B2B Marketing KPIs: The Metrics That Actually Drive Revenue
Most B2B marketing teams track 30+ metrics. Only 5-7 drive revenue decisions.
The gap between vanity metrics and revenue metrics is where marketing credibility dies. Social followers and website visits feel productive to track. But they don't predict pipeline. B2B marketing KPIs are the metrics tied directly to revenue — pipeline velocity, customer acquisition cost, marketing-sourced revenue percentage, and conversion rates at each funnel stage. They answer the question your CEO actually cares about: is marketing generating profitable growth?
B2B requires different KPIs than B2C because the buying process is different. Sales cycles run 3-12 months, not 3 minutes. Buying committees have 6-10 stakeholders, not one impulse shopper. Attribution spans dozens of touchpoints across months. The metrics that matter reflect this complexity.
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Run my numbers →What Are B2B Marketing KPIs?
A KPI (key performance indicator) is a metric tied to a business goal with a target threshold. A metric is any measurable data point. Page views are a metric. Page views growing 20% quarter-over-quarter to support a pipeline target is a KPI.
B2B marketing KPIs differ from B2C in three ways. First, they track longer, more complex sales cycles. B2C measures immediate conversions. B2B measures pipeline progression over months. Second, they account for multi-touch attribution. A B2B buyer might interact with 7-13 pieces of content before converting. Third, they tie to revenue, not transactions. B2C optimizes for volume. B2B optimizes for deal size and customer lifetime value.
Most B2B teams organize KPIs into three categories: pipeline and revenue KPIs (the outcomes), marketing efficiency KPIs (the cost side), and channel performance KPIs (the inputs driving both).
| KPI Category | What It Measures | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Pipeline & Revenue | MQLs, SQLs, pipeline velocity, CAC, LTV | Direct revenue impact |
| Marketing Efficiency | Cost per lead, ROMI, conversion rates | Spend effectiveness |
| Channel Performance | Organic traffic, paid ROAS, email conversions | Input health by source |
Pipeline & Revenue KPIs
The seven core metrics that measure marketing's direct contribution to revenue: MQLs, SQLs, pipeline velocity, CAC, LTV, win rate, and average deal size.
Marketing Qualified Leads (MQLs): Leads that meet your threshold for sales readiness based on behavior and fit. MQL volume matters, but MQL-to-SQL conversion rate matters more. If only 10% of MQLs become SQLs, your qualification criteria are broken.
Sales Qualified Leads (SQLs): Leads that sales has accepted and is actively working. The MQL-to-SQL conversion rate shows alignment between marketing and sales. Across 6,000+ MarketerHire clients, companies with formal lead scoring see 30-40% MQL-to-SQL rates. Companies without it average 15-20%.
Pipeline velocity: How fast deals move from SQL to close. Formula: (number of opportunities × average deal size × win rate) / average sales cycle length. Faster pipeline velocity means marketing is attracting higher-intent buyers and sales is closing efficiently.
Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC): Total sales and marketing spend divided by new customers acquired. If your CAC is $15,000 and your average deal size is $12,000, you have a problem. Track CAC by channel to identify where you're overpaying.
Customer Lifetime Value (LTV): Total revenue a customer generates over their relationship with you. The CAC:LTV ratio is the single most important metric for sustainable growth. A healthy B2B SaaS ratio is 3:1 or higher. Below 3:1, you're spending too much to acquire customers. Above 5:1, you're likely underinvesting in growth.
Win rate: Percentage of SQLs that close. Marketing influences this by attracting qualified leads. A 25% win rate is typical for B2B SaaS. If yours is below 20%, marketing may be generating volume but not quality.
Average deal size: Revenue per closed deal. Marketing can increase this by targeting enterprise accounts, bundling products, or positioning premium tiers. Track this alongside win rate — a higher deal size with a lower win rate might still improve revenue efficiency.
Marketing Efficiency KPIs
Marketing efficiency KPIs measure cost per pipeline dollar generated. They show whether your budget is working or wasting.
Cost per lead (CPL) is total marketing spend divided by leads generated. But raw CPL is misleading if those leads don't convert. Cost per MQL and cost per SQL are better proxies for efficiency because they filter for quality.
Marketing-sourced revenue percentage shows what portion of closed revenue came from marketing-generated leads. This is different from marketing-influenced revenue, which includes any deal that touched a marketing asset. Marketing-sourced means marketing created the opportunity. A healthy B2B target is 40-60% of revenue sourced by marketing.
Return on marketing investment (ROMI) is revenue generated by marketing divided by marketing spend. If you spend $500K on marketing and generate $2M in pipeline that closes at 25%, you generated $500K in revenue. Your ROMI is 1:1. Not great. Target 5:1 or higher for mature programs.
Conversion rates at each funnel stage reveal where prospects leak. Measure visitor-to-lead, lead-to-MQL, MQL-to-SQL, and SQL-to-customer. If your visitor-to-lead rate is 2% but your competitor's is 5%, your offers or landing pages need work. If your MQL-to-SQL rate is 12%, your lead scoring is too loose.
Channel Performance KPIs
Different channels drive different value. Track performance by source to allocate budget intelligently and double down on what works.
| Channel | Key KPIs | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Organic search | Traffic, keyword rankings, conversions, organic-sourced MQLs | Compound growth — investment builds over time |
| Paid search | CPC, ROAS, conversion rate, cost per SQL | Immediate pipeline control, but diminishing returns |
| Paid social | CPC, CTR, cost per MQL, pipeline contribution | Top-of-funnel awareness, lower intent than search |
| Open rate, click rate, conversion rate, email-sourced pipeline | Highest ROI channel for nurture and retention |
Organic search drives 40-60% of B2B pipeline for content-mature companies. It has the best CAC because once you rank, traffic is free. But it takes 6-12 months to see results.
Paid search gives you pipeline control. You can turn spend up or down and see results in days. But cost per click rises over time, and ROAS compresses as competition increases. Use paid to fill gaps while organic builds.
Email has the highest ROI of any B2B channel — $36-42 for every $1 spent, according to Litmus 2026. But only if your list is engaged. Track unsubscribe rate and spam complaints. If either spikes, your cadence or content is off.
Content marketing is the engine for long B2B sales cycles. A buyer who reads 3+ pieces of your content before converting has a 2x higher close rate than one who reads zero. Track which content assets appear most often in closed-won deals. Double down on those formats.
How to Build a B2B Marketing Dashboard
A dashboard is only useful if the team checks it. Start with 5-7 core KPIs, update them weekly, and make them accessible to everyone on the marketing team.
Step 1: Pick your core KPIs. Start with pipeline velocity, MQL-to-SQL conversion, CAC:LTV ratio, marketing-sourced revenue percentage, and cost per SQL. Add 2-3 channel-specific KPIs based on where you invest most (organic traffic and conversions if you're SEO-heavy, ROAS and cost per MQL if you're paid-heavy).
Step 2: Choose your tools. HubSpot and Salesforce handle attribution and pipeline tracking. Google Analytics tracks website and organic performance. Looker, Tableau, or Databox visualize it all in one place. Avoid building dashboards in spreadsheets — they break as soon as someone changes a formula.
Step 3: Set your review cadence. Review lead volume, MQL/SQL counts, and channel performance weekly. Review CAC, LTV, pipeline velocity, and ROMI monthly. Review annually to set targets and adjust strategy.
Step 4: Report to leadership. CEOs and boards don't care about 30 slides. Show them 3 numbers: pipeline generated, marketing-sourced revenue percentage, and CAC:LTV ratio. Add context on what changed and why.
Common KPI Mistakes (and How to Fix Them)
The top five KPI mistakes we see across 6,000+ MarketerHire clients: tracking vanity metrics, measuring too much, and not tying metrics to revenue.
Mistake 1: Tracking vanity metrics. Social followers, page views, and email list size feel good but don't predict revenue. Fix: Replace them with conversion-focused metrics. Swap page views for conversion rate. Swap social followers for social-sourced SQLs.
Mistake 2: Measuring too much. If you track 40 KPIs, you're not tracking anything. You're reporting. Fix: Cut to 5-7 KPIs that directly impact your quarterly goal. Archive the rest.
Mistake 3: Misaligned attribution. First-touch attribution over-credits top-of-funnel channels. Last-touch over-credits bottom-of-funnel. Both lie. Fix: Use multi-touch attribution or a weighted model that reflects your sales cycle. If your CRM can't handle it, hire someone who can build it.
Mistake 4: Not tying metrics to revenue. Leads are not revenue. MQLs are not revenue. Pipeline is not revenue. Track closed-won revenue sourced by marketing, and work backward from there. Fix: Build your dashboard top-down — start with revenue, then pipeline, then leads.
Mistake 5: Ignoring customer acquisition cost. If you don't know your CAC by channel, you're flying blind. Fix: Track spend and conversions by source. Calculate CAC monthly. Kill channels where CAC exceeds LTV.