Content Marketing ROI: How to Measure What Actually Matters
If you’re tracking page views to prove content marketing’s value, you’re using the wrong metrics.
Vanity Metrics (Stop Tracking)
- Page views
- Time on page
- Bounce rate
- Social shares
These feel productive but tell you nothing about revenue.
Revenue Metrics (Start Tracking)
1. Assisted Conversions
In GA4 or your attribution tool: how many converters touched your content somewhere in the journey?
2. Content-Sourced Pipeline
Tag every form fill with the entry-page URL. Track which content pieces sit at the top of converting paths.
3. Cost per Lead by Source
If a blog post brings 100 leads at SAR 0 marginal cost, that’s an infinite ROI piece. Identify these and replicate.
4. Lifetime Value by
First-Touch Channel Content-acquired customers often have longer LTV than paid-acquired. Measure it. Justify the budget.
The Reporting Cadence
- Weekly: traffic + leads from content
- Monthly: pipeline + closed-won attributed to content
- Quarterly: LTV by acquisition channel
When content gets attributed properly, the budget conversation changes from “can we cut this?” to “how fast can we scale this?”