Marketing Techniques, Marketing Tips, Online Marketing, Social Media Marketing
Why ROI Matters More Than Likes, Clicks and Vanity Metrics

Modern marketing has a reporting problem.
Not because there is too little data, but because there is far too much of the wrong kind.
Businesses are surrounded by dashboards. They can see impressions, reach, click-through rates, open rates, views, shares, comments and engagement scores in almost real time. On the surface, that sounds like progress. Marketing appears more measurable than ever before. Yet despite all that information, many business owners still feel unclear about whether their marketing is actually working. That is because visibility is not the same as value.
Visibility vs Value
Metrics like likes, clicks and engagement are not meaningless, but they are often overrated. They tell you something about attention. They may indicate that a message has landed, that content has generated curiosity, or that a campaign is being seen. But they do not, by themselves, answer the question that matters most: did this activity produce a worthwhile commercial return?
That is where ROI comes in.
Return on investment remains the most important measure because it cuts through all the noise and forces marketing back into business reality. It connects spend to outcome. It asks whether the money invested in a marketing campaign, channel or activity created a return that justifies the decision. That is the measure leadership teams care about, and rightly so.
Without ROI, marketing performance is dangerously open to interpretation.
A campaign can look “successful” because it generated strong engagement. A post can be celebrated because it reached thousands of people. A paid ad can appear efficient because it drove lots of traffic. But if none of that attention turns into profitable action, then the commercial case quickly falls apart. The business has not bought growth. It has bought visibility. And visibility on its own does not pay the bills.
Understanding which metrics are “vanity”
This is where many SMEs get pulled off course. They start reporting on what is easiest to measure rather than what is most meaningful to understand. Vanity metrics feel reassuring because they are immediate and often flattering. They can create the impression that marketing is active, relevant and performing. But flattering data can be dangerous when it distracts from uncomfortable truths.
A hundred enquiries from the wrong people are not progress. Neither are thousands of views from an audience that will never buy. Nor is a spike in website traffic that produces no real uplift in leads, sales or profit.
ROI forces honesty where vanity metrics allow ambiguity.
That does not mean softer metrics should be ignored entirely. They can still be useful signals. For example, a low click-through rate may suggest weak messaging. Strong engagement might indicate that a topic is resonating. Reach can sometimes help assess whether awareness activity is broad enough. But these measures should be treated as indicators, not verdicts. Their value lies in what they might explain, not in whether they prove success on their own.
Reversing the logic is a mistake
Too often, businesses begin to chase the metrics that look impressive publicly and lose sight of the numbers that matter privately. Marketing becomes performative. It starts optimising for applause rather than contribution. Teams become busy improving campaign optics rather than commercial outcomes. That is when trust starts to erode, especially between marketing and leadership. The boardroom does not need more noise. It needs clarity.
ROI (Return On Investment) should be the focus
That is why ROI is so powerful. It puts marketing back on the same commercial footing as other business decisions. It helps leaders compare channels more objectively. It supports smarter budgeting. It makes it easier to decide what deserves more investment and what should be stopped. Most importantly, it changes the tone of the conversation. Marketing is no longer asking to be believed. It is providing evidence. For SMEs, that matters enormously.
Smaller businesses often do not have the luxury of treating marketing as a broad experimentation budget with vague long-term intentions. They need sharper choices. That means understanding which activities are creating enquiries, which enquiries are converting, what those customers are worth, and how much profit remains once the cost of generating them has been taken into account. That is proper marketing measurement.
Strategic marketing reporting
It also makes marketing more useful internally. Once ROI becomes the benchmark, reporting becomes more strategic. Instead of simply listing what happened, businesses can explain what it meant. They can say which campaigns created return, which channels underperformed, where spend should be redirected and where future growth is most likely to come from.
This sort of reporting is far more valuable than a report full of decorative numbers.
There is also a cultural shift that comes with this. When businesses focus on ROI, they become more disciplined about the quality of their thinking. They stop signing off random tactics without clear objectives. They ask stronger questions before launch. They become more rigorous about tracking results. In short, they stop using marketing as a creative outlet and start using it as a commercial system. That is not anti-creativity. It is pro-accountability.
Channelling creativity commercially
The best marketing often does have a creative spark. But creativity needs a job to do. It should help attract the right people, communicate value more clearly, improve conversion or strengthen retention. When it does that profitably, it has earned its place. When it only generates attention, it should not be mistaken for success.
That distinction is vital. Because the longer businesses confuse vanity with value, the longer marketing remains harder to trust, harder to justify and harder to improve. But when ROI becomes the central measure, decision-making sharpens. Waste becomes easier to spot. Good channels become easier to scale. And marketing starts sounding a lot more credible in the conversations that matter most.
It is worth remembering that likes, clicks and reach are not the end goal. They are, at best, steps on the path.
Return is the goal.
ROI is the goal, not because everything in marketing can be judged in a crude short-term way, but because every serious business needs to know whether its investment is contributing to sustainable growth. That is the standard marketing should be held to.
And frankly, it is the standard it should want to be held to.
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Ian Kirk
Founder at Opportunity Marketing
Ian is the founder of Opportunity Marketing marketing, with over 18 years of experience in successfully setting up marketing departments, creating marketing strategies and implementing these strategies across a wide number of SME companies in both the B2B and B2C sectors through a variety of channels.






