Public relations has long been admired for its influence, yet questioned for its measurability. For senior leaders, business owners and communications professionals, this tension is no longer acceptable. In 2026, PR must not only shape reputation and visibility but also demonstrate its contribution to growth, lead generation and commercial performance.
The good news is that modern PR measurement has evolved considerably. No longer confined to crude volume counts or outdated proxies for value, today’s metrics allow organisations to assess PR with rigour, relevance and strategic clarity. This article outlines the key metrics that matter, explains why some legacy measures should be retired, and shows how effective evaluation can support confident investment decisions.
PR now sits at the intersection of reputation, content, search, social and sales enablement. According to AMEC, organisations that align communications measurement with business objectives are significantly better placed to demonstrate value and secure ongoing investment.
Without measurement, PR becomes anecdotal. With it, PR becomes accountable.
1. Output Metrics: Measuring Activity, Not Impact
Output metrics measure what has been produced. They are useful, but insufficient on their own.
Common examples include:
These metrics answer the question: What happened?
They do not answer: So what?
As Spin Sucks notes, output metrics should be treated as hygiene indicators, not success measures. They provide context but must be paired with deeper indicators of performance.
2. Outtake Metrics: Measuring Audience Response
Outtake metrics assess how audiences engage with or absorb PR activity.
These include:
Digital PR has made these metrics far more accessible. Tools such as Google Analytics, Search Console and media monitoring platforms allow PR teams to observe how coverage translates into attention and consideration.
3. Outcome Metrics: Linking PR to Business Results
Outcome metrics are where PR earns its seat at the leadership table.These metrics connect communications activity to organisational objectives, including:
Spin Sucks’ PESO Model highlights the importance of measuring how earned media supports owned and shared channels, ultimately contributing to paid performance and revenue outcomes.
PR rarely operates as a last click channel. Its value often lies in influence and acceleration rather than direct attribution. Measurement frameworks must reflect this reality.
4. Reputation and Trust Indicators
While reputation can be difficult to quantify, it remains one of PR’s most valuable assets.
Indicative metrics include:
Boston University’s PR Lab notes that reputation metrics should be tracked longitudinally rather than campaign by campaign, reflecting PR’s cumulative effect.
5. The PESO Model as a Measurement Framework
The PESO Model provides a structured approach to PR measurement across:
Rather than evaluating earned media in isolation, the model encourages organisations to assess how PR content amplifies across channels and supports broader marketing performance.
This integrated approach is particularly valuable for leadership teams seeking clarity on how PR supports digital strategy and revenue generation.
Advertising Value Equivalency, or AVE, attempts to assign a monetary value to editorial coverage by comparing it to advertising costs. It is widely discredited.
AMEC formally rejected AVE as a valid metric, stating it does not measure outcomes,impact or credibility and fails to reflect how PR works in practice.
Modern PR leaders should regard AVE not as a shortcut, but as a red flag.
Effective PR measurement is not about volume. It is about value.
By focusing on meaningful metrics that reflect audience response, reputational strength and business contribution, organisations can move beyond vanity reporting and towards confident decision making.
For leaders considering whether to invest in PR, outsource it or expand existing efforts, robust measurement provides reassurance. It allows PR to be evaluated not as an art alone, but as a disciplined contributor to growth.
When measured properly, PR does not merely earn coverage. It earns credibility, influence and return.