13 Critical Demand Generation KPIs to Track in 2026

Demand generation KPIs measure how well your marketing creates pipeline value and drives revenue. Unlike vanity metrics like page views or email opens, demand gen KPIs track pipeline velocity, conversion efficiency, and revenue attribution. The 13 metrics below help B2B marketing leaders prove ROI, optimize spend, and align marketing with sales targets.

73% of B2B marketers can't prove demand gen ROI. The problem isn't effort — it's measurement. Most teams track activity metrics (MQLs, form fills, content downloads) that look good on dashboards but don't connect to revenue. The metrics that matter measure outcomes: how fast deals move through the funnel, how efficiently you acquire customers, and which campaigns actually influence closed-won revenue.

This guide covers 13 demand gen KPIs used by high-performing B2B teams to turn marketing from a cost center into a growth driver.

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Why Most Demand Gen KPIs Miss the Mark

Most demand gen dashboards track the wrong things. They measure activity instead of outcomes.

Activity metrics count what happened: MQLs submitted, emails sent, webinars attended. Outcome metrics measure what changed: pipeline created, deals accelerated, revenue influenced. Activity metrics make you look busy. Outcome metrics prove you're effective.

Activity metrics teams obsess over:

Outcome metrics that actually matter:

The gap between the two is why marketing gets blamed when pipeline stalls. You can generate 1,000 MQLs and still miss revenue targets if none of them convert. The right KPIs measure conversion, not volume.

From 30,000+ marketer matches at MarketerHire, we've seen that the highest-performing demand gen teams track 5-7 outcome metrics and ignore the rest. They know which campaigns drive pipeline, how long deals take to close, and what their actual CAC is. Their dashboards answer one question: are we creating revenue faster and cheaper than last quarter?

The 13 Demand Generation KPIs That Matter

1. Pipeline Velocity

Pipeline velocity measures how fast deals move from first touch to closed-won. It combines four variables: number of opportunities, average deal size, win rate, and sales cycle length. Faster velocity means you're closing more revenue in less time.

Why it matters: Velocity shows whether your demand gen is accelerating deals or creating slow-moving pipeline that clogs the funnel. A 10% increase in velocity is often worth more than a 10% increase in lead volume.

How to calculate:

Pipeline Velocity = (# Opportunities × Average Deal Value × Win Rate) / Sales Cycle Length (days)

Benchmark: Best-in-class B2B SaaS teams see 15-25% annual velocity improvements. If your velocity is flat or declining, your demand gen isn't working.

2. MQL-to-SQL Conversion Rate

MQL-to-SQL conversion rate measures the percentage of marketing qualified leads that sales accepts as sales qualified leads. It's the clearest measure of lead quality.

Why it matters: High MQL volume with low SQL conversion means marketing is generating junk leads. Sales ignores them, marketing blames sales, and nobody hits quota. A healthy conversion rate proves your targeting and qualification work.

How to calculate:

MQL-to-SQL Rate = (SQLs / MQLs) × 100

Benchmark: 13-20% is typical for B2B SaaS. Below 10% signals misalignment between marketing and sales on what "qualified" means. Above 25% means you might be qualifying too conservatively.

3. Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC)

CAC measures how much you spend to acquire one new customer. It includes all marketing and sales expenses divided by the number of customers won.

Why it matters: CAC determines whether your growth is sustainable. If CAC is higher than customer lifetime value (LTV), you're losing money on every deal. The goal is to lower CAC while maintaining or improving lead quality.

How to calculate:

CAC = (Total Marketing Spend + Total Sales Spend) / # New Customers

Benchmark: Healthy B2B SaaS companies target a 3:1 LTV:CAC ratio. If your CAC is rising quarter-over-quarter, your demand gen efficiency is declining.

4. Pipeline Value Generated

Pipeline value generated measures the total dollar value of opportunities created by marketing in a given period. It's the most direct measure of marketing's revenue contribution.

Why it matters: This is the number that proves marketing's value to the board. If you generate $5M in pipeline and close at 25%, you created $1.25M in revenue. Without this metric, marketing is a cost center.

How to calculate:

Pipeline Value = Sum of all opportunity values created by marketing-sourced or marketing-influenced campaigns

Benchmark: High-performing demand gen teams generate 3-5x their annual budget in pipeline value. If you're below 2x, you're not generating enough top-of-funnel or your targeting is off.

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5. Campaign Attribution Percentage

Campaign attribution percentage shows what portion of your pipeline can be traced back to specific marketing campaigns. It answers the question: which campaigns actually drive deals?

Why it matters: Without attribution, you're flying blind. You don't know which channels to scale and which to cut. Attribution lets you double down on what works and kill what doesn't.

How to calculate:

Attribution % = (Pipeline attributed to campaigns / Total pipeline) × 100

Benchmark: Best-in-class teams attribute 60-80% of pipeline to specific campaigns. Below 40% means your tracking is broken or your campaigns aren't actually driving deals.

6. Content Engagement Score

Content engagement score combines metrics like time on page, scroll depth, downloads, and return visits to measure how deeply prospects engage with your content. It predicts conversion better than pageviews.

Why it matters: Someone who reads three blog posts and downloads a guide is more qualified than someone who bounced after 10 seconds. Engagement scores let you prioritize high-intent prospects and surface them to sales faster.

How to calculate:

Engagement Score = Weighted average of: time on page (40%), pages per session (30%), return visits (20%), conversions (10%)

Benchmark: Leads with engagement scores in the top 20% convert to SQL at 3-5x the rate of low-engagement leads.

7. Lead Scoring Accuracy

Lead scoring accuracy measures how well your scoring model predicts conversion. It compares the close rate of high-scored leads vs. low-scored leads.

Why it matters: If high-scored leads convert at the same rate as low-scored leads, your scoring model is useless. Accurate scoring lets sales focus on the best opportunities and ignore the rest.

How to calculate:

Scoring Accuracy = (Close rate of top-scored leads / Close rate of bottom-scored leads)

Benchmark: A 3:1 ratio or higher indicates strong scoring accuracy. Below 2:1 means your model needs recalibration.

8. SQLs Generated

SQLs (Sales Qualified Leads) are leads that sales has accepted and committed to working. Unlike MQLs, SQLs are vetted by sales and meet buying criteria.

Why it matters: SQL volume is the truest measure of demand gen output. MQLs are a vanity metric — anyone can inflate MQL count by lowering the bar. SQLs prove that sales believes the leads are worth pursuing.

How to calculate:

SQLs = # of leads accepted by sales and entered into active pipeline

Benchmark: High-growth B2B teams target 10-15% month-over-month SQL growth. Flat or declining SQL volume means demand gen isn't scaling.

9. Time to Pipeline

Time to pipeline measures how long it takes from first touch to creating a sales opportunity. Shorter is better — it means your nurture works and prospects don't go cold.

Why it matters: Leads that sit in nurture for 6 months before converting are expensive and likely to churn. Fast time-to-pipeline indicates strong intent and efficient qualification.

How to calculate:

Time to Pipeline = Average days from first touch (ad click, content download, event) to opportunity created

Benchmark: Best-in-class B2B teams see 30-60 days for inbound leads, 60-90 days for outbound. Longer than 90 days signals weak intent or poor nurture.

10. Cost per SQL

Cost per SQL measures how much you spend to generate one sales-qualified lead. It's a more honest efficiency metric than cost per MQL.

Why it matters: You can drive cost per MQL to $50 by lowering qualification standards, but if none convert to SQL, you wasted the budget. Cost per SQL accounts for quality and conversion.

How to calculate:

Cost per SQL = Total Marketing Spend / # SQLs Generated

Benchmark: $500-$1,500 is typical for mid-market B2B SaaS, depending on deal size. If your cost per SQL exceeds 30% of average deal value, your efficiency is poor.

11. Revenue Influence

Revenue influence measures the total revenue from deals that had any marketing touchpoint in the buyer journey — even if sales sourced the lead. It's broader than marketing-sourced revenue.

Why it matters: Most deals involve multiple touchpoints. A sales-sourced lead might attend your webinar, download content, and visit pricing pages before closing. Revenue influence captures marketing's full contribution, not just first-touch credit.

How to calculate:

Revenue Influence = Total closed-won revenue from opportunities with at least one marketing touchpoint

Benchmark: Marketing should influence 60-80% of total revenue in a healthy demand gen motion. Below 40% means your campaigns aren't reaching active pipeline.

12. Multi-Touch Attribution

Multi-touch attribution distributes credit for a deal across all touchpoints in the buyer journey. It shows which channels and campaigns contribute to closed revenue at each stage.

Why it matters: First-touch attribution over-credits top-of-funnel channels. Last-touch over-credits bottom-of-funnel. Multi-touch shows the full picture — which channels drive awareness, which nurture, and which close.

How to calculate:

Use a multi-touch attribution model (U-shaped, W-shaped, or time-decay) in your MAP or BI tool. Assign fractional credit to each touchpoint based on stage and recency.

Benchmark: No universal benchmark — the goal is visibility into which channels contribute at each stage so you can optimize the full funnel, not just top or bottom.

13. Marketing Sourced vs. Influenced Pipeline

This KPI separates pipeline where marketing created the first touch (sourced) from pipeline where marketing contributed later (influenced). It clarifies marketing's role in the funnel.

Why it matters: If 90% of your pipeline is influenced but only 10% is sourced, you're great at nurturing but weak at demand creation. The ratio tells you where to invest — top-of-funnel or mid-funnel.

How to calculate:

Sourced Pipeline = Opportunities where marketing owned first touch
Influenced Pipeline = Opportunities where marketing touched the deal but didn't source it

Benchmark: Healthy teams see 30-50% sourced, 50-70% influenced. If sourced is below 20%, your demand gen isn't creating enough new pipeline.

How to Build a Demand Gen Dashboard That Actually Gets Used

A dashboard is only useful if people look at it. Most dashboards fail because they're too complex, update too slowly, or answer questions nobody asked.

Start with stakeholder alignment. Execs care about pipeline value and CAC. Sales cares about SQL volume and lead quality. Practitioners care about channel performance and conversion rates. Build three views: executive (5 metrics, weekly), sales (8 metrics, daily), and practitioner (12+ metrics, real-time).

Pick the right tools. Your dashboard lives in your BI tool (Looker, Tableau, Power BI) or your MAP (HubSpot, Marketo, Pardot). Pull data from CRM (Salesforce), MAP, ad platforms (Google, LinkedIn), and web analytics (GA4). Use reverse ETL tools like Census or Hightouch if your data warehouse is the source of truth.

Set a reporting cadence. Weekly is ideal for most teams. Monthly is too slow to catch problems. Daily creates noise. Weekly lets you spot trends, course-correct, and keep marketing-sales alignment tight.

Make it actionable. Every metric needs a threshold. "MQL-to-SQL is 14%" is a number. "MQL-to-SQL is 14% — target is 18%, we need to tighten qualification" is actionable. Add red/yellow/green zones so anyone can see what's broken at a glance.

From MarketerHire's 30,000+ matches, we've seen that the teams who nail dashboards do three things: they limit metrics to what stakeholders actually use, they update in near-real-time, and they tie every metric to a decision. If a metric doesn't change behavior, cut it.

Common Demand Gen KPI Mistakes (and How to Fix Them)

Mistake 1: Tracking too many metrics. If your dashboard has 40 KPIs, nobody knows what to focus on. You dilute attention and slow decisions.

Fix: Pick 5-7 core metrics that map to business goals. Pipeline velocity, cost per SQL, MQL-to-SQL rate, pipeline value, and attribution % cover 90% of what matters. Track the rest in a secondary dashboard for practitioners only.

Mistake 2: Ignoring multi-touch attribution. First-touch attribution makes paid search look like a hero. Last-touch makes sales look like the only thing that matters. Neither is true.

Fix: Implement a U-shaped or W-shaped attribution model that credits both early touchpoints (awareness) and late touchpoints (conversion). If your MAP doesn't support it, use a BI tool or attribution platform like Bizible or Dreamdata.

Mistake 3: Not tying metrics to revenue. MQLs, content downloads, and webinar signups mean nothing if they don't convert to pipeline and revenue.

Fix: For every top-of-funnel metric, calculate the downstream impact. "We generated 500 MQLs" becomes "We generated 500 MQLs, 75 SQLs (15% conversion), $2.1M pipeline (avg deal size $28K), and $525K in closed-won revenue (25% close rate)." Now you can see if the channel is worth scaling.

Mistake 4: Using the same benchmarks for all channels. Organic search leads convert at 20%. Paid social converts at 8%. Webinars convert at 30%. Treating them the same leads to bad decisions.

Fix: Set channel-specific benchmarks. Compare paid social performance to last quarter's paid social, not to your organic search or event programs.

Mistake 5: Measuring marketing in isolation. Demand gen KPIs don't matter if sales isn't following up, if your product has a retention problem, or if pricing is off.

Fix: Tie marketing KPIs to full-funnel metrics. Track not just SQLs created but SQL-to-close rate, time to close, and first-year retention. If SQLs are converting but churning in month 3, the problem isn't demand gen — it's product-market fit or onboarding.

FAQ
13 Critical Demand Generation KPIs to Track
Pipeline velocity is the single most important demand gen KPI because it measures speed and efficiency across the entire funnel. It combines opportunity volume, deal size, win rate, and sales cycle length into one metric. Improving velocity by 15-20% often has more impact than doubling MQL volume.
Demand gen ROI = (Revenue influenced or sourced by marketing - Total marketing spend) / Total marketing spend × 100. For example, if you spend $500K and influence $2M in closed revenue, your ROI is 300%. Track both sourced and influenced revenue to capture marketing's full contribution.
Lead gen metrics measure volume and conversion at the top of the funnel: MQLs, cost per lead, form fill rate. Demand gen metrics measure pipeline creation and revenue impact: pipeline velocity, SQLs, cost per SQL, revenue influence. Demand gen focuses on outcomes, lead gen on activity.
Track 5-7 core KPIs for executive and sales dashboards. Practitioners can track 10-15 for deep analysis. More than 20 creates noise and slows decision-making. Focus on pipeline velocity, MQL-to-SQL rate, cost per SQL, pipeline value, attribution %, and revenue influence.
HubSpot, Marketo, and Pardot track most demand gen KPIs natively if integrated with your CRM. For advanced attribution, use Bizible, Dreamdata, or HockeyStack. For dashboards, use Looker, Tableau, or Power BI. Pull data from Salesforce, your MAP, ad platforms, and GA4.
Review weekly for most teams. Monthly is too slow to spot problems and course-correct. Daily creates noise and burnout. Weekly gives you enough data to see trends without overreacting to single-day fluctuations. Run deep-dive reviews quarterly to reassess strategy and benchmarks.
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  1. 1 How to Structure a Demand Gen Team That Hits Targets
  2. 2 Demand Generation Agency vs. In-House vs. Fractional
  3. 3 Hire a Fractional CMO

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