How to Measure Brand Awareness in 2025 (AKA the Year of the Brand)
Below I’ve laid out 11 workflows you can follow to measure the success of your brand awareness—including some little-known Ahrefs use cases. Brand awareness refers to a series of marketing tactics that help audiences recognize and recall a brand...
Article Performance
Data from Ahrefs
The number of websites linking to this post.
This post's estimated monthly organic search traffic.
Brand awareness is one of the “fuzziest” growth channels. And when things get fuzzy, you need concrete ways to prove your time and investment is paying off. Below I’ve laid out 11 workflows you can follow to measure the success of your brand awareness—including some little-known Ahrefs use cases. Brand awareness refers to a series of marketing tactics that help audiences recognize and recall a brand name, logo, or product. It’s a “death-by-a-thousand-cuts”/ ”sales-by-a-thousand-sightings” approach to marketing: lots of tiny actions working together to create big benefits for your company. If you’re thinking of advertising, eyeballs, and impressions, you’re in the right ballpark. Big brands spend millions building awareness, because with recognition comes a certain level of legitimacy and trust—which can turn into sales further down the line. There’s no right way to manufacture awareness. Brands use different formats, channels, and varying levels of creativity to capture audience attention. Examples of different types of brand awareness include: B2B companies spent 28.9% of their marketing budgets on brand awareness in 2024, according to Gartner—investing more than at any other stage of the customer journey. Companies can burn through cash on awareness campaigns, hoping people will recognize and love their brand. But generating a buzz with no sales is a situation no marketer wants to find themselves in. “The key to building a successful brand with ads is that those ads need to actually convert people into buyers—otherwise you’ll waste a ton of money and could bankrupt your company if everyone knows your brand but doesn’t buy it.” That’s why it’s crucial to measure the impact of your brand awareness strategy as you build it. The events of the last year mean it’s harder than ever to build brand awareness, what with AI eating into top-of-the-funnel traffic, near-constant search reshuffling, declining social reach (hello, TikTok ban), and a flood of low-quality AI content eroding consumer trust. But I also, counterintuitively, think it’s the best time to build and measure your brand. The more brand awareness, trust, and loyalty you build now, the less troubled you’ll be by these challenges in future. That’s because the benefits of brand awareness compound. Building awareness will bring you more: Brand awareness is the fuzziest form of marketing, built on emotional resonance rather than measurable metrics. Outcomes like brand recall, recognition, perception, affinity, and sentiment are notoriously tricky to quantify because they rely on subjective, emotional responses. What’s more, some of your brand awareness counts as earned media—like PR, word of mouth, user-generated content, and social media. This awareness is beyond your direct control, and since you didn’t create the content, you lack full performance data, making it even tougher to evaluate. For example, you won’t know the traffic or impressions a New York Times article mentioning your brand has generated without access to their analytics. Similarly, your brand will inevitably generate awareness you can’t track—and may never even know about—through offline channels or dark social. And another thing! Brand awareness sits right at the start of the customer journey, so following the breadcrumbs through to conversion is not easy and, at times, impossible. But don’t let all that put you off. Measuring brand awareness can still be done, and when done right, it’s hugely valuable, helping you to: So, it’s hard to justify spend on brand because it’s so… fluffy. But you can remove a lot of that fluffiness by measuring awareness in smart ways, and paying attention to what works. Here’s how to do that. Let’s dive into 11 different methods and metrics you can use to figure out how well your brand awareness strategy is working. There are so many moving parts when it comes to increasing brand awareness. Different ads, creative formats, channels, messages. You really need a top-level view of performance to know if it’s all working. Share of Voice (SoV) is that in a nutshell—a top-down metric that helps you quantify your brand awareness in the context of your market and competitors. The formula to calculate share of voice is: Social share of voice shows you the percentage of the market you’ve cornered on social media, measured by your share of brand mentions vs. total brand mentions in the remaining market. The formula to calculate social share of voice is: Brandwatch Consumer Research helps you measure your social share of voice Search SoV calculates how much organic traffic you own as a proportion of the total market. The formula is: Ahrefs Rank Tracker will show you your brand’s search share of voice for up to 10K keywords. Just list out your branded or campaign-specific keywords, and see whether your brand awareness is falling, growing, or going steady. You can also benchmark your brand awareness against competitors in Rank Tracker, if you’ve specified them in your project setup. To see that data, head to the “Competitors > Overview 2.0” tab on the left for Share of Voice and Share of Traffic Value timelines. In this example, we’ve seen a 6.2% increase in our search share of voice over the last six months, bringing us up to an overall share of 23.1% for the keywords we care about. These are the kinds of metrics to look back on when you’re proactively building your awareness. Rank Tracker is great if you want to see your SoV trending over time, but for a snapshot view, head to Keywords Explorer. Same as Rank Tracker, this report lets you track 10K keywords, so you can benchmark your brand’s top-level search presence against your closest competitors. Here’s an easy workflow you can follow: Metrics to measure Each month, report on key metrics such as Share of Voice uplift, traffic and position improvements, and traffic share percentage. Advertising is a huge part of increasing brand awareness. You need to watch how your ads are performing before, during, and after each marketing campaign—and keep tracking at scale—to see if your brand awareness efforts are actually paying off. Most ad platforms have built-in ad managers (e.g. Google Ads Manager, Google Display Network, Facebook Ads Manager) which show you key brand awareness metrics like impressions, traffic, clicks, or CTR. We run our own ads on Quora, for example, and have access to all of those figures. Here are a couple more ways you can measure the success of your ads using Ahrefs. Head to Site Explorer and enter your domain¹, then find the Paid Pages report². Other reports in Ahrefs let you dive into the minutiae of your search ads, but this is one of the best places to study overarching ad awareness. Once you’re there, make a note of your Total Traffic³ at the top of the keyword table, and then study your paid traffic growth over time⁴—especially in relation to ad cost. When your paid traffic exceeds paid traffic cost, it’s a good sign that your brand awareness ads are doing the trick! In this report, you can also filter by keywords in URLs, titles, and descriptions to better report on the campaign-specific brand awareness. Metrics to measure Report monthly on metrics such as total paid traffic and campaign-specific paid traffic. For a birdseye view over your brand ads, pull up the Overview report in Site Explorer. It’s great for checking your: Metrics to measure Each month, record metrics such as paid traffic as a percentage of organic traffic, paid traffic growth/decline, and location-based paid traffic growth/decline. If you want to know whether people care about your brand, watch your traffic during a campaign. It’s not a perfect science, but it can help you quantify intangible goals like brand recall and recognition. When people recognize your brand, they’re more likely to visit your site. If they visit it directly, that’s further proof that they know you exist. In other words, if you run an ad and your direct traffic goes up, there’s a good chance it’s working. You can monitor total and direct traffic without fuss in Google Analytics 4, via the report: And now you can view your web traffic in Ahrefs, via our Web Analytics tool in the Dashboard¹ part of the platform. When you get there, just head to Projects² to see your total web traffic³. Then, to see your direct traffic, add a “Channel” filter for “Direct”. When you set the date range to align with your campaign, you can see whether your promotion is having any impact. You can also segment your total and direct traffic by campaign URLs or UTMs. Metrics to measure Report regularly on your total, direct, and campaign-specific traffic—including growth in each area. People may like your brand and visit your site, but you know your awareness is really growing when they care enough to talk about it. This will look like a steady stream of backlinks and referral traffic back to your site from publications, blogs, review sites, forums, and social media. But not all links are created equal. When you report on earned awareness, you need to focus on the growth of quality referrals—not just the sum total. Here are some things to consider when you’re working out what constitutes a “good” link: And you’ll also want to think about what “good” looks like to your brand. For instance, some companies may see a link from a national publication as being the zenith of awareness—regardless of whether it drives referral traffic. Here are some practical ways you can use Ahrefs to measure growth in your backlinks and referrals. Once you decide what quality referrals look like, you can configure a “Best links” filter to speed up your monthly SEO reporting. This filter allows you to set specific criteria for your links. For example, you might choose to only see “dofollow” links in an attempt to pick up more link equity, or “in content” backlinks, to sidestep spurious links in footers or comment sections. Here’s how to measure your best brand backlinks: This configuration will give you a macro-level view of your highest-quality links. Then you can record link numbers each month… …and roughly correlate spikes in backlink acquisition with the dates of your brand campaigns. Metrics to measure Each month, note down your total backlinks and referring domains, plus any growth. If someone links to you, but doesn’t mention your brand, is that even brand awareness? To really understand the strength of your brand presence, tracking your brand name in link anchor text is a must. Head to Ahrefs’ Anchors report, set an “Anchor with surrounding text” filter for your brand name (and any common misspellings). This will show you every occasion where a site has either hyperlinked your brand name, or mentioned your brand name in the content immediately surrounding a link to your site. This is important to quantify because the more your brand name gets repeated, the more likely audiences will be to recall it. Remember, you can limit your analysis to “Best links”, as above, so you’re focusing on the mentions that really count. Tracking how your brand anchors grow over time will give you a better idea of how your brand awareness is growing. You may also want to work out your brand anchors as a percentage of your total anchors, and track how that changes. For instance, right now at Ahrefs we have 22,072 “brand name” anchors, and 96,640 anchors overall, meaning that 23% of our links are driving overt brand awareness. We can check back on this figure every month, and even segment the analysis to focus on the uptake of specific brand campaigns, like the Ahrefs Podcast. Metrics to measure Report monthly on your total brand anchors, new brand anchors, and brand anchors as a percent of the total. If you want to see which one of your brand awareness tactics have pushed users through the marketing funnel, then it’s a good idea to report on referral traffic—this will show you the number of users that actually made it back to your site. You can track this in GA4, via the report I mentioned earlier on: Or you can dig into your traffic in Ahrefs Web Analytics. Just add a “Channel” filter for referral traffic. Metrics to measure Each month, record your total referral traffic, campaign-specific referral traffic, plus any growth. Whether you’re paying a princely sum for a 30 second election ad like Calm… …or doing a lo-fi brand spoof like smartphone manufacturer Nothing… …the very least you can hope for is a spike in social media engagement following your brand awareness campaigns. Here are some metrics to look at when you’re assessing your brand awareness on social. You can use social listening tools to scour for earned mentions of your brand, and set up queries for your: Once you’ve tapped into brand-relevant conversations, you can make note of your total reach, and measure how much awareness your brand has sparked in the market. For years, social tools have been able to analyze the language of your brand mentions, and decree whether they’re positive, negative, or neutral in sentiment. I imagine this kind of analysis is only going to get better with advancements in AI and LLMs. If you want to quantify the qualitative (read: “fluffier”) parts of your brand, then sentiment scores are another great metric to include in your reporting. Sentiment scores in SproutSocial Metrics to measure Each month, report on: your most important engagement metrics (e.g. subscribers), your total reach for brand-relevant keywords, and your brand sentiment scores. Companies are losing up to ~40% of their organic traffic as AI Overviews take over popular brand awareness searches, like FAQs and definitions. But at the same time, AI overviews are sending more awareness and traffic to certain (cited) brands. It’s a similar story with AI chatbots: They’re encroaching on organic traffic, but what they take with one hand, they give with another—mentioning, recommending, and linking to brands in customer conversations. Whatever you make of them, these new awareness channels are still largely untapped, and offer huge potential for brands that get in early. Here’s how to increase brand awareness in AI. Track your ownership of AI overview keywords Keeping a handle on your awareness today means tracking your brand ownership of AI overviews. There’s a straightforward way to do this in Ahrefs: This will show you which AI overview keywords you have picked up since last month, along with any organic traffic uplift. Make a note of the total keywords each month (shown in the position history chart) to measure your AIO awareness over time. Metrics to measure Report monthly on your total AI overview keywords, and your average organic traffic uplift. To find out how often your brand is cropping up in AI conversations, you can configure a report in Ahrefs Web Analytics. Just select the “Channel” filter and choose ”LLM” to assess your traffic from popular AI chatbots. Pay close attention to the types of pages and content getting cited. This will give you a better idea of the content formats to double down on. For instance, we’re getting most of our AI brand visibility from stats, tools, courses, and trend-based blogs, so we should probably create more of that content to continue turning up in relevant AI conversations. Metrics to measure Report monthly on your referral views and visits from AI, making a note of growth and content-type success. Large language models generate content by calculating the statistical proximity between topics and entities. The more commonly topics appear together in training data, the more statistically significant their connection, and the more likely an LLM is to mention those topics together in a response. Meaning, if you make a conscious effort to align your brand with relevant topics, it’s more likely to crop up alongside those topics in AI. You can track your brand alignment efforts in Ahrefs by measuring co-mentions of your brand alongside key topics. Just head to the Content Explorer and: In this example, 3.2% of Patagonia’s brand mentions also mention the keyword “sustainability”. Monitoring these figures can give you a solid sense of your overall topical authority. Metrics to measure Record your monthly topic mentions, topic mentions as a percent of total mentions, and number of topic mentions vs. competitors. Your branded keyword search volume is a crucial indicator of your brand awareness. According to our own research, 45.7% of all searches made on Google are branded. That’s nearly half of all searches made on Google. If that isn’t the best justification for tracking your branded keywords, I don’t know what is. Google Trends can help you visualize brand search volume growth and decline… …but it doesn’t give you exact search volumes or growth figures to report on. And it can’t predict whether your brand awareness will be sustained. Here’s how you can measure those metrics in Ahrefs. Head to the Matching Terms report in Keywords Explorer and search your brand name, plus any misspellings. At the head of the report, you’ll see some top-line brand metrics including your overall… And if you want to anticipate demand, there’s data for that too. In the column section, just hit “Growth forecast” to see a 12-month search volume trend for every brand term on your list. Or alternatively, search your brand name in Keywords Explorer, and check the overview page for a larger visual forecast of your organic brand demand… This data will show you the trajectory of your brand demand. Growing? Show it off and repeat what works. Declining? Study it and consider changing tack. Whenever you want to prove the success of past brand campaigns, or get buy-in for future brand awareness projects, this kind of data is invaluable. You can also use it for backcasting: defining your brand search volume goals and working backwards from there. One obvious way to do this would be to analyze your competitors in the same way, then model your awareness on the one with the strongest brand growth and growth forecasts. Metrics to measure Every month, note down your total number of branded keywords, global branded keyword volume, global growth rate (3 /mo), and any growth forecasts (12 /mo) So, you can now prove your awareness campaigns are paying off through brand search volume growth—but how many of those searches actually result in traffic to your site? To answer this, start tracking your branded keyword traffic and positions on an ongoing basis—any uplift should correlate nicely with effective brand awareness. There’s a few ways you can go about this in Ahrefs. In Site Explorer, hit the Overview report, set your date range, and scroll down to the “Avg. branded vs. non-branded organic traffic” and “Organic keywords by intent” reports. Here, you’ll be able to track and record the organic traffic you’re receiving for branded keywords, and how that’s changed over time. Bear in mind that, for now, this report tracks your traffic for any keyword in our database that’s identified as a brand, so that could be your brand name—but it could also be your competitors’. This is something we’re working on changing in the near future. If you want to narrow your search traffic reporting to specific brand awareness keywords, here’s how to do that: Metrics to measure Report monthly on the number of pages ranking for your branded keywords, your total brand traffic, and total traffic growth or decline month-over-month. Not everyone links! Journalists are notorious for withholding backlinks, and discussions will be had about your brand that you’re not privy to if you’re only checking your links. Monitoring unlinked brand mentions is an absolute must—not only can they equate to a serious amount of brand awareness, you’ll find out a lot more about your audience in the process—including their opinions, preferences, and demographics. Today, unlinked brand mentions are as good as links in the eyes of LLMs and AI. According to research from Seer Interactive, links actually display the weakest correlation of all common SEO factors when it comes to LLM visibility. Disregard brand mentions at your peril! In Content Explorer¹ do an “Everywhere”² search for your brand name³, and note down the number of pages⁴ that return. Keep hold of that figure, until you update it the following month—then note the number of new pages⁵. You can also set up brand mention alerts across Google Alerts, BuzzSumo, and even native social media platforms like Reddit. Metrics to measure Every month, note down the number of brand mentions, taking into account any growth. You might not expect direct sales to result from brand awareness campaigns, but it does happen—and it’s worth tracking. You can monitor this using analytics/attribution tools like Google Tag Manager and GA4. Using Google Tag Manager, for example, you can track when a user comes to your site via a brand campaign link, clicks on a converting CTA, loads a specific URL fragment, or takes any other action that infers/equates to a conversion. Then, you can measure all those events in GA4. Once you have that data to hand, you can calculate conversion rates—just divide conversions by the number of total visitors. For example, imagine the UK meal delivery brand Cook running a “CookTok” campaign of recipe challenges on TikTok. If 1,000 users visit the campaign landing page after watching the videos, and 50 sign up for a subscription, the conversion rate would be 5% (50/1,000). If you can’t make event tracking work, then another alternative is tracking conversions and sales increase during periods of high brand awareness, so you can loosely connect the dots between awareness and revenue. While it’s true that brand awareness campaigns don’t always neatly track back to conversions, if your conversion rate is nonexistent over an extended period of time, you might need to start troubleshooting—it could signal that there’s something wrong with your brand messaging, UX, or tracking. Measuring brand awareness in 2025 isn’t just possible—it’s a prerequisite. These are 11 concrete ways I think you can successfully prove your brand’s impact. The next step would be to combine these metrics to build a complete picture of your brand awareness. Once you’ve brought everything together, you’ll have a much better understanding of how to increase your brand awareness. I’m looking to create a Looker Studio dashboard of Ahrefs’ brand data for this very reason. If you have any smart techniques I’ve missed off, ping me on LinkedIn. I’m all ears!Measure the success of PPC brand awareness campaigns
Track total uplift in PPC traffic
Quality link traitsAsk yourself…How to validate Relevant Is this link relevant to my brand? • Check anchor text
• Visit siteAuthoritative Is this site considered an authority? • Check the site’s DR
• Check the page’s URVisible Will people actually see my brand from this referral? • Referring page organic traffic
• Referral traffic back to your site
• Mentions of your brand name in/surrounding anchor textEquitable Will it pass on link equity? • Dofollow vs. nofollow links Track how many high-quality backlinks you pick up
Measure how much your brand name gets mentioned in anchor text
Measure brand awareness in terms of referral traffic
Social media mentions and sentiment growth (earned)
Track your AI /LLM referral traffic
Measure your brand ownership of relevant topics
Track your brand demand
Track branded search traffic vs. non-branded
Measure your organic traffic for specific brand keywords
Track your brand mentions
Final thoughts