How to track QR code campaign effectiveness
How to track QR code campaign effectiveness:from Smart Insights Digital Marketing
A small business campaign example shows which calls-to-action work best
Giulia’s family runs the popular Italian restaurant ‘Al Gatto Nero’, in Poole in the UK, and they get customer interactions with QR Codes every day.
As there are several places she wants to use QR codes, Giulia decides to use the Campaigns and Sources to track which places give her the best results.
- Campaign #1: “Facebook – get more likes”
- Campaign #2: “enewsletter – get more sign-ups“
- Source #1 = “restaurant“
- Source #2 = “takeaway pizza boxes“
- Source #3 = “newspaper“
- QR Code #1= “Help us reach 500 Facebook likes leaflet” (Facebook, restaurant)
- QR Code = “Sign up to our enewsletter leaflet” (enewsletter, restaurant)
![Newsmailr Sign Up Widget](https://s3.amazonaws.com/newsmailr/customers/C10000022/T38/SUW9/AlGattosubscribe.png)
Looking at her tracking reports one month later, Giulia can see that…
- Her source “restaurant” generates good activity, with 25 enewsletter sign ups and 15 Facebook likes. So QR codes work well in her restaurant. Great!
- However the source “newspaper” only got 15 enewsletter sign ups, so QR codes in that newspaper didn’t work quite as well. Boo!
- Her campaign “takeaway pizza boxes” is the star performer however. She got 54 enewsletter sign ups and 21 Facebook likes. It seems when one customer orders pizzas to share, then all their friends also scan the QR code on the box. Share a pizza and share a QR Code – clever! Giulia rocks!
Remember… if Giulia had only created one QR Code, one Campaign and one Source, and used it everywhere, she would have no idea which was the best. If you do what Giulia did and use the Campaigns and Sources feature in FreeQRCodeTracker.com like a professional, you too will get professional results.
Back to those mouth-watering pizzas… I think I’ll go for a ‘Pizza Gatto Nero’, with extra rocket leaves and a glass of wine.
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