conversations and leads connect social to revenue.
- Track trends over time, not single-post spikes.
Why likes aren't enough
A like is the lowest-effort action a person can take. It tells you something mildly resonated, but not whether it drove interest, trust, or a sale. To understand what's working, look at the metrics tied to attention and intent.
The metrics that actually matter
Focus on a small set of signals that map to business value rather than vanity.
- Reach and impressions — how many people saw it.
- Saves and shares — content worth keeping or passing on.
- Comments and DMs — genuine conversations started.
- Leads and orders — the outcomes that matter most.
Count the conversations, not just the clicks
For most businesses, the real goal of social media is to start conversations that lead to sales. Tracking how many comments and DMs turned into customer conversations connects your content directly to revenue.
Read trends, not spikes
One viral post is nice, but direction matters more than any single result. Watch your numbers over weeks and months to see whether engagement and conversations are steadily climbing.
[ FAQ ] Frequently asked questions
Which social media metrics matter most for businesses?
Reach, engagement quality (saves, shares, comments), and the number of conversations and leads generated — these connect content to actual business outcomes.
Are likes a useful metric at all?
Likes offer a rough sense of resonance but shouldn't be your main measure. Prioritise metrics tied to attention and conversion instead.
