Beyond external KPIs, a great launch unites the entire company, boosting morale and engagement. Consider tracking employee sentiment as a secondary, intangible metric, as it makes everyone—even in non-customer-facing roles—feel invested in the company's success.

Related Insights

Avoid the trap of trying to achieve everything with one launch. Instead, define a single primary KPI—such as press mentions, sales rep message adoption, or a specific user action—and build the entire campaign strategy around optimizing for that one goal.

Instead of pitching the abstract value of 'delight,' connect it to concrete business objectives. By asking a founder, 'Are users proud enough to recommend our product?' the focus shifted from a vague concept to a clear driver of word-of-mouth growth, making it easier to get buy-in.

If everyone in the company instantly understands and agrees with your launch message, it might be too safe. A great launch reframes the market, which should provoke some initial internal skepticism. This indicates the message is bold enough to break through external noise.

Not all design impact can be quantified with metrics. When data is unavailable, frame your value by highlighting contributions to competitive parity, internal team efficiency, or bug reduction. This holistic view of business health resonates with leadership beyond just product managers.

For Nike's innovators, the ultimate measure of success isn't market performance but the user's genuine joy upon experiencing the product. This "athlete's smile" confirms that a meaningful problem has been solved, serving as a leading indicator that commercial success will naturally follow.

There is a direct correlation between a marketer's genuine excitement for a campaign and its eventual performance. Passion leads to higher quality execution, more interesting ideas, and authenticity that resonates with the market. Teams that are just “punching a clock” will produce mediocre work that fails to break through the noise.

View metrics like call volume and conversion rates not just as numbers for your manager, but as your personal scoreboard. This perspective provides immediate, unbiased feedback on your own performance. It shifts the focus from external pressure to internal analysis, empowering you to identify weak spots and take ownership of your improvement.

Shift your team's language from tracking output (e.g., 'deployed XYZ API') to tracking outcomes. Reframe milestones to focus on the business capability you have 'unlocked' for other teams. This small linguistic change reorients the team toward business impact and clarifies your contribution to metrics like NPS.

Solely measuring a team's output fails to capture the health of their collaboration. A more robust assessment includes tracking goal achievement, team psychological safety, role clarity, and the speed of execution. This provides a holistic view of team effectiveness.

The team moves beyond surface-level KPIs like open and click rates. They measure success by its contribution to broader business objectives: generating more value with less cost and investment. This focus on operational efficiency ensures marketing activities are directly tied to tangible financial outcomes and long-term customer value.