Joe Hamman, Director, Novus Group
Reach is one of the first numbers people look for in a media report. It is big, easy to understand, and gives the impression of broad visibility. That is also why it can be misleading.
A reach figure indicates how many people could have been exposed to a piece of coverage. It does not tell you who saw it, whether they cared, trusted the publication, or whether the message changed anything.
A story with a potential reach of one million is not automatically more valuable than a feature reaching 50,000 highly relevant decision-makers. The first may create broad awareness. The second may reach the people who can buy, invest, recommend, regulate, or influence the outcome the organisation actually needs.
Reach still has a place in media monitoring. It helps show the scale of potential visibility. It can be useful for benchmarking campaigns over time, comparing publications, and understanding the level of exposure different channels may have created. But reach should be treated as a starting point, not a conclusion.
Understanding the new landscape
The media environment has become too fragmented for one number to explain whether coverage worked. Audiences move between online news, print, radio, podcasts, social platforms, search, and AI-assisted discovery. Algorithms influence what people see. Trust varies from platform to platform. A large reach number may look impressive in a report, but without context it can create a false sense of success.
This is why global measurement frameworks have moved away from vanity metrics. AMEC’s Barcelona Principles 4.0, widely used as a best-practice framework for communication measurement, emphasise measurable objectives, stakeholder audiences, relevant channels, qualitative and quantitative analysis, and the need to evaluate outcomes and impact, not only outputs.
This is where media monitoring becomes more useful. Finding the coverage is the easy part. The value lies in understanding what it means: publication relevance, sentiment, message pull-through, brand prominence, competitor presence, and audience trust. Without that context, visibility can easily be mistaken for impact.
Making sense of data
Muck Rack’s State of PR Measurement 2024 report shows why this is so important. Reach and impressions were the second most tracked PR metric after stories placed, used by more than three-quarters of PR professionals. Yet reach and impressions also ranked among the least trusted metrics, with nearly a quarter of respondents saying they did not trust reach or impressions. Many teams still rely on the metric because it is familiar and easy to report, even when it does not explain impact on its own.
Many organisations still get stuck here. A campaign can appear successful because the reach is large, but the more important question is whether the coverage supported the objective. For PR professionals, relevance matters more than raw scale.
A smaller article in a credible industry publication may do more for reputation, lead generation, policy influence, or stakeholder confidence than a larger story in a publication with limited relevance. Reach still matters. It just needs context before anyone treats it as evidence of impact.
What makes good measurement?
Good measurement should give a communications team a clearer view of what worked and what needs to change. A large reach number may be useful, but it is only one part of that view. On its own, it cannot explain whether the coverage strengthened credibility, reached the audience that matters, or helped move the organisation closer to its objective.
That is the point we need to get back to. Media monitoring should not make weak results look impressive. It should help organisations understand the difference between being seen and being understood.
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