18 of 21 distributors in the Bardahl network survey said they track performance at least occasionally. But only 3 could easily share an analytics export. Most track engagement and follower growth but not sales, leads, or ROAS. This module is designed to close that gap by building a practical monthly measurement habit, starting from wherever you currently are.
The most important shift in this module is moving from measuring presence to measuring performance. Presence metrics tell you whether people saw your content. Performance metrics tell you whether your content drove commercial outcomes: traffic, leads, and sales. This module is about pointing your measurement in the right direction.
What you will learn
Module structure
Presence metrics (followers, impressions) tell you whether people saw your content. Performance metrics (link clicks, saves, profile visits) tell you whether your content generated commercial intent. Your reporting must include both, but your decisions should be driven by performance metrics.
Tier 1 and 2: Focus on four metrics: follower growth rate, reach, engagement rate, and link clicks. These give you a clear picture without requiring advanced analytics access.
Tier 3 and above: Add saves, story completion rate, and profile visits to build a more complete picture of content performance and purchase intent.
Do not use follower count or total impressions as your primary performance measure. These numbers increase simply because your page is active. The meaningful question is whether reach is growing relative to engagement, and whether engagement is generating link clicks.
A distributor running a Meta traffic campaign for 5-in-1 Cleaner with a $200 budget generates 480 link clicks. CPC: $0.42. CTR: 2.1%. Solid efficiency. But if the product listing those clicks land on has poor images and no detailed description, ROAS will be zero. Paid social KPIs must always be read alongside e-commerce KPIs. Paid drives the traffic. E-commerce converts it.
Tier 1 and 2: Track CPC, CTR, and total spend. These tell you whether your ads are generating clicks efficiently.
Tier 3: Add ROAS and CPA once conversion tracking is set up.
Tier 4 and 5: Add frequency monitoring and begin testing multiple creative variants to maintain CTR as frequency builds.
ACoS and ROAS are the two numbers that determine whether your paid activity is commercially sustainable. Section 4.2 of this toolkit introduced both. D5 is where you track them. If you are running marketplace ads and cannot report your ACoS, you cannot know whether you are running a profitable campaign or an expensive one.
Tier 1 and 2: Track sessions from social, units sold, and revenue. These three metrics tell you whether social activity is producing commercial results.
Tier 3: Add conversion rate, product page views, and marketplace CTR.
Tier 4 and above: Add ACoS, ROAS, AOV, and cart abandonment. Do not skip the foundational metrics to track everything at once.
In markets across the Middle East, Africa, and parts of Southern Europe, WhatsApp operates as a significant commerce-support layer. Customers use it to ask pre-purchase questions, request product guidance, and in some cases complete orders directly. Most tracking is manual or semi-manual. That is not a reason to skip it.
Do not treat WhatsApp as unmeasurable because it lacks a formal analytics dashboard. Enquiries generated and orders attributed can be tracked in a simple spreadsheet. A distributor who captures 30 WhatsApp enquiries per month and converts 12 of them to orders has commercially meaningful data, even without a single analytics platform involved. Manual tracking is better than no tracking.
For each platform, identify your two or three most important metrics and record them every month before adding anything else. Organic social: reach, engagement rate, link clicks. Paid social: CPC, CTR, ROAS. E-commerce: sessions from social, units sold, revenue. WhatsApp: enquiries generated, sales attributed. These twelve metrics, recorded every month, give you a commercially useful picture of your entire system.
What to record every month from Meta Business Suite
Open Meta Business Suite on desktop. Navigate to Insights, then Content. Set date range to previous calendar month. Click Export. Download the spreadsheet. This file contains all post-level performance data in one step.
What to record from Meta Ads Manager (leave blank if no paid activity this month)
What to record from GA4 (webshop) and Amazon Seller Central (marketplace)
What to record manually from WhatsApp Business (mark not applicable if WhatsApp is not active in your market)
Complete the template on the first working day of every month. A template completed ten days late is harder to fill accurately and harder to compare against the month before. Build the habit by treating the monthly report as a fixed commitment, not an optional review.
Tier 1: Your only goal is to establish a baseline. Complete the template for three consecutive months without judging the numbers. After three months you have a trend, and that trend becomes your first benchmark.
Tier 2: Compare your figures to the ranges above and identify your single weakest metric as your focus area for the next quarter.
Tier 3 and above: Use the benchmarks to set monthly improvement targets for each key metric and track progress formally.
Low Engagement Rate
If engagement rate is consistently below 1% on Facebook or below 2% on Instagram, your content is not addressing a problem your audience recognises, you are posting at the wrong times, or your format is not suited to how people consume content on that platform.
Response: Look at your top three posts from the past three months. Identify what they have in common: format, topic, product, or hook. Create more content that follows that pattern. For Bardahl, content that names a specific symptom (engine noise under load, oil consumption on a diesel, a cooling system warning light) consistently outperforms brand-generic content.
Low Link Clicks Despite Reasonable Engagement
Likes and comments but no link clicks means the call-to-action is not connecting. Either the CTA is unclear, the link is difficult to find, or the post gives people enough information to feel satisfied without clicking through.
Response: Make the CTA more direct. Instead of "available in our shop," use "Link to order Full Metal is in our bio." On Facebook, include the product link directly in post text. Use story link stickers on Instagram rather than relying on passive bio links.
High CPC or Low CTR on Paid Ads
A CTR below 0.8% or a rising CPC typically means the creative is not stopping the scroll. The opening image or first video frame is not immediately communicating a problem or benefit the audience cares about.
Response: An ad for Engine Stop Leak that opens with oil residue on a garage floor will outperform a product shot on a white background. Test one specific change at a time: swap the opening image, then measure CTR after three to five days before changing anything else.
Low ROAS or High ACoS
Low ROAS on Meta can mean either a traffic quality problem (wrong audience clicking) or a conversion problem (right audience not buying). High ACoS on Amazon typically means keywords are too broad, bids are too high, or listing quality is poor.
Response: Check conversion rate alongside ROAS. If conversion rate is healthy but ROAS is low, the problem is traffic volume or audience targeting. If conversion rate is very low, fix the product page before spending more. For B2 or 5-in-1 Cleaner on Amazon, ensure your listing title includes the specific search term buyers use (e.g. "diesel engine oil additive" or "fuel system cleaner petrol diesel").
Low Sessions from Social Despite Good Engagement
Good engagement but zero social-attributed sessions in GA4 almost always means a tracking gap. Your UTM parameters may be missing or broken, sending social traffic into the Direct bucket rather than the Organic Social bucket.
Response: Check your UTM tags before changing any content or strategy. Verify that every link you share is using consistent source and medium naming.
Do not change multiple things at once when a metric is underperforming. Change one element and test for five to seven days. One change, one test, one clear result. That discipline turns monthly reporting from record-keeping into a learning system.
Do not invest in paid tools before your free tool setup is working. Paid tools add value by improving visibility into data you are already collecting. If the underlying data collection is broken, a more expensive tool will not fix it. Fix the data foundation first.
The Pixel tells Meta Ads Manager when a visitor who came from your ad completes a purchase. Without it, ROAS cannot be calculated. This is the single most important technical step for any distributor running paid social campaigns.
In Meta Business Manager:
Navigate to Events Manager. Select Connect Data Sources, then Web. Follow the setup steps to receive your Pixel ID.
On Shopify:
Settings > Apps and Sales Channels > Facebook and Instagram > follow connection flow. No code required.
On WooCommerce:
Install Meta for WooCommerce plugin. Connect your Pixel ID and enable Purchase event. No code required.
Verify it is working:
Install the Meta Pixel Helper Chrome extension. Check that the Purchase event fires on your order confirmation page. Allow 2-3 days of campaign activity before checking ROAS in Ads Manager.
UTM parameters tell GA4 exactly where a visitor came from. Without them, social traffic appears as Direct and you cannot see which posts or campaigns are driving webshop visits.
Use the free Google Campaign URL Builder at ga-dev-tools.google/campaign-url-builder. Enter your destination URL, then fill in:
utm_medium: organic_social | paid_social
utm_campaign: b2_may26 | full_metal_q3 | engine_stop_leak_june
Copy the tagged URL. Shorten with Bitly. Use the Bitly link in your post, story, or ad. The tracking is preserved.
Critical: use the same naming convention every month. If you use "facebook" in one month and "Facebook_page" in another, GA4 treats them as separate sources and your comparison breaks.
GA4 e-commerce tracking records purchases, order values, and the items bought. Without it, GA4 shows traffic but cannot report conversion rate or revenue.
On Shopify:
Install Shopify Google and YouTube app from the Shopify App Store. Connect to your GA4 property. Standard e-commerce events (purchase, add_to_cart, view_item) send automatically.
On WooCommerce:
Install Google Site Kit plugin from the WordPress plugin directory. Connect to GA4. Purchase events populate within 24-48 hours.
Verify: place a test order. After 24 hours, check GA4 > Reports > Monetisation > E-commerce Purchases. If your order appears, tracking is working.
In Amazon Ads Campaign Manager: Reports > Create Report > Sponsored Products > Campaign performance > Schedule: Monthly. Amazon emails you the report at the start of each month with all your ACoS, ROAS, and spend data for the previous period.
For organic sales data, generate the Detail Page Sales and Traffic report manually from Seller Central > Reports > Business Reports each month.
A distributor sets up the full measurement stack over two weeks. Week 1: install Meta Pixel on Shopify via native integration, verify it fires on the order confirmation page, connect GA4 via the Google and YouTube app. Week 2: build their UTM naming convention, create UTM-tagged links for their 5-in-1 Cleaner page, shorten with Bitly, update link in bio. At month end: organic social from Business Suite, paid social from Ads Manager with ROAS now populating, webshop traffic and conversions from GA4, marketplace data from Seller Central. Full setup: two weeks. Monthly reporting time from that point: under one hour.
Hold the review in the first week of the following month, after the template is complete. At Tier 1 and 2 this may be a single person. At Tier 3 and above, include the person responsible for social content and the person responsible for commercial performance.
Work down the funnel in sequence. The first step where the answer is "no" is where the problem is located.
Do not review metrics in isolation. Reach up while engagement rate falls = wider but shallower audience. Link clicks up while sessions flat = UTM parameters broken. ROAS falling while conversion rate holds = traffic quality problem, not product page problem. Every metric has a relationship to at least one other metric. Read them together.
These are standing rules. When the condition is met, the action follows. No debate required.
Escalation to HQ is a commercial conversation. Most issues should be resolved locally using this framework. Escalate when HQ needs to know, when only HQ can address it, or when the opportunity is large enough for a shared response.
- ROAS consistently above 4.0 across two or more months: signal your market is ready for increased investment
- A content format generating unusually high engagement that is not in the global asset library
- A capability gap you cannot resolve with current resources (content assets, product specs, technical support)
- A marketplace pricing or listing problem that originates upstream of your local control
- Evidence that your market is ready to move up the maturity ladder and you need HQ confirmation
- Month-to-month fluctuations within normal variance
- Raw data without interpretation: share findings and what you believe they mean
- Problems diagnosable and fixable using this framework
One page. Three sections: (1) What the data shows — two to four key metrics with month-on-month comparison. (2) What it means commercially — your interpretation, the opportunity or risk, and the local context HQ may not have. (3) What you are asking for — a specific, actionable request. Budget approval. A content asset. A connection to another market. A decision only HQ can make.
D5 closes the loop on the commercial system built across D1 through D4. Section 5.1 defined the metrics. Section 5.2 gave you the template and benchmarks. Section 5.3 set up the tools. Section 5.4 built the review habit.
The goal was never a perfect dashboard. The goal is a consistent monthly practice of looking at the right numbers, connecting them to commercial outcomes, and making one specific decision better than the month before. That cycle, sustained over twelve months, is what maturity ladder progression looks like in practice.
A distributor who tracks presence is measuring whether people saw their content. A distributor who tracks performance is managing a commercial system. D5 is the module that makes that shift.
- Can you name the three most important metrics for each of your active channels?
- Do you know where to find and export each metric at the end of the month?
- Is your Meta Pixel installed and firing on your order confirmation page?
- Are your UTM parameters set up with a consistent naming convention?
- Do you have a date in your calendar for the first working day of next month to complete your template?