Social Media ROI Is Real — Here's How We Measure It
The vanity metrics trap
Likes don't pay rent. Followers don't cover payroll. Every social media manager knows this, but most reports still lead with follower count and engagement rate. These metrics tell you about reach, not revenue.
We measure social media the same way we measure any marketing channel: by the revenue it generates. Here's the framework.
Attribution setup
Before measuring ROI, you need to connect social activity to revenue events. We use UTM parameters on every link shared organically. Each post, story, and bio link gets a unique UTM that tracks it through GA4 to a conversion event.
For direct message conversions (someone DMs 'how much does this cost?' and buys), we track manually in a CRM. It's not automated, but it's accurate. Most businesses undercount DM revenue by 60% because they don't track it at all.
The three revenue paths
Social media generates revenue through three paths, each requiring different measurement:
- Direct conversion — user clicks a link in a post, lands on your site, and purchases. Tracked via UTMs + GA4
- Assisted conversion — user discovers you on social, then converts later via a Google search or email. Tracked via multi-touch attribution in GA4
- Brand lift — social presence increases brand recognition, which increases conversion rates across all channels. Measured by comparing branded search volume before and after social campaigns
The monthly report format
Our social media reports show three sections: Activity (what we posted), Engagement (how the audience responded), and Revenue (what it generated). Each section connects to the next. High-engagement posts that drove zero revenue get cut. Low-engagement posts that drove conversions get doubled down on.
This approach forces honesty. Some months, the ROI is negative. That's fine — we adjust. The point is knowing the truth, not pretending likes equal success.
Benchmarks we've seen
Across our clients, organic social generates between 5% and 18% of total revenue, depending on the industry. B2C and e-commerce brands skew higher. B2B and professional services skew lower but still measurable.
The businesses that see the highest social ROI share one trait: they treat social content as a distribution channel for their best content, not as a separate activity. The blog post, the case study, the testimonial — social amplifies these, and the content converts.