How to Measure Marketing ROI and Prove Value

With this article, I aim to help executives accurately and efficiently calculate the return on investment for their marketing budget by focusing on liabilities versus net value directly on marketing spends, rather than oversimplifying ROI based on net profit or final sales.

Most marketing executives have challenges when quantifying the return on investment of the marketing budget that is allocated to them. It’s crucial to maintain a specific perspective when approaching the “R” (return) part of ROI in marketing. I believe ROI means different things for sales and marketing.

Measuring Marketing ROI in High-Touch, Appointment-Based Sales Models

For businesses that need appointments to make sales, measuring marketing ROI becomes more challenging. A prospect’s individual decision-making process when accepting a meeting may be driven by several different factors such as brand value, value proposition, or competitive pricing. Companies that offer services or need appointments have tried several methods to assign ROI for marketing departments such as reverse engineering end sales to ‘marketing touches,’ calculating the number of appointments, appointment-to-sale ratios, and appointment-to-held ratios.

In a high-touch business model, executives should take a holistic approach when identifying marketing ROI. The main reason for this is that sales are a direct component of “all touches,” hence the “return” on investment.

What Doesn’t Work in Measuring Marketing ROI for High-Touch Sales

I have personally witnessed businesses putting pressure on marketing when things don’t go in the right direction. “Sales are down because we don’t get enough appointments.” The term ‘enough’ is where executives lose touch with their marketing departments because the term ‘enough appointments’ varies with the appointment-to-close ratio of the sales department.

Let’s Quantify This:

  • Business monthly sales goal: 60 accounts
  • Sales appointment to sales ratio goal: 10%
  • Monthly qualified appointments set by marketing: 600
  • 10% of 600 = 60 sales

In this scenario, both sales and marketing meet their goals.

I wish the world would be full of rainbows, but perfection rarely happens in real life. Problems arise when end sales fail to meet the goals set by the executives. If marketing provides 600 appointments a month but sales deliver only 5%, then the sales department is likely to say, “The quality of the appointments delivered by marketing is poor.” And marketing will respond with, “The sales department should be more aggressive.”

Good luck solving this century-old conflict. I will illustrate this for a cybersecurity business since I have first hand experience over 12 years. Here is what I did:

  1. If you already have a marketing database, make sure it’s cleaned and enriched based on the attributes most relevant to your target audience. If not, build a list with the attributes you identify to set ‘qualified’ appointments with the sales team. Here is an example of the attributes:
    • Location: US, Canada, Germany, and England (include or exclude states, cities or districts if applicable)
    • Company size: 50 to 200 employees
    • Titles/Personas: CTO, CISO, Director of IT, CIO
    • Industries: Healthcare, Education, Green Energy
  2. Communicate this with marketing and set goals for the number of appointments.
  3. Have both marketing and sales agree.

Determining Budget for Marketing:

Reverse engineering the sales funnel becomes critical. Note that I base my calculation on net value and not net profit. This focuses on the efficiency of marketing and sales “machines.” The main purpose of calculating net value is that you can subtract your marketing cost (liabilities) from what it contributes (net value).

Using net profit can result in unreliable and inconsistent numbers due to external impacts such as pricing adjustments, solution upgrades, or adding new products. You can sell “enough” but not generate enough profit, which is a separate issue outside your marketing and sales departments. I have seen many companies trying to fix what works, such as modifying sales and marketing processes, and avoiding addressing underlying issues.

Assuming you have some historical data on sales, you should have some ideas about the average sales value and LTV (Lifetime Value) per client. Let’s simplify LTV:

Metrics Needed:

  • Retention: Average number of months you retain a paying customer
  • Revenue Per User: Average monthly revenue generated per account
  • Churn Rate: Monthly percentage of paying customers who discontinue your services

Calculating LTV:

  • Average Monthly Revenue Per Customer (ARPU): $2,000
  • Average Customer Retention: 6 months

LTV = ARPU × Customer Retention = 2,000 × 6 = 12,000

Calculating Total Revenue from Sales Goal:

  • Monthly Sales Goal: 60 accounts
  • LTV per Customer: $12,000

Total Revenue = Monthly Sales Goal × LTV per Customer = 60 × 12,000 = $720,000

Calculating Total Costs:

Sum all monthly costs (salaries, tools, software, overhead, etc.)

Total Costs = Sales and Marketing Salaries + Tools and Software + Other Expenses

Calculating Net Revenue:

Net Revenue = Total Revenue − Total Costs

Calculating the Appointment Value:

  • Monthly Qualified Appointments Set by Marketing: 600
  • Sales Appointment to Sales Ratio Goal: 10%

Sales from Appointments = Monthly Qualified Appointments × Sales Appointment to Sales Ratio = 600 × 0.1 = 60

Net Appointment Value = Net Revenue / Monthly Qualified Appointments

Example Calculation:

Given:

  • Average Revenue Per Client: $2,000
  • Client Retention: 6 months
  • Monthly Sales Goal: 60 accounts
  • Monthly Qualified Appointments: 600
  • Sales Appointment to Sales Ratio Goal: 10%

Calculate LTV: LTV = 12,000

Total Revenue from Sales Goal: Total Revenue = 720,000

Assume Total Monthly Costs:

  • Sales and Marketing Salaries: $100,000
  • Tools and Software: $20,000
  • Overhead: $30,000
  • Other Expenses: $10,000

Total Costs = $100,000 + $20,000 + $30,000 + $10,000 = $160,000

Calculate Net Revenue: Net Revenue = $720,000 − $160,000 = $560,000

Calculate Net Appointment Value: Sales from Appointments = 60

Net Appointment Value = $560,000 / 600 = $933.33

The net value of each appointment, after considering all costs, is $933.33.

Monthly Basis Calculation:

60 appointments × $933.33 = $56,000 net value.

Use this number as a benchmark when optimizing your investment based on net value expectations. Reverse engineering from net value will help you tailor the marketing and sales process to identify bottlenecks and make improvements.

Conclusion

By now you should know the following:

  • What is a qualified appointment (since both sales and marketing agreed on the specific attributes),
  • How many qualified appointments marketing needs to set for sales to reach the monthly goal,
  • Net value per appointment,
  • Monthly net value of marketing.

Remember, the methods I mentioned above to help you calculate ROI from marketing are just to set up your foundations. With this approach, you will have an initial educated idea of how marketing impacts your business growth.

Categories: Blog

Ugur Gulaydin

Visionary Chief Marketing Officer with a profound quantitative background excels in leading transformative marketing strategies across competitive B2B sectors like cybersecurity, managed IT services, home automation, and cloud security. Specializes in assembling and guiding elite teams to pioneer performance marketing techniques, focusing on measurable, scalable outcomes. Follow me on LinkedIn

0 Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *