Which Marketing KPIs are Worth Tracking?

Growth marketing is not just about getting more traffic or leads. It is about measuring how people move through the full customer journey and understanding which efforts actually drive sustainable business results. That is why choosing the right KPIs matters.

The most important growth marketing KPIs usually fall into a few core categories.

First, track acquisition metrics. These show how effectively you are bringing new people into your funnel. Common examples include website traffic, cost per click, lead volume, customer acquisition cost, and conversion rate from visitor to lead. These numbers help you understand whether your top-of-funnel efforts are working.

After that, measure engagement metrics. These help you understand whether prospects and customers are actively interacting with your brand after the initial activation point. Metrics such as email click-through rates, content downloads, session frequency, social engagement, and time on site can all help show whether people are staying interested and involved.

It is also important to track re-engagement metrics. Not every prospect or customer stays active continuously, so growth marketers need to know whether they can successfully bring people back after a drop-off. Re-engagement metrics might include reactivation rate, returning user rate, win-back campaign performance, repeat site visits, or the percentage of dormant users who engage again after a marketing touch. These KPIs show whether your campaigns can recover lost attention and create additional value from existing audiences.

Another critical area is marketing pipeline influence. Not every marketing effort creates an immediate conversion, but it may still play a meaningful role in moving prospects closer to a sale. Pipeline influence helps you understand how marketing contributes across the funnel, not just at the point of first touch or last touch. This can include metrics such as marketing-influenced opportunities, influenced pipeline value, and the percentage of closed deals touched by marketing campaigns. These KPIs are especially useful for showing how marketing supports revenue generation over time.

You should also measure the time it takes for prospects to progress through the funnel, especially where marketing has had an impact. This includes how long it takes someone to move from lead to qualified lead, from qualified lead to opportunity, or from opportunity to customer. Looking at funnel velocity alongside marketing influence can reveal whether campaigns are not only generating interest, but also helping move people through the buying journey faster. A shorter progression time often signals stronger messaging, better nurturing, and a more effective overall funnel.

I also always like to track the revenue vs revenue (average order value and lifetime value) that had marketing influence. We, as marketers, like to think that we play a vital role in the sales cycle, but at the end of the day, we know we are a cost center (and sometimes a very costly one.) Being able to show both quicker deal progression and higher revenue from marketing influence are very concrete datapoints to show executives on the power of marketing. 

Retention metrics are equally important. Growth that disappears quickly is not real growth. Track repeat purchase rate, churn rate, customer retention rate, and ongoing product usage over time to understand whether customers continue to find value after the first conversion. It is also useful to include upsell and cross-sell metrics within retention, since expanding existing customer relationships is a major part of sustainable growth. Measures such as upsell conversion rate, cross-sell revenue, expansion revenue, and average revenue per customer can show whether retained customers are deepening their relationship with your brand.

The key is not tracking everything. The best growth marketing teams choose a small set of KPIs tied directly to business goals, then review them consistently. When done well, KPIs help teams move beyond guesswork and make smarter decisions about where to invest, optimize, and scale.