In the first post in this series, we talked about the most important place to start when evaluating your chapter’s marketing:
You have to know what success looks like before you can measure it.
Before promoting an event, meeting, or course, ask yourself:
“If this marketing works, what should people do?”
Most chapter marketing goals fall into a few simple categories:
Once you define the goal, the next step is knowing what to watch to see whether your efforts are working.
The good news is this: you do not need a complicated analytics dashboard or a marketing background to do this well.
In fact, most chapter leaders only need to pay attention to five simple metrics to get a clear picture of how their marketing is performing.
These metrics act like signals. They help you understand whether your message reached people, whether it motivated them to act, and whether your chapter is building momentum over time.
Let’s walk through each one.
For most chapter events, registrations are the first and clearest sign that your marketing is working.
When someone registers for an event, they are doing more than just reading your email or seeing your post. They are taking action.
That action shows:
If registrations start coming in shortly after you promote an event, that is a strong signal that your message resonated with your audience.
If registrations are slow, it does not automatically mean the event itself is weak.
More often, it means one of these things:
These are all fixable problems.
For chapter leaders, registrations are helpful because they are easy to track. Most event platforms, forms, or registration tools automatically record them.
Over time, you may begin to notice patterns such as:
Those insights help you improve future events.
Registrations tell you that people were interested.
Attendance tells you whether they followed through.
Every chapter has experienced this situation: a strong number of registrations, but fewer people actually show up.
This does not mean your marketing failed. But it does reveal an important piece of the picture.
Comparing registrations versus attendance can help you identify opportunities to improve communication before the event.
For example:
Sometimes the difference between strong attendance and weak attendance is simply a well-timed reminder email or message a day or two before the event.
Tracking attendance also helps you evaluate overall engagement with your chapter.
You may notice patterns such as:
Those patterns help guide future programming and promotion.
Email remains one of the most effective ways for chapters to promote events and communicate with members.
But many leaders feel unsure about how to interpret email metrics.
One of the simplest indicators to watch is email open rate.
Open rate tells you one thing:
Did people notice your email enough to open it?
That is important, because if people never open the message, they will never see the details of the event.
It is helpful to remember that email opens are usually influenced more by the subject line than by the content of the email itself.
For example, these two subject lines might produce very different results:
The second subject line is clearer about the value of the event, which makes people more likely to open it.
That said, open rates should not be treated like a grade. They are simply a directional signal.
If open rates are unusually low, it may be worth adjusting:
If open rates are healthy but registrations are low, that tells you something else: people saw the message but did not feel compelled to act.
That insight can help you refine your messaging next time.
Clicks are another helpful signal because they show active engagement.
While open rates indicate whether someone noticed your message, clicks indicate that someone was interested enough to take the next step.
Examples include:
This metric can also highlight a common marketing mistake: asking people to do too many things at once.
If an email contains multiple links, multiple announcements, and several different calls to action, readers may not know what to do first.
Clear marketing works best when there is one obvious next step.
For example:
When the action is simple and clear, clicks usually increase.
For chapter leaders, clicks help answer an important question:
Did people move beyond reading and actually engage?
The final metric is less about individual events and more about the overall health of your chapter’s engagement.
This is where you start looking for patterns over time.
Ask questions like:
Even small chapters can build strong engagement if participation is consistent.
For example, a chapter that consistently attracts 20 engaged members who return month after month may be healthier than a chapter that has one large event but little ongoing participation.
Engagement over time helps you see whether your marketing and programming are building momentum.
It is not just about a single successful event.
It is about whether your chapter continues to attract interest, participation, and connection within your local professional community.
When you look at the five metrics together, they tell a simple story:
You do not need dozens of metrics to understand what is happening.
In most cases, these five signals are enough to help you answer the most important question:
Is our marketing helping people take action?
Once you begin paying attention to these signals consistently, you will start noticing patterns.
Maybe earlier promotion leads to more registrations.
Maybe certain topics drive stronger engagement.
Maybe reminder emails improve attendance.
Those insights are incredibly valuable because they help you make small adjustments that improve results over time.
If you are a chapter leader reading this, remember:
You are not trying to run a corporate marketing department.
You are trying to support your chapter, promote meaningful events, and keep members engaged.
Tracking a few simple signals helps you do that more effectively without adding unnecessary complexity.
The goal is not perfect data.
The goal is better decisions.
In the final post in this series, we will look at how to track these metrics in a simple, practical way — using tools you likely already have.
We will also cover how to review your results after each event and use what you learn to improve future chapter promotions.
Because when chapter leaders combine clear goals with a few helpful signals, marketing stops feeling like guesswork — and starts becoming a valuable tool for growing engagement and participation.
Have question or need help getting started? Reach out to chapters@ampp.org. We are here to help!
Want more marketing tips? Subscribe to the "Lead & Succeed" blog to get the latest insights and tools for chapter leaders.
We're here to help you grow and strengthen your chapter. If there's a topic you'd like us to cover, let us know—we’re always looking for ways to support you better!