fbpx

13 Essential Digital Marketing Metrics & KPIs to Measure Performance

Digital marketing metrics and kpis

Marketing metrics are a competitive advantage. They allow you to create and optimize campaigns based on actionable evidence rather than intuition. 

But to turn data into insights and money, it’s not enough to simply collect information. You have to track metrics you can act on. 

In this article, you’ll learn which metrics to measure if you want to understand and improve marketing performance.

Featured guides:

What are digital marketing metrics?

Digital marketing metrics are values that are used to track and measure campaign performance.

The right marketing metrics show how customers react to your digital marketing efforts. Their insights support decision-making and budget management by identifying profitable channels and honing in on where to maximize conversions. 

To capitalize on what the data is telling you, metrics should align with your goals and evolve with your strategy. 

A useful metric is both accurate (in that it measures what it says it measures) and aligned with your goals. Don’t measure anything unless the data helps you make a better decision or change your actions. – Seth Godin

Goals determine your key performance indicators (KPIs), which inform the metrics to track. 

KPIs vs. digital marketing metrics

KPIs and digital marketing metrics are often used interchangeably because they both measure performance. There is however an important difference: 

  • A KPI is a quantifiable measure of business goals. For example, if your goal is to boost sales by 20% over the next quarter, you might set multiple KPIs to get the full picture of how your team is progressing (e.g., new customer aquisition, conversion rate, and churn rate).
  • A metric measures progress toward your goal at a tactical level. For example, if you want to see how a landing page contributes to your goal of increasing sales, conversion rate is a good metric to track. 

In short, a KPI can be made up of multiple metrics, but not all metrics are KPIs. 

If your goal is to boost sales, simply tracking website visitors isn’t a KPI, it’s a metric. Because website traffic alone isn’t tied to your goal. But if you understand how traffic translates to form submissions, it becomes important. 

If marketing analytics show a correlation between form submissions and sales qualified leads (SQLs), visitors and form submissions become KPIs because they give you the full picture of how you’re progressing toward the goal. 

But if form submissions come mostly from another source like email marketing, website visitors would simply be a metric, not a KPI. It’s worth tracking, but it’s not tied directly to your goal as a KPI is.

Analytics platforms track a wide range of metrics by default. Google Analytics, for example, tracks more than 200 different data points spanning the entire marketing funnel. Not all of these will be relevant to you—focus on the metrics that influence your KPIs. 

With this in mind, let’s look at 13 digital marketing metrics to track for campaign effectiveness. 

Individually or together, each of these metrics will contribute to common underlying marketing goals:

  • Building awareness;
  • Customer acquisition;
  • Customer retention.

Website traffic is a digital marketing staple. In Google Analytics and other analytics software, overall traffic shows how many people visited or engaged with your website. This data is also filtered by source to show where traffic comes from. 

For example, in this screenshot, we can see that traffic mostly comes from direct visitors.

Screenshot of Google Analytics 4 Acquisition Overview

Overall traffic gives you a bird’s eye view of your marketing efforts. If a lot of people are visiting your website, it’s a signal that your campaigns are effective. 

If traffic has dipped, it indicates a problem. This could be related to technical issues such as broken links or a sign of poorly performing content. 

Traffic on its own doesn’t provide enough information to directly influence the type of content you should create. It’s a metric best used alongside others to track KPIs. However, it’s a useful benchmark. 

Monitor traffic closely to spot patterns that can influence your marketing strategy. For example, if visitor numbers spike around particular events or seasons, you can use this to plan ahead and target interested people. 

How to track overall traffic

Measure traffic from your Google Analytics dashboard. 

In Universal Analytics go to Reports > Acquisition > Overview

Screenshot of Google Analytics Traffic Acquisition Overview

In Google Analytics 4 go to Reports > Life cycle > Acquisition > Overview.

2. Traffic by channel: Find out where your visitors come from

Traffic by channel adds meat to the bones of overall traffic. In Google Analytics or other analytic platforms, channels are the sources featured on the overall traffic dashboard. They show where users were before arriving at your website, providing insight into how your campaigns are performing. 

Screenshot of Google Analytics Traffic Sessions Channel

These insights can be used to help focus your strategic initiatives to acquire more traffic

For example, if a high number of visitors comes from organic search and very little come from paid search, you can look at shifting ad budget over to SEO. If further analysis shows that direct traffic contributes more to conversions, you have a strong case for doing so.

Here are different channels to track and what they mean: 

1. Direct. Traffic from users that entered a URL into a browser, clicked on a saved bookmark, or clicked on a direct link from outside of the browser (e.g., in an app). This traffic typically comes from people with awareness or affinity to your website. Therefore, direct traffic is likely to be from loyal and/or engaged users. This makes it a good metric to measure brand awareness and demand.  

2. Referral. Traffic from direct links, such as an affiliate link or news source. High referral traffic is an indication of strong affiliate links or media coverage. Look closer at this traffic to understand your partnerships. Sources that drive a lot of traffic to your site can be used to build long-term relationships. 

3. Organic. Traffic from non-paid results on search engines. A large amount of organic traffic is a sign that your content is performing well in search results. Traffic tends to be high-intent, which can lead to high levels of engagement. Use Google Search Console or a tool like SEMRush to look at which keywords bring traffic to your website. Build future content around the most popular non-branded terms. 

4. Paid. Traffic from paid search ads on search engines. High paid search traffic is a sign that people are clicking on your ads. As ads appear in search results, visitors generally show high intent. Use ads analytics to view keywords and understand which products and messaging deliver success. 

5. Social. Traffic from social media platforms. Consistently generating a high level of social traffic indicates an engaged and loyal community. Look at which platforms drive the most traffic to understand your core communities. 

6. Display. Traffic from Display and Video ads. As with paid traffic, generating a lot of visitors from Display is a sign that your ads are engaging. Dig deeper into where this traffic is coming from to get a better idea of your targeting, messaging, and product focus. 

Where to track traffic by channel

In Universal Analytics, go to Reports > Acquisition > Overview > All Traffic > Channels. Click on a specific channel to see a breakdown of your most popular sources (e.g. landing pages or search engines).

Screenshot of Google Analytics that shows where to track traffic by channel

In GA4, go to Reports > Life cycle > Acquisition > Overview

You’ll see that traffic by channel is catergorized as “User acquisition” and “Traffic acquisition.”

Screenshot of Google Analytics Traffic Acquisition by Channel
  • User acquisition shows you where new users come from.
  • Traffic acquisition shows you where new sessions come from for new and returning users. 

If you want to find out which sources brought a user to your site in the first place, look at user acquisition. If you want information on the latest session, look at traffic acquisition. 

Monitor both to see how your audience engages with your marketing. 

3. Engagement rate: Learn which content resonates with your audience

Engagement rate is a content performance metric. It tracks how actively involved with your content your audience is. From this, you can understand if you’re reaching the right people with the right message. 

High engagement results in increased awareness and strong brand affinity, which leads to increased revenue.

Use engagement metrics to measure performance and learn which content resonates with your audience so you can create more of it. When doing so, pay attention to the make up of your audience. 

For example, if you notice that a high percentage of engagement comes from a particular demographic, you can tweak your target audience and strategy to better suit their needs.   

What constitutes an engaged user differs depending on the context and medium. Therefore, there are different metrics to look at depending on where you’re measuring engagement. Here’s what to look at:

Where to measure engagement rate

In Google Analytics 4, engagement rate is calculated automatically and displayed as a ratio in your acquisition reports. To find these go to Reports > Life cycle > Engagement > Overview.  

Screenshot of Google Analytics that shows where to measure Engagement Rate

The ratio is calculated as: 

Engaged sessions / total sessions x 100% = Engagement rate

For example, if you had 100 engaged sessions and 1000 total sessions, your engagement rate would be 10%.

100 / 1000 x 100% = 10%

An engaged session is logged when a visitor completes one or more of the following: 

  • Views a page for 10 seconds or longer;
  • Views more than one page;
  • Triggers a conversion event (e.g., submits a form).

For reference, according to FirstPageSage, a good engagement rate is anything above 63% for B2B websites and above 71% for B2C websites. 

To measure social media engagement, you’ll need to run the math yourself. The formula for this is:

Total engagement / total followers x 100% = Engagement rate

  • Total engagement is the sum of all interactions (e.g, likes, shares, comments, etc.).
  • Total followers is the number of people who follow your account. 

For example, if your Twitter account has 10,000 followers and you received 200 likes, 100 replies, and 100 shares, your engagement rate would be 4%.

400 / 10,000 x 100% = 4%

Social engagement rates differ depending on the platform and industry. Check out socialinsider’s social media industry benchmarks study to see where you stand in the market.

4. Bounce rate: Learn what’s causing people to leave your website

Bounce rate is the percentage of sessions that contain a single view of your website. 

A bounce is calculated when a visitor lands on your website and leaves without navigating to another page and without interacting. 

The number of bounces is divided by the number of sessions to find the rate. For example, if four visitors viewed a single page before leaving and four visitors viewed two pages before leaving, your bounce rate would be 50%. 

Bounce rate can tell you how relevant your content is and whether you’re driving traffic to the right landing pages. A high bounce rate is generally seen as a negative (i.e. your page isn’t serving its purpose) and a low bounce rate as a positive. But it’s not always as simple as that.

A high bounce rate on a help page, for example, could be because the visitor found what they needed and left happily. Or it could be that issues with UX design have ruined the experience. Context is important. 

Use bounce rate to measure page performance and as a jumping-in point to examine different elements. 

If you’re experiencing a high bounce rate, ask some deeper questions: 

  • What’s the purpose of the page?
  • What’s a good bounce rate benchmark?
  • Does improving bounce rate correlate with improved revenue and conversion metrics?
  • What’s the quality of the traffic landing on this page?

Based on your answers, make necessary changes to your marketing, SEO, or user experience and continue to track bounces closely. 

What is a good bounce rate?

We’ve already published extense guides on what is a good bounce rate. Generally speaking, when it comes to bounce rates, the lower the better. However, just how low it should be depends on the type of page it is. 

Blog posts, for example, will have a naturally higher bounce rate. People tend to be passive content consumers, abosrbing a post or scanning it and then clicking away to something else. They might also have been directed to the post through social media, read a bit, and then return to scrolling.

Because of user behavior, the average blog post has a higher bounce rate than, say, a product page. On a product page, the customer is more likely to have a high purchase intent, meaning they’ll convert.

Furthermore, bounce rates vary by industry. Reference, food and drink, and science industries have higher bounce rates than real estate, shopping, and gaming industries.

For further insights into bounce rates by page type and industry, read our post on bounce rates.

Where to track bounce rate

Measure bounce rate in Google Analytics.

In Universal Analytics, go to Reports > Acquisition > Overview > All Traffic > Channels or Reports > Behavior > Site Content > All Pages.

Screenshot of Google Analytics that shows where to track Bounce Rate

In GA4, bounce rate is measured as part of engagement rate (see metric #3). Anything that does not class as an engaged session can be viewed as a bounce.

To see the bounce rate, you will need to create an exploration report. Check out 

Loves Data’s step-by-step guide on how to add bounce rate to GA4.

5. Exit rate: Identify issues in your marketing funnel

Where bounce rate measures the number of people who have landed on your website and left quickly, exit rate measures the percentage of users who have left from a specific page. 

It’s calculated by dividing the total number of visitors to a page by the total exits it received. 

Track exit rate to monitor the success of your conversion funnel. A high exit rate will reveal which stage visitors are falling away at so you can correct it. 

For example, if someone lands on your homepage and navigates to your product page where they exit, it’s an indication that something is wrong with the page. 

From here, you can make tweaks such as editing product descriptions and call-to-actions (CTA), then analyze how exit rate changes. 

Where to track exit rate

Measure exit rate in Google Analytics.

In Universal Analytics go to Reports > Behavior > Site Content > All Pages.

Screenshot of Google Analytics that shows where to track Exit Rate

In GA4, exits are only available in custom explorations. To build a report, check out Analytics Mania’s step-by-step guide

Learn the difference between bounce rate and exit rate and why both matter to performance.

6. New visitors vs. returning visitors: Understand how customers use your website

Comparing the number of new visitors with the number of return visitors is a good way to measure the effectiveness of your website and new content.

In Google Analytics, new visitors are users navigating to your website for the first time on a specific device. Returning visitors are users who come back to your website on a specific device within a two-year period. If it’s been more than two years since a person has visited your site, the next time they return will be counted as a new visit. 

These numbers won’t always be accurate. For example, seeing 10,000 new users won’t necessarily mean 10,000 different people. If a person visits your site from a new device or browser, uses private browsing, or blocks cookies, they’ll be counted as new even if they’re not. 

But comparing the two can reveal interesting insights. 

For example, if new visitors spend less time on your site than returning ones, use a behavioral analytics tool like Hotjar to gather qualitative data to find out why. The answers can be used to make tweaks to improve the experience. For instance, using coupon codes or a free guide to incentivize first-time visitors.

If returning users have a higher bounce rate than new users, look at your content strategy and design. Does the quality of new content match older posts? Have you made UX changes that might alienate existing users?

Where to track new vs. returning visitors

User metrics can be tracked in Google Analytics reports. 

In Universal Analytics go to Reports > Audience > Behavior > New vs. Returning.

Screenshot of Google Analytics that shows where to track New vs. Returning visitors

In GA4 go to Reports > Life cycle > Retention.

Screenshot of Google Analytics that shows Retention Overview Page 

7. User demographics: Analyze your targeting

Demographics give you an insight into your target audience. This includes: 

  • Location;
  • Gender;
  • Interests;
  • Age;
  • Language.

Use this information to compare website visitors with your target audience. If demographics match your customer personas, it’s an indication that your targeting is effective. 

If the two are widely different, it’s a sign that your positioning or messaging is off. If this is the case, look at conversions (see metric #9). If rates are down with your core audience, revisit your digital marketing strategy. 

Demographics can also uncover new opportunities. For example, a significant number of visitors from surprising locations or age groups can open up new markets to explore. 

Where to track demographics

Monitor demographics in Google Analytics. 

In Universal Analytics go to Reports > Audience > Demographics. From here, you can also explore Interests and Geo (location). 

Screenshot of Google Analytics Demographics 

In GA4, go to Reports > User > Demographics

Screenshot of Google Analytics Demographic Overview

Other platforms such as Facebook’s business page dashboard and social media management tools like Sprout Social and Hootsuite will also provide a demographic breakdown of your social audience.

8. Sentiment: Track brand perception

For your brand to strike the right chord with customers, it’s important to know how your company is perceived.

Most consumers (94%) say that negative reviews have convinced them to avoid a business. Measuring brand sentiment is important to managing brand reputation and ensuring negative perceptions don’t harm your bottom line. 

From a content marketing perspective, it expands on engagement rate to give you a deeper insight into what customers like and why. 

From a customer service perspective, it allows you to be proactive in your support. For example, monitoring brand mentions might reveal that customers are frustrated at delivery delays. You can use this insight to email them with preemptive apologies and put measures in place to speed up delivery. 

Where to track sentiment

You can measure sentiment in several ways: 

  • Set up Google Alerts for your brand name and other related topics where your brand is actively mentioned.
Screenshot of Google Alerts Set-Up
  • Run customer questionnaires to work out your Net Promoter Score (NPS).
  • Regularly review customer service emails and support chat logs. Categorize conversions by tag (e.g., complaint, query, and praise) to gauge overall sentiment. 
  • Monitor social media shares and mentions for tone, frequency, and volume to gain context for how people are engaging with your brand. 

9. Conversion rate: Understand marketing success

Conversion rate is the percentage of users who visit your website and complete a desired goal, out of the total visitors. The action is directly tied to your goal. For example, completing a form, signing up for a service, or purchasing a product. 

Conversion rate can be calculated with the following formula: 

Number of conversions / Number of visitors x 100 = Conversion rate

For example, if you generated 12 purchases from 240 visits to your product page, your conversion rate would be 5%. 

12 / 240 x 100 = 5%

Track conversion rate to understand how successful you are at attracting leads or customers.

Conversions can be as specific or as broad as you want them to be, with insights used to improve performance. Here are a few examples of different rates to monitor: 

  • Overall conversion rate. How well does your site convert traffic from all sources? 
  • Marketing channel conversion rate. Do Google Ads convert better than Facebook Ads or email marketing?
  • Landing page conversion rate. Which of your landing pages convert the most traffic? Can this format be replicated?
  • Campaign conversion rate. Did changes to targeting or messaging make a difference?
  • Ad conversion rate. Which ads drive more qualified traffic? What do these ads do that underperforming ads don’t? 
  • Keyword conversion rate. Which keywords perform best? Successful terms warrant more budget. 

Use results to identify profitable channels and troubleshoot friction points in your sales funnel. A poor conversion rate combined with a high exit rate, for example, can help you pinpoint areas for analysis. 

But what makes a good or bad conversion rate? 

Most analyses find that average conversion rate for B2B companies is around 2%, whereas for B2C companies it’s around around 1.6%. These rates are useful for benchmarking, but your rate should always be measured alongside lead quality and sales. 

A high conversion rate for non-purchases only benefits your bottom line if it results in a paying customer. 

Where to track conversion rate 

Monitor conversion rate in Google Analytics. 

In Universal Analytics go to Reports > Conversions > Goals > Overview.

Screenshot of Google Analytics Conversion Overview

From here you can explore conversions deeper by looking at goal completions by URL, reverse goals paths, and funnel visualization. 

This will help you understand attribution and how different pages and marketing assets contribute to conversions.

Check out our guide to setting up conversion-boosting funnels in Google Analytics.

In GA4, conversions are based on which events (actions) you mark as conversions. For example, clicking a link or completing a purchase. Learn how to set up events in our definitive guide to Google Analytics 4.

10. Click-through rate: Understand how your emails and ads engage customers 

Click-through rate (CTR) shows the relationship between the number of views and the number of clicks on an ad or in an email. 

This is calculated slightly differently depending on the medium. 

For email, the formula to find your CTR is:

Number of people who clicked a link / Number of emails delivered successfully x 100 = CTR

For example, let’s say you sent an email to your list of 150 people and 100 were successfully delivered. Of those 100 recipients, 50 clicked on your CTA and were sent to your landing page. Based on those figures, your CTR would be 50%

50 / 100 x 100 = 50%

For PPC, the formula to find your CTR is:

Number of people who click an ad / total number of ad impressions x 100 = CTR

For example, if 100 people saw your ad and 10 people clicked on it, your CTR would be 10%

10 / 100 x 100% = 10%

CTR is an important metric for measuring the efficiency of your PPC ads and email marketing campaigns.

Monitor the CTR of your email campaigns to analyze multiple elements and improve results:

  • Email interest or fatigue;
  • Content quality;
  • Media type;
  • Link placement;
  • Number of links.

Track CTR for ads to evaluate the quality of your keywords and thus your ads. CTR is a key factor in Google’s Quality Score formula used to raise your ad position and reduce your spending. 

Screenshot of Google Quality Score

Essentially, a high CTR means that your keywords are targeting and engaging the right audience. 

A low CTR points to an issue in one of the factors affecting your Quality Score. keyword relevance, landing page quality, or ad relevance. 

  • If your ads aren’t being shown, assess keyword quality. Are you bidding on terms that are relevant to your target audience?
  • If people are clicking on your ads but not converting, analyze your landing page. Is messaging consistent with your ad? Does it do a good enough job of explaining the benefits of your product? Are CTAs clear and well-positioned? Optimize different elements of your page and run A/B tests to find the best combination of elements. 
  • If people are seeing your ads but not clicking on them, look at your messaging, images, and CTAs. Is the ad engaging your target audience? Again, test different versions to gauge what works. 

So what’s a good CTR? 

Looking at all industries shows an average CTR of 6.64% for search and 0.57% for display. A CTR higher than the average in your industry can be considered a good CTR. Learn what your industry average is in our click through rates breakdown.

Where to track click-through rate

Email CTR will be measured automatically in your email marketing platform. You can track links in two ways:

  1. Unique clicks. This tracks once for each user who clicks a link to reveal the percentage of recipients who clicked through an email.
  2. All link clicks. This tracks any click-through on an email, even if the same user clicks on a CTA multiple times. It will reveal the ratio of emails sent to visits to your website. Use it to see how effective your website is at converting users first time.

In Google Ads, CTR can be found in your Campaigns dashboard.

11. Cost per click: Track ad spending to improve performance

Cost per click (CPC) is the price you pay for each click on a PPC ad. Since your overall campaign return on investment (ROI) is determined by how much you’re paying for clicks and the quality of traffic those clicks drive, it’s an important metric to measure in terms of expense and value.

CPC acts as a thermometer for ad performance. Monitor it to identify which ads, ad groups, or ad campaigns deliver the best ROI, and as a way to compare your ad effectiveness against competitors. 

To measure your average CPC, use the following formula:

Total cost of clicks / Total clicks = CPC

For example, if your ad gets two clicks, one at $0.20 and one at $0.10, the total cost is $0.30. 

$0.30 / 2 = $0.15

According to WordStream, the average CPC across all industries is around $2. Costs tend to be higher for search network ads and lower for ads shown on Google’s display network.  

If your CPC is high, it signals room for improvement in your Quality Score or ad targeting. To lower it, analyze:

  • Audience. Are you targeting the right people? Narrow down your audience to one specific group. 
  • Ad relevance. Ensure your ads are engaging for potential customers.
  • CTAs. Test different CTA copy. Get specific. User action words to entice clicks. For example, if you’re giving away an ebook, don’t say “click here”, say “download your free guide.” Tell the person what will happen when they click. Check out our guide to crafting compelling CTAs

Where to track CPC

Measure CPC in your Google Ads Campaigns by looking at the “Avg. CPC” column. 

Screenshot of Google Ads Overview Dashboard

12. Customer acquisition cost: Prevent reckless spending 

Customer acquisition cost (CAC) measures how much your company has to spend to get a new customer. It also tells you how much you need to earn from each customer to run a viable company. 

Measuring CAC is critical to ensuring you’re not spending more than you’re making. It’s also a way to identify opportunities and streamline marketing for better ROI. For example, if your acquisition costs are high for LinkedIn ads, you can shift marketing budget to a tactic with a lower CAC. 

CAC is calculated by totaling expenses related to acquiring new customers and dividing them by how many customers you’ve earned. 

Total marketing spend / Number of new customers = CAC

For example, if you spent $300 on email marketing and $400 on PPC ads and acquired 500 new customers, your CAC would be $1.6. 

$700 / 500 = $1.6

Track CAC to keep your business honest and spend wisely. Check out our guide on how to maintain a healthy customer acquisition cost and use this metric for growth.

Where to track CAC

To measure and compare CAC over time, create a cost spreadsheet to track spending. 

Here’s an example from Startup Tools:

Screenshot of Cost Spreadsheet to track CAC 

If you want to track marketing and ad spending, include only your marketing outlay. 

If you want to measure your true CAC to get an idea of overall business health, include all costs related to day-to-day operations. These are your Cost of Goods Sold: materials, rent, labor, storage, shipping, etc. 

13. Customer Lifetime Value: Learn how to increase retention

Customer Lifetime Value (LTV) is the amount of money a customer is predicted to spend with your business for as long as they are a customer. 

LTV is a measure of customer loyalty. The more valuable existing customers are to your business and the longer they stick around, the less you have to spend finding new ones. 

Track LTV to help answer some key questions about your customers and marketing, such as:

  • Do offers meet customer needs and incentivize repeat purchases?
  • How much should we invest in retaining or winning back customers?
  • Does our onboarding process help foster brand loyalty?
  • How much time and money should we invest in marketing for acquisition? 

LTV is also an important financial metric. When measured alongside CAC, LTV provides a holistic view of your business. CAC tells you how much a customer costs. LTV reveals how much a customer is worth. 

If you retain customers for a long time, LTV can put CAC in a more positive light. Here’s an example from our guide on ecommerce customer acquisition costs

If your CAC is $100 per customer, that may seem high. If you acquire 2,000 customers a year, your total expenditure would be $200,000. 

However, if each customer stays with you for two years and has an average order value (AOV) of $30 a month, you earn $620 per customer. Multiply that figure by your 2,000 customers, and you get $1,240,000.

Calculate LTV as:

Average value of a sale x Number of repeat sales x Average retention time = LTV

For example, if a customer spends $20 per month on your product for three years, LTV would look like this:

$20 x 12 months x 3 years = $720 in total revenue (or $240/year)

This is a very basic equation and it’s important to segment your customers to understand the correlations between those who stay and those who churn quickly.

LTV/CAC ratio should be at least three for a sustainable business (i.e., a new customer should bring at least 3X the value of what they cost to acquire).

Anything less is a red flag that indicates overspending on acquisition. If this is the case, review the CAC of prominent channels and analyze your marketing funnel to find faults.

Where to track customer lifetime value

The numbers needed to track lifetime value can be found in the analytics and reporting tools of your ecommerce or sales management platform (e.g., BigCommerce, WooCommerce, Pipeline, or Salesforce). 

There are a few numbers you’ll need to track in a spreadsheet to uncover your average LTV.

To find the average value of a sale, divide total revenue by the number of orders over the period.

Total revenue / Number of orders = Average purchase value

To find the number of repeat sales, divide the number of purchases by the number of customers over the period: 

Number of purchases / Number of customers = Average number of repeat sales

Multiply average purchase value by average number of repeat sales to find your customer value. 

Average purchase value / average number of repeat sales = Customer value

To find the average lifespan of your customers, divide the amount of time a customer continues to purchase from you by the total number of customers. 

Customer lifespan / number of customers = Average customer lifespan

Finally, multiply customer value by customer average customer lifespan to get your average customer lifetime value. 

To help you quickly run these sums, use Chattermill’s customer lifetime value calculator

Screenshot of Customer Lifetime Value Calculator

Conclusion

Tracking metrics lets you build digital marketing campaigns around what you know works and patch holes when they appear.

But not every metric is needed in every scenario. Use KPIs to determine which metrics to measure. Consider whether the data offers useful insights to improve performance. If it doesn’t contribute to your goal, it’s probably not worth tracking right now. 
Become great at data-driven marketing and use insights to grow your business with CXL’s Digital Analytics Minidegree.

Related Posts

Current article:

13 Essential Digital Marketing Metrics & KPIs to Measure Performance

Categories