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Media, Branding & Outreach·Lesson 26 of 29

Analytics-Driven Content Strategy: Measuring What Works

Move from posting on instinct to making data-informed decisions using platform analytics — reach, watch time, retention, and the metrics that actually matter for an FRC team.

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Most FRC media teams post and hope. Advanced teams measure, learn, and adjust. You don't need expensive tools — every major platform gives you free analytics.

Know which metric maps to which goal. Don't chase 'likes' if your real goal is sponsor visibility or recruiting. Map metrics to objectives:

  • Awareness/recruiting goal -> reach and impressions (how many unique people saw it).
  • Engagement/community goal -> saves, shares, and comments (saves and shares are stronger signals than likes; they mean the content had lasting or social value).
  • Video performance -> average watch time and retention (the percentage of viewers still watching at each second).

Read retention graphs like a video editor. Instagram, YouTube, and TikTok all show a retention curve. A sharp drop in the first 3 seconds means your hook is weak — fix it by leading with your best moment (the 'cold open' from the highlight-reel project), not a logo intro. A mid-video cliff tells you exactly where to cut. This is the single highest-leverage analytics habit.

Find your best posting times. Platform 'insights' show when your followers are online. Schedule match-day recaps for those windows. For an FRC audience, evenings and the hours right after matches tend to peak — but check your own data rather than assuming.

Run a simple A/B experiment. Pick one variable — say, captioned vs. uncaptioned reels — and post each style for two weeks. Compare average watch time. Because captions improve muted-autoplay viewing, captioned versions usually win, but proving it with your own numbers builds the case for the workflow.

Build a one-page monthly dashboard. Track a handful of numbers month over month: follower growth, average reel watch time, top 3 posts by reach, and reach per platform. A shared Google Sheet is enough. The point is the trend line, not any single number.

Tie media metrics to outreach and the Impact Award. This is where analytics become strategic. Impact Award judges want measurable impact, and your reach numbers are evidence: 'Our robot-reveal reel reached 25,000 people, 4x our follower count' is a concrete, citable stat for your executive summaries. You can also pull your team's media footprint on The Blue Alliance (/team/frcXXXX/media/{year}) to show how widely your content is referenced in the community.

Avoid vanity-metric traps. A viral video that reaches people outside your region and community doesn't necessarily advance recruiting or local sponsorship. Weight 'right audience reached' over raw view count. Likewise, buying followers or engagement is worthless and erodes trust with sponsors who check.

The discipline is simple: set a goal, pick the metric that measures it, check it monthly, change one thing, and re-measure. That loop, run all season, beats any amount of guessing.

Key takeaways

  • Map metrics to goals: reach for recruiting/sponsors, saves/shares for community, watch time/retention for video.
  • Read retention curves — a first-3-second drop means a weak hook; a mid-video cliff shows where to cut.
  • Run one-variable A/B tests (e.g., captioned vs not) and keep a one-page monthly dashboard of trends.
  • Convert reach stats into measurable evidence for Impact Award executive summaries; ignore vanity metrics and never buy engagement.

Lesson quiz

Required

Answer all 3 questions correctly to complete this lesson.

1.When evaluating whether your FRC team's social posts actually resonate with the audience, which metric is the most reliable signal of content quality rather than just account size?

2.On Instagram, which two interaction types are generally considered the strongest engagement signals that a piece of content was genuinely valuable to viewers?

3.What is the core idea behind an analytics-driven content strategy for an FRC media team?

Answer every question to submit.