How to Measure the ROI of Content Marketing
Content is one of the highest-leverage marketing investments you can make — but only if you can prove it pays. Most teams don’t fail at producing content; they fail at measuring it. A blog might be driving most of the company’s pipeline and no one in the boardroom would know.
This guide walks through the same measurement framework we use with our clients. It works for B2B and B2C, and it doesn’t require expensive enterprise software — only honest tracking and a calm, quarterly review.
1. Start with the business outcome
Before measuring anything, agree on the single number content is meant to influence. For most companies it is one of:
- Marketing-qualified leads (MQLs)
- Sales-qualified opportunities (SQLs) or booked calls
- Free trial or product signups
- Closed-won revenue
- Repeat purchases or customer retention
Pick one primary outcome per quarter and one supporting outcome. Trying to optimize for everything simultaneously dilutes both your content and your reporting.
2. Map content to the buyer journey
Tag every piece of content as top, middle or bottom of funnel. Top-of-funnel content earns awareness; middle-of-funnel content earns trust; bottom-of-funnel content drives conversions. Expect very different metrics for each — and judge them by the right yardstick.
- Top of funnel — measured by reach, organic traffic, social shares and brand search lift.
- Middle of funnel — measured by email signups, content downloads, return visits and assisted conversions.
- Bottom of funnel — measured by direct conversions, demos booked and revenue attributed.
A content portfolio that’s 80% top-of-funnel will look weak on direct revenue. That doesn’t mean it’s failing; it means you’re measuring it with the wrong stick.
3. Track three layers of metrics
- Reach — impressions, organic traffic, video views.
- Engagement — time on page, scroll depth, email signups, social saves.
- Outcomes — leads, demos, sales attributed to content.
Reach without engagement means people aren’t paying attention. Engagement without outcomes means you’re entertaining strangers. The ratio between layers tells you where the funnel is leaking.
If a metric won’t change a decision, stop tracking it.
4. Use multi-touch attribution, not last click
Content rarely wins on the last click. A blog post might bring a visitor in six months before they convert through paid search or a direct visit. If you give last-click credit to whatever the visitor touched at the moment of conversion, you’ll systematically undervalue content and over-invest in bottom-funnel ads.
A simple model that works for most teams:
- Position-based — give 40% credit to the first touch, 40% to the last, and split 20% across everything in between.
- Linear — split credit evenly across every touchpoint in the journey.
- Custom — only worth building when you have hundreds of conversions per month.
Both GA4 and most CRMs support these models out of the box. The exact percentages matter less than picking one and applying it consistently.
5. Set up clean tracking from the start
Before producing any new content, make sure you can answer these questions:
- Where did the visitor come from? (UTM tags on every campaign link.)
- What pages did they read before converting? (Event tracking on key pages.)
- Which form, button or CTA converted them? (Named conversion events.)
- Did they become a paying customer? (CRM integration.)
The single most common reason teams can’t prove content ROI isn’t that the content isn’t working — it’s that the link between content and customer was never instrumented in the first place.
6. Calculate ROI honestly
The simple formula:
Content ROI = (Revenue attributed to content – Total content cost) ÷ Total content cost
Total content cost includes:
- Salaries of writers, editors and producers (or proportionate time).
- Freelance and agency fees.
- Tools (CMS, SEO, analytics, design, scheduling).
- Distribution costs (paid promotion, syndication).
Revenue should be looked at over a 6 to 12 month window — not a single month. Content compounds. Judging it on a 30-day window is like judging a fitness program after a single workout.
7. Build a one-page dashboard
If your content dashboard takes more than 30 seconds to read, it won’t be read. A good monthly dashboard fits on one page and answers four questions:
- Are we reaching more of the right people than last month?
- Are they engaging more deeply?
- Are they converting at the same or higher rates?
- Did we hit the cost-per-lead and revenue targets we agreed to?
Five to seven metrics, big numbers, a small trend chart for each. That’s it.
8. Report on a quarterly cadence to leadership
Content compounds, so weekly reporting to leadership creates panic and bad decisions. A clean quarterly review focused on cost-per-lead, organic traffic growth and pipeline contribution shows the real picture and protects long-term investments.
Our standard quarterly content review includes:
- Traffic and ranking trends (top 10 pages and changes).
- Email list growth and engagement.
- Leads and revenue attributed to content (with attribution model named).
- Cost per lead and per customer from content.
- Top three lessons learned and the plan for next quarter.
9. Don’t forget the leading indicators
Revenue is a lagging indicator. By the time it moves, the work that caused it happened months ago. To stay ahead, watch the leading indicators of content health:
- Number of indexed, ranking pages on page one.
- Branded search volume on Google Trends.
- Newsletter open and reply rates.
- Social shares per post and saves per video.
- Direct traffic — a hidden but reliable signal of brand recall.
10. Know when to cut, not just when to publish
Most content libraries have a long tail of underperforming pages dragging down their averages. Every quarter, identify pages with no traffic, no conversions and no strategic role. Either improve them, merge them into stronger pages, or remove them. A smaller, stronger library outperforms a sprawling, average one — both for users and for search engines.
The takeaway
Content marketing has always been measurable. What changes from year to year is the patience required to measure it well. Pick one outcome, instrument it cleanly, attribute it fairly, and review it quarterly. Do that for a year and you’ll know exactly which articles, videos and emails earn their keep — and which to retire.