ROMI – Return On Marketing Investment
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ROMI or Return On Marketing Investment is a derivative of the ROI or Return on Investment formula, that seeks to specifically derive the value of marketing budgets – according to Singapore interactive agency Qais Consulting.
To understand ROMI, then, we should first refresh our memories on the ROI formula.
ROMI or Return On Marketing Investment is a derivative of the ROI or Return on Investment formula, that seeks to specifically derive the value of marketing budgets – according to Singapore interactive agency Qais Consulting.
To understand ROMI, then, we should first refresh our memories on the ROI formula.
Table of Contents
Metric: Return on Investment (ROI)
The Question:
How much profit have I generated from an investment?
Approach:
Net profit divided by invested capital
Commentary:
The default metric for speaking to CEOs and CFOs. However it is hard to explain long-term benefits, particularly when justifying brand uplift. ABC or similar needed to fully calculate Net Profit. May also need to calculate NPV
The Formula:
Return On Investment – ROI(%)= Net Profit ($) / Investment ($)
Metric: Return on Marketing Investment (ROMI) – Short Form
The Question:
How much return have I generated from my marketing investments?
Approach:
Total revenue divided by marketing budget
Commentary:
A quick an easy way to determine total impact of marketing for a company or discrete set of products. As with ROI, short form ROMI is not good at measuring long-term impacts
The Formula:
ROMI (Index) = Incremental Revenue Attrib. to Marketing ($)/ Marketing Spend ($)
Metric: Margin ROMI or mROMI
The Question:
What incremental profit do I get from incremental marketing spend?
Approach:
Incremental profits generated by marketing
Commentary:
As marketers we believe that what we do is an investment creating lasting value. ROMI shows us the revenues generated, mROMI shows us margins generated – ie our contribution to profits
The Formula:
mROMI (Index)= ROMI * Contribution Margin %
Using ROMI Coefficients
Using ROMI Coefficients
- A marketing mix model will define the potential uplift from increasing spend on particular media or campaign types
- This can be used to forecast the impact of budget changes
- For example, the model may forecast that for every $1 we spend on online advertising, we expect to get $10 of revenue
- We may be able to further refine that to say that every incremental $1 spent on billboards will generate 45% ROI, but with diminishing returns after $1 million
- Marketing-mix models typically results in coefficients, such as incremental revenue per gross rating point (GRP), or incremental revenue per impression.
- These must then be converted into ROMI indices for revenue or margin, and ultimately marketing ROI to explain to the CEO & CFO current performance and future improvements
ROMI Examples and Tests
ROI & ROMI Test Run
Campaign 1
Incremental Revenues = $250,000
Incremental Costs = $50,000
Contribution Margin = 30%
Campaign 2
Incremental Revenues = $50,000
Incremental Costs = $20,000
Contribution Margin = 50%
Calculate ROMI, mROMI and ROI for both Campaigns
Which campaign has better ROI? And why might you still prefer the other campaign?
ROI & ROMI Test Run Answers
Campaign 1
ROMI = $250k/ $50k = 5.00
mROMI = 3.0 * 30% = 1.50
ROI = (1.50 – 1.00) * 100% = 50%
Campaign 2
ROMI = $70k / $20k = 3.50
mROMI = 3.5 * 50% = 1.75
ROI = (1.75 – 1.00) * 100% = 75%
Campaign 2 has better ROI. For every dollar invested in Campaign 2, $3.50 in revenue and $1.75 is returned, for 75% ROI, compared to 50% ROI for Campaign 1
If the Marketing Manager needs to deliver volume, and if Campaign 2 can’t be scaled up, then they still might pick Campaign 1 – or both to improve overall ROI
Example – Online Travel Agent ROMI Calculations
Online ads (banner ads, text ads, widgets, search ads and eDMs) tagged with a code from an Ad Server
Ads are tracked ‘post impression’ – a sale will be attributed up to 30 days after an ad is viewed
The revenue for that booking is attributed to the ad, minus any cancellations
Revenue and margin data is reconciled using database queries
Media cost data is manually added
A ‘Last Touch’ Attribution methodology is used – all revenues are said to be caused by the last ad impression (display) or click (search/ text ad)
COGs = Wholesale cost of hotel room
Cost Per Room Dollar = Cost of Sale = Media Cost/ Rev
Agency Costs = fees directly attributable to campaign + share of general fees (ie agency costs)
Internal Costs = fees directly attributable to campaign + share of general fees (ie staff + share of overheads)
SG&A = Media costs + Agency Costs + Internal Costs
Test – Calculate ‘Media’ ROMI, SG&A, ROMI, Contribution Margin, mROMI & ROI for the Online Travel Agent
This is one campaign out of 4 the agency is engaged to run
This campaign has the following total revenues and media costs
Revenue = $183,501.64
Media Cost = $18,823.77
1. What is the ‘Media’ ROMI for this campaign? For every dollar invested in media, how much revenue will we generate?
Marketing AgencyFees
Creative Production Costs for this Campaign = $8,021.02
Mgmt & Reporting Costs, for 4 Campaigns = $12,665.00
Internal Fees
Marketing Staff, for 4 Campaigns = $4,872.21
External Tech Fees, for 4 Campaign = $2,000.00
Cust Service & Finance Dept Costs, this Campaign = $2,818.90
2. What Total SG&A Cost Figure should we use?
3. What is our net ROMI? For every dollar of marketing budget, how much revenue will we drive?
4. Revenue = $183,501.64
5. Media Cost = $18,823.77
6. What is the Contribution Margin for this campaign?
7. What is the mROMI for this campaign? For every dollar of marketing budget we invest, how much marginable revenue do we contribute?
8. What is our total effective ROI for this campaign?
9. Is it a good or bad ROI?
Sales & Marketing
Marketing for Dummies Guides
- Marketing for Dummies
- Marketing Plan
- Marketing Strategy
- Positioning
- Differentiation
- Brand Equity
- Brand Marketing
- Direct Marketing
- RFM – Recency Frequency Monetary
- Breakeven Response Rate
- Customer Profitability
- CLV – Customer Lifetime Value
- Loyalty Program
- The 4 Ps
- The Campaign Framework
- The Marketing Budget
- The Marketing Mix
Measuring, Marketing, Metrics & KPIs
- KPI – The One Key Marketing Metric
- Marketing KPIs and Metrics
- Measuring Marketing
- ROMI – Return on Marketing Investment
- Marketing Finance
- Financial KPIs
- Market Share
- Mind Share
- Customer Satisfaction (Cust Sat)
- Net Promoter Score
- Kano Model
Online Marketing/ Digital Marketing
- CPM Advertising
- CPC Advertising
- CPA Advertising
- Click Through Rate (CTR or Click Thru Rate)
- Conversion Rate
- SEO Marketing
- SERP: Search Engine Ranking Page
- Behavioral Email
- Guerilla Marketing