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  • Writer's pictureCancian Digial

Reach vs Impressions: What’s the Difference?

Is your business working toward better brand awareness? Are you doing everything possible to grow and influence your audience on social media? If so, it’s critical to know the difference between reach vs impressions.

Marketers commonly encounter these two terms, but not everyone knows and understands what makes each metric so important. Many understand the importance of social media engagement. However, when it comes to strategy, it’s all about accurately measuring your metrics and finding areas to increase efforts.

Various social media terms are often misinterpreted and some are even thought to mean the same thing. While it’s very easy to group terms like reach and impressions together, they do have their own definitions. Before you accurately measure these metrics, let’s learn a crash course on reach vs. impressions.

What’s the Difference Between Reach vs. Impressions?

Reach is the total number of people who see your content. Impressions are the number of times your content is displayed, no matter if it was clicked or not.

Think of reach as the number of unique people who see your content. In a perfect world, every one of your followers would see every piece of content you posted.

Unfortunately, that’s not how things work on social, and not all of your followers will see every single post you publish.

However, an impression means that content was delivered to someone’s feed. A viewer doesn’t have to engage with the post in order for it to count as an impression. Also, one person could have multiple impressions for a single piece of content. For example, a Facebook post could show up in the News Feed from the original publisher and appear again when a friend shares the publisher’s post. If you saw both forms of activity in your feed, that counts as two impressions for the same post.

Digging Deeper Into Reach & Impressions


As you can see, there are a lot of similarities between reach and impressions, but there’s still an underlying difference in terms of engagement. Similar to our first example, let’s say you have 100 followers on Instagram and you published one post. If every one of your followers sees that post, you have a reach of 100 users–along with 100 impressions.

To continue, say tomorrow you publish two posts to the same 100 followers. Your reach is still 100 users because your follower count didn’t change. However, now you have 200 impressions. Why? Because every single one of your 100 followers saw both posts you published.

That’s why you may notice the number of impressions for a post may sometimes be significantly larger than your follower count. It’s a bit of a challenging concept, but absolutely important to know when tracking the success of a social media campaign. If you recall nothing else about reach and impressions, remember this: Reach is the number of people who may have seen your content, while impressions are the total number of times your content was displayed to people.

Learning More About Engagement Metrics

If you’re looking to better understand how to improve your reach and impressions, it’s important to learn about other related engagement metrics. For example, there are different kinds of reach and impression metrics on each social network—Facebook to be specific.

Other platforms may include reach and impressions in their social media analytics, but they’re pretty standard. Facebook shows reach and impressions broken down by post type and other categories, which is necessary to understand when looking to improve.

Facebook Reach vs. Impressions

On Facebook, reach falls into three different categories:

Organic: This represents the number of unique people who saw your content—for free—in the News Feed. Paid: This is the number of unique people who saw your paid content, such as a Facebook Ad. Viral: This is the number of unique people who saw your post or Page mentioned in a story published by a friend. These stories include actions such as Liking, sharing or commenting.

There are a number of factors that play into your Facebook reach. Depending on the type of reach you want to grow, you might follow different strategies.



Reach, Impressions & Your Marketing Strategy

With better clarity on reach vs. impressions, it’s important to also look beyond the definitions and see what they mean for your marketing strategy.


Know Your Target Audience

As reach increases, it naturally leads to increased awareness. For businesses, it’s important to extend your reach to as many consumers as possible. But even if you’re reaching 10,000 people, it won’t mean a thing if only 1,000 of them have interest in your brand.

Sent messages lose effect and no value is gained when they’re ignored. Design messages and your content strategy with your target audience in mind.

Also keep an eye on the content that’s being shared, liked or replied to. By tracking these engagements, it’ll help you find potential users to target, thus extending your reach.


Monitor & Analyze Engagement Metrics Regularly

Impressions measure your ability to get your content in front of your intended audience. When your impressions rise, it’s likely due to your content surfacing more frequently into users’ feeds.

This usually means your posts are optimized for whichever social network you’re using. If you do not see the impressions you hoped for, first look at how you share your content. Is it optimized for the platform you’re using?

Another tip to consider when trying to increase impressions is to focus on growing the number of actively engaged fans in your community for that platform. Place more emphasis on publishing shareable content. As your community begins sharing your posts with their networks, your impressions (and reach) will increase.

The only way you’ll know if your efforts work is to regularly monitor and analyze these metrics. Continually make improvements and experiment with changes and Facebook retargeting efforts.


Looking at the Bigger Picture

Learning the difference between reach vs. impressions is sometimes a little convoluted, but it’s not impossible to understand. Once you distinguish the two metrics, you begin working toward the most important one of all: social media engagement.

A common goal behind every social media campaign is increased engagement. If your content isn’t getting likes, replies or shares, something is wrong—either on the creation or targeting end.

Awareness comes before engagement, and reach and impressions drive people to take action. You can’t have one without the other, and you can’t improve one without also tweaking the others. So when you’re thinking about how to increase engagement, do so while also considering how reach and impressions play into i


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