Revenue and Efficiency Metrics
1. Return on Ad Spend (ROAS)
Revenue generated divided by advertising spend. A good ROAS ranges from 2:1 to 4:1 (200-400%) for most retail verticals. Average 2025 ROAS ranges from 3.9x to 6.4x depending on channel and vertical (First Page Sage, 2026). Sports and outdoor brands see the highest
Google Ads ROAS at 6.07x, while beauty and personal care averages 3.01x. Report ROAS both blended (all channels) and by individual channel. A rising blended ROAS with declining channel ROAS usually means you’re benefiting from brand momentum, not marketing efficiency.
2. Marketing Efficiency Ratio (MER)
Total revenue divided by total marketing spend, including all channels, agency fees, and creative production. MER gives you the big picture without attribution complexity. A healthy retail MER is 5:1 to 10:1. If your MER is declining quarter-over-quarter, your marketing spend is growing faster than your revenue, regardless of what individual channel ROAS looks like. MER is the metric your CFO should see every month.
3. Revenue Per Store (Marketing-Attributed)
The portion of each store’s revenue that can be attributed to marketing activities. This requires a test-and-control methodology: run marketing in some locations and not others, then measure the revenue lift. Retailers who implement location-level attribution typically find that 20-35% of store revenue is marketing-influenced. Without this metric, you can’t answer the question: “What happens to store revenue if we cut the marketing budget?”
4. Gross Margin After Marketing Costs
Gross margin minus total marketing spend, expressed as a percentage of revenue. A product with 60% gross margin and 15% marketing cost has a 45% margin after marketing. If marketing costs push this below 30%, your acquisition strategy is eating into profitability even if the top line is growing. Track this metric by product category and by customer segment to find where marketing spend creates value vs. where it destroys margin.
Customer Value Metrics
5. Customer Lifetime Value (CLV)
The total revenue a customer generates across all channels over their entire relationship with your brand. CLV is used by executives to identify the most valuable customer segments and justify investments in retention marketing (Improvado, 2026). Calculate as: Average purchase value x Purchase frequency x Average customer lifespan x Gross margin. Omnichannel customers have 30% higher lifetime value than single-channel customers (SAP Emarsys, 2026). Segment CLV by acquisition channel to identify which marketing channels bring in high-value customers, not just volume.
6. Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC)
Total marketing spend divided by new customers acquired. For retail, include digital ad spend, traditional media, in-store promotion costs, and the portion of employee time spent on customer acquisition. A healthy CLV:CAC ratio is 3:1 or better. Below 2:1, acquisition is too expensive. At 5:1+, you may be under-investing in growth. Track CAC by channel: paid social, search, email, in-store events, and partnerships all have different economics.
7. Repeat Purchase Rate
The percentage of customers who make a second purchase within a defined period (90 days, 6 months, or 12 months). Repeat customers spend 33% more per transaction than first-time buyers (SAP Emarsys, 2026). A healthy repeat purchase rate for retail is 25-40%. If yours is below 20%, your post-purchase experience needs work before you invest more in acquisition. Retention marketing (email, loyalty, remarketing) typically costs one-fifth of new customer acquisition.
8. Loyalty Program ROI
Revenue from loyalty program members minus the cost of the loyalty program (rewards, technology, administration), divided by program cost. 85% of customers report that loyalty programs influence their decision to keep shopping with a brand, and 73% adjust spending to maximize loyalty benefits (Triple Whale, 2026). But a loyalty program that gives away 5% in rewards to customers who would have bought anyway has a negative ROI. Measure incremental revenue from loyalty members vs. a control group of non-members.
Channel Performance Metrics
9. Online Conversion Rate
The percentage of website visitors who complete a purchase. The retail average ranges from 2-4% depending on category. Fashion converts at 3.1%, beauty at 4.9%, and general retail at 2.5-3.5% (Nector, 2026). Mobile conversion trails desktop by more than 50%, which matters because mobile accounts for 70-80% of retail traffic. If your mobile conversion is below 1.5%, prioritize mobile UX before increasing traffic spend.
10. In-Store Conversion Rate
The percentage of store visitors who make a purchase. Measured using foot traffic counters at store entrances and POS transaction data. Physical retail conversion rates range from 20-40%, far higher than online. A declining in-store conversion rate with stable traffic suggests merchandising or staffing issues, not marketing problems. A declining conversion rate with declining traffic suggests the marketing mix isn’t driving the right people to the store.
11. Cost Per Store Visit (Digital-Driven)
The cost of digital marketing campaigns specifically designed to drive foot traffic to physical locations. Google’s Store Visit conversions, Meta’s Offline Events, and third-party footfall attribution tools can measure this. The cost per digital-driven store visit ranges from $3-15 depending on market density and competition. Compare this against your average transaction value: if a store visit costs $8 and the average transaction is $45 with a 30% margin ($13.50 gross profit), the economics are positive.
Omnichannel Metrics
12. Omnichannel Conversion Rate
The percentage of customers who interact with multiple channels (website + store, app + store, email + website) and make a purchase, measured across the total journey rather than at a single touchpoint. Omnichannel shoppers convert at 2-3x the rate of single-channel shoppers. Track the percentage of your customer base that interacts with 2+ channels, and track their conversion rate separately. This metric justifies continued investment in both physical and digital channels.
13. Buy-Online-Pick-Up-In-Store (BOPIS) Rate
The percentage of online orders fulfilled through in-store pickup. BOPIS customers spend 10-15% more during their pickup visit (incremental in-store purchases). For retailers with a physical footprint, BOPIS rate is both a convenience metric and a revenue multiplier. If your BOPIS rate is below 10% of online orders, you may have awareness, UX, or operational gaps that are costing you incremental revenue.
14. Footfall Attribution Rate
The percentage of in-store visits that can be attributed to a specific digital campaign or marketing touchpoint. Tools like Google Store Visits, Foursquare Attribution, and Cuebiq measure this through mobile device location data. Campaigns with footfall attribution included see a 42% increase in measured ROAS because you’re capturing the offline impact of digital spend (SAP Emarsys, 2026). Without footfall attribution, you’re measuring only half of your retail marketing’s impact.
15. Inventory Turn Rate (Marketing Impact)
The speed at which inventory sells through, measured as cost of goods sold divided by average inventory, and attributed to marketing activities. Marketing impacts inventory turns through seasonal campaign timing, clearance promotions, new product launch campaigns, and demand forecasting data. A category with 6x annual turns is healthy for most retail. If marketing campaigns consistently leave you with excess inventory (below 4x turns) or stockouts (above 10x turns), your demand signals aren’t reaching your buying team fast enough.