Vanity metrics have been a sugar rush for marketers for nearly two decades, but they’re ultimately unsatisfying. Clicks, likes, page views and time-on-site may look impressive on a dashboard or great in a deck, but they rarely correlate to true success where it matters: revenue, growth and long-term business performance.
These surface-level metrics give a false sense of success. They create feel-good moments that rarely translate into meaningful outcomes. They often provide the basis for misguided decision-making. And even worse, they have eroded marketing’s influence in the boardroom. Vanity metrics frequently mask underperformance and contribute to the growing credibility gap between marketing, business leadership and corporate shareholders.
Currently, only 63% of Fortune 500 companies have a chief marketing officer or similar. This number has declined by 10 points over the past two years. The message is clear: As marketing fails to speak the language of business outcomes, it is increasingly losing its seat at the decision-making table. Flashy numbers often fail to convert into revenue or measurable impact, eroding confidence in the marketing function, particularly among CFOs and other senior leaders.
From engagement to earnings: the metrics that matter
According to McKinsey, marketing often reports high brand awareness and web traffic—yet CFOs later reveal declining sales and profits, suggesting a disconnect between flashy metrics and business reality. Campaigns optimized for reach often sacrifice relevance. Case studies celebrating engagement may overlook conversion. The result is a misalignment between what’s being measured and what truly matters in the boardroom: revenue.
Finance teams don’t care how many people liked a post or visited a page if none of those people became customers. No one is allocating more budget to marketing based on time-on-site or click-through rate. To stay relevant and trusted, marketers need to shift the conversation. That means recentering on business impact, aligning tightly with finance and product teams and rethinking what success means. It’s time to move from activity metrics to outcome metrics.
What we often hear from marketing leaders is, “We have more data than ever, yet we’ve never been less confident in the decisions we’re making.”
Data backs this up with an exclamation point. According to McKinsey, most senior executives say their organizations make poor decisions more often than they make the right ones. The road to budget-slashing, job-eliminating mistakes is paved with vanity metrics, siloed strategies and organizational misalignment. And it has put the credibility of the entire marketing industry on the clock.
The credibility comeback requires alignment
The only solution that matters is a twofold alignment shift. First, organizations must prioritize a single set of truths for marketing decisions. This requires a unified, verified data source to validate decisions, hypotheses and outcomes across marketing, operations, customer service and sales.
Research published earlier this year indicates that fewer than 5% of executives fully understand their company’s strategic priorities, resulting in an average loss of $122 million per billion dollars of corporate expenditures, or about 12%. So, if everyone gets on the same page regarding the data that’s driving marketing decisions, the result is an instant 12% boost to the bottom line. Compare that to most corporate initiatives on the table today, and a single source of truth represents the most impactful move most companies can make in 2025.
What follows is the second critical alignment: reducing or eliminating the use of vanity metrics in marketing. No organization should feel confident using data points like increased time on site, response rates, brand awareness or social media engagement to justify their budget.
We have all the data and tools needed to measure every marketing expenditure in terms of dollars in and dollars out. With a single set of facts, the path becomes clear. The more marketers can show how their efforts directly lead to customer growth, long-term value, sales and referrals (the actual business value of loyalty and advocacy), the more they’ll be included in the room where the budget is allocated—not just the room where it’s handed down.
“Data-Driven Thinking” is written by members of the media community and contains fresh ideas on the digital revolution in media.
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