5 Steps To Elevate Marketing’s Value From Metrics to Meaning
Marketers work endlessly to capture, wrangle, and report on headless, platform-centric metrics that don’t necessarily reflect brand value or revenue growth. Can we turn busyness, into business?
The daily routines of marketers and advertisers are filled with tasks that can feel endlessly repetitive.
We babysit social media platforms, refresh dashboards, churn out multimedia presentations, resize logos (and then resize them again), wrangle data, wrestle with programmatic ad issues, and keep content flowing at the breakneck pace demanded by ever-shifting algorithms.
These tasks, essential as they may seem, often fall under the umbrella of “busywork.” In the grand scheme of business, they often seem designed more to appease marketing platforms and efficiency metrics than to truly drive value for the clients and brands we represent.
And herein lies a problem that many marketers feel but can’t always put into words: too much of our day-to-day work is spent optimizing the machinery of marketing rather than creating outcomes that directly align with client goals.
We measure ourselves on metrics—impressions, click-through rates, engagement scores—but where’s the connection to client retention, revenue, or brand impact?
The real question becomes: how can we, as marketers, translate all this busywork into genuine, revenue-driving value for the brands and clients we work for?
Step 1: Look Beyond Efficiency Metrics—Ask Why
Marketing platforms are very good at giving us numbers that tell us “how” efficiently we’re working with their tools, but not “why” those numbers matter to our clients’ business.
The first step in elevating our work beyond busywork is to dig deeper into our metrics and ask questions that will help us understand what really drives value.
Instead of asking “How can I improve my engagement rate?” let’s ask, “Why does engagement rate matter for this client? Does higher engagement with this social content actually influence the behaviors that influence revenue or retention for them?” If the answer is “not really,” then it’s time to think about what would drive meaningful engagement and align that with business goals.
Questions to ask:
What do these engagement metrics represent in terms of customer behavior?
How does engagement on this platform correlate with purchasing behavior or brand loyalty for this client?
Step 2: Challenge the Platforms—Find the "So What?" in Each Metric
Most platforms are not built to measure brand impact directly; they measure platform interaction. In a world of endless scrolling, likes, and shares, we need to find the “so what?” in every metric. Efficiency metrics tell us how well we’re operating within a system but say little about the brand’s impact outside of it.
When analyzing any metric, ask yourself: if this metric improved tomorrow, would it have a clear and measurable benefit for my client’s business objectives?
A key example: CTR (click-through rate). It's one of the easiest numbers to inflate, but if those clicks don’t convert or lead to measurable brand lift, then they’re little more than digital noise. Instead of only measuring CTR, we should be looking at post-click activity and working with clients to define what happens after the click that matters to them.
Questions to ask:
If we improve this metric by 10%, what tangible effect will it have on brand or sales goals?
What business value or outcome does this metric actually reflect?
Step 3: Break Free of Platform Constraints—Focus on Business Outcomes, Not Platform Metrics
The success of a marketing campaign should ultimately be measured by the business outcomes it drives, not by the platform-specific metrics that are often dictated by martech vendors. For instance, if you’re managing ads for a retail client, performance should be evaluated by incremental sales uplift rather than by impressions served. This shift from platform performance to business performance is critical but requires you to dig deeper and possibly integrate cross-platform data or use modeling to understand the true impact of your campaigns.
Questions to ask:
How do we measure the actual impact of this campaign on brand perception, customer acquisition, or revenue growth?
What data can we connect across platforms to get a better sense of our real influence on customer behavior?
Step 4: Change the Conversation—Set Client Expectations Around Impact, Not Activity
Much of the busywork in marketing is often self-imposed due to the perceived need to “show” clients all the work being done. But real value doesn’t lie in activity reports; it lies in strategic insight and measurable business outcomes. Setting a new standard with clients involves steering the conversation from “what we did” to “what we achieved.”
Start by involving clients in discussions that move away from surface-level metrics and toward outcomes that matter. Instead of reporting “we posted X number of times on social,” report on how social engagement increased customer advocacy or supported a successful product launch.
Questions to ask:
What would a successful campaign look like for this client outside of platform-defined KPIs?
How can we set up reporting that aligns with the client’s revenue or brand awareness goals, not just platform efficiency?
Step 5: Create Space for Meaningful, Impactful Work
Busywork is often the result of a mindset that prioritizes filling time over creating impact. To get out of this loop, marketers need to create space in their schedules to focus on high-impact activities—those that involve true strategic planning, creative ideation, and innovation. This can mean automating the repetitive tasks that don’t require human insight and using that time to work on projects that require creative thought, strategic insight, or deep analysis.
Questions to ask:
Which tasks are repetitive and can be streamlined or automated, allowing more time for high-impact work?
Where could more strategic thinking or insight have a greater impact than just turning out content for content’s sake?
It’s Time to Switch Busyness, Back in to Business
Marketers have long been saddled with the double-edged sword of platform-centric metrics that don’t necessarily reflect brand value or revenue growth. But this is beginning to change, especially as clients grow more savvy about the difference between busywork and business impact.
As marketing professionals, we must become champions of true impact, continually asking the questions that transcend platform metrics and lead us back to the heart of what we do: drive growth and build meaningful connections between brands and customers. When we do this, we turn the busywork into something much more powerful—a direct contributor to the business success of the brands we represent. And in doing so, we elevate the profession itself.