Insights

Picture by Javy Luzania on Unsplash
16. Mar 2026

HOW TO MEASURE THE SUCCESS OF PR AND CORPORATE COMMUNICATION

HOW TO MEASURE THE SUCCESS OF PR AND CORPORATE COMMUNICATION

“You can only manage what you can measure”: this principle holds truer today than ever before. The pressure on communications departments to deliver results has increased significantly in recent years. Senior management and board members expect robust evidence of the actual contribution that PR and corporate communications make to the company’s success.

Maintaining media contacts and placing content is no longer enough. Those responsible for the budget must demonstrate impact. Gut feeling and isolated success stories are not a sound basis for this. What is needed is data-driven communication that makes impact transparent and enables strategic management.

Media monitoring is more than just a digital press review

Media monitoring is a key component of this. In the past, it was often limited to collecting clippings and documenting mentions. But is that still enough?

No. Today, professional media monitoring systematically analyses how visible a company is within its relevant competitive environment and in what context it is perceived. Among other things, it answers the following questions:

  • How visible is my company compared to defined competitors?
  • In what context are we mentioned?
  • Are we cited as experts, or merely mentioned in passing?
  • In which leading media outlets do we actually feature?
  • Are our core strategic messages and positioning conveyed in the coverage?

It is particularly in the B2B sector that the difference between activity and impact becomes apparent. Ten mentions in relatively irrelevant media often have less strategic value than a well-researched specialist article in a leading publication read by decision-makers.

Monitoring therefore provides not just figures, but a basis for decision-making. It highlights where communication is effective, where opportunities lie, and where efforts need to be refocused.

From communication objectives to key performance indicators

A clear definition of objectives is essential for a robust measurement of success. Key performance indicators must not be viewed in isolation, but must be directly derived from the organisation’s communication and business objectives.

A company seeking to increase brand awareness requires different indicators to one that wishes to strengthen its position as a thought leader in a future-oriented field or specifically support its sales efforts.
Depending on the objective, the following key performance indicators may be relevant, for example:

Increase brand awareness

  • Reach and quality of media coverage
  • Presence in clearly defined target media
  • Share of voice compared to competitors

Build thought leadership

  • Tone of coverage
  • Proportion of qualified expert quotes
  • Thematic positioning within the desired context

Support sales

  • Sharing via social media
  • Interactions with published content
  • Growth in website traffic and enquiries following publications

Optimising communication and making sales support visible

When used correctly, key performance indicators enable a nuanced assessment of communication performance and provide concrete starting points for optimisation.

In practice, it is repeatedly evident that companies with a consistent media presence in relevant trade and business publications build trust more quickly. Potential customers are often already familiar with the company from independent sources before they speak to the sales team for the first time. This reduces the need for explanation and can shorten decision-making processes.

The example of a software provider

A typical example from the B2B technology sector: over a period of several months, a software provider consistently positions itself as an expert in a clearly defined future-oriented topic. At the same time, its visibility in the leading media relevant to the target audience increases.

And suddenly, the doors for the sales team are wide open. Because the company is increasingly perceived as a well-known provider, the sales team has a completely different basis for discussion. They do not first have to convince prospects of the company’s merits, but can quickly address specific solutions.

Such effects cannot be attributed solely to a single publication. Taken together, however, they are measurable and can be strategically managed.

Modern tools ensure greater agility and precision

AI-powered monitoring tools now track large parts of the media landscape in near real time. They identify emerging trends, analyse competitive dynamics and provide structured insights.

This significantly increases speed and transparency. At the same time, technology does not replace strategic assessment. Particularly when it comes to complex specialist topics, human judgement remains crucial for correctly assessing context, relevance and risks.

The combination of data-driven analysis and strategic interpretation makes all the difference.

Key Takeaways

  • Modern media monitoring provides the data foundation for strategic decisions in corporate communications.
  • It creates transparency for senior management and other stakeholders.
  • It transforms communication from an elusive cost factor into a quantifiable contribution to value creation.
  • Measurability enables control. And control enables impact.