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Agency Performance Scorecard: A Monthly Template That Holds Your Agency Accountable

A structured monthly scorecard across 6 performance dimensions: KPI delivery, deliverable completion, communication quality, strategic value, innovation, and overall partnership health. Built for CMOs and marketing directors who need objectivity in agency reviews.

Last updated: March 2026 · 9 min read

About This Template

Why do you need a formal agency performance scorecard?

Because “I feel like they’re doing okay” is not a management strategy.

An agency performance scorecard is a structured evaluation tool that scores your agency’s work across multiple dimensions on a consistent monthly basis. It replaces subjective impressions with objective measurement, and it gives both you and your agency a shared language for what “good” looks like. According to Setup’s 2024 Agency Performance Study, 62% of marketing leaders say they evaluate agency performance “informally” with no documented process. The same study found that companies using structured scorecards retain agencies 2.1x longer and report 45% higher satisfaction with the agency relationship. The scorecard doesn’t just measure performance. It improves it. The reason is straightforward: when agencies know they’ll be scored on specific dimensions every month, they prioritize those dimensions. When there’s no scorecard, agencies optimize for what’s easiest to show, not what matters most to your business. A monthly scorecard closes that gap. This template covers the 6 dimensions that matter most to brand leaders managing agency relationships, with a weighted scoring system you can customize to your priorities.
Who It’s For

Who should use this agency performance scorecard?

CMOs and Marketing Directors

You manage 1-3 agency relationships and need a consistent way to evaluate them. This scorecard gives you a monthly data point to track performance trends over time and make renewal decisions based on evidence.

Brand Managers

You’re the day-to-day contact with your agency. This scorecard helps you document what’s working and what isn’t, so your quarterly review with leadership is data-backed, not anecdotal.

Procurement and Vendor Management

You need a standardized evaluation framework across multiple marketing vendors. This scorecard uses the same structure whether you’re evaluating an SEO firm, a paid media team, or a creative shop.

Preview

What does the agency performance scorecard measure?

6 dimensions, each weighted by importance. Score 1-5 on each. Total out of 500.

Dimension Weight What It Measures Score (1-5)
1. KPI Performance 30% Did the agency hit the agreed-upon KPI targets this month?
2. Deliverable Completion 20% Were all committed deliverables completed on time and at quality?
3. Communication Quality 15% How effective and responsive was the agency’s communication?
4. Strategic Value 15% Did the agency bring insights, recommendations, or proactive thinking?
5. Innovation & Adaptability 10% Did the agency suggest new approaches, test new ideas, or adapt to changes?
6. Partnership Health 10% How strong is the working relationship? Trust, alignment, collaboration.
Total 100% / 500
Dimension 1

How do you score KPI performance objectively?

KPI performance is the most heavily weighted dimension (30%) because it answers the fundamental question: is the agency delivering results? But “results” needs to be defined precisely before the month starts, not interpreted after it ends. At the beginning of each month (or quarter), agree on 3-5 KPIs with specific targets. For an SEO engagement, these might include: organic sessions target, keyword ranking improvements, technical issues resolved, and organic-sourced leads. For paid media: ROAS target, cost per acquisition, and spend efficiency.
Score KPI Achievement
5 Exceeded all KPI targets by 10%+
4 Met all KPI targets
3 Met most targets (70-90% achievement)
2 Missed multiple targets (50-69% achievement)
1 Missed most or all targets (below 50%)

Important: A score of 3 is acceptable in months with external factors (algorithm updates, seasonal dips, budget changes). But consecutive months at 3 or below signal a systemic problem, not bad luck. According to 8 Figure Agency’s 2025 performance metrics analysis, agencies that consistently score below 3 on KPI delivery have a 78% churn rate within 6 months.

Dimension 2

How do you evaluate deliverable completion?

Deliverable completion measures whether the agency did what they said they’d do. This is different from KPI performance. An agency can deliver every blog post on time (high deliverable score) but those posts might not move rankings (low KPI score). Both dimensions matter. Start each month with a deliverable tracker listing every committed item: number of content pieces, technical fixes, reports, strategy documents, campaign launches. At month-end, mark each as: completed on time, completed late, or not completed.
Score Deliverable Completion
5 100% on time, quality exceeds expectations
4 100% completed (minor delays on 1-2 items)
3 80-99% completed, with some quality issues
2 60-79% completed, or significant quality gaps
1 Below 60% completion, or major quality failures
Dimension 3

What does good agency communication look like?

Communication quality is weighted at 15% because it’s the leading indicator of relationship health. Poor communication doesn’t just cause frustration. It causes missed opportunities, duplicated work, and strategic misalignment. Gartner’s 2025 Agency Management Survey found that communication issues are cited 3.2x more often than performance issues as the reason for agency termination. Evaluate communication across 4 sub-criteria:
  • Responsiveness: Do they respond to emails and messages within 24 hours?
  • Proactiveness: Do they flag issues before you discover them? Do they bring ideas unprompted?
  • Clarity: Are reports and updates easy to understand? Do they explain the “so what” behind the data?
  • Cadence: Are regular meetings happening on schedule? Is the agenda prepared in advance?
Score Communication Quality
5 Proactive, clear, fast, and consistently adds value
4 Responsive and clear, with occasional proactive insights
3 Adequate but mostly reactive; you have to ask for updates
2 Slow responses, unclear reports, missed meetings
1 Poor across all sub-criteria; you’re chasing them constantly
Dimension 4

Is your agency a strategic partner or a task executor?

Strategic value separates agencies worth Rs 2,00,000 per month from those worth Rs 50,000. A task executor does what you tell them. A strategic partner tells you what you should be doing, challenges your assumptions, brings competitive intelligence, and connects their channel expertise to your broader business goals. Score this dimension based on whether the agency provided any of the following this month:
  • A new strategic recommendation you hadn’t considered
  • Competitive intelligence or market insight
  • Data-backed pushback on a direction you wanted to take
  • A connection between their channel work and your business outcomes
  • Proactive identification of a risk or opportunity
Score Strategic Value
5 Consistently brings strategic recommendations that drive measurable business impact
4 Regular strategic input; occasionally changes your direction for the better
3 Provides strategy when asked but doesn’t proactively bring insights
2 Mostly executes tasks; strategic thinking is shallow
1 Zero strategic contribution; functions purely as a task executor

“We tell every client to score us monthly. Not because we enjoy being graded, but because it forces the conversations that matter. When a client says ‘we’re not happy,’ that’s too vague to act on. When they say ‘strategic value is a 2, communication is a 4, KPIs are a 3,’ we know exactly where to focus.”

Hardik Shah, Founder of ScaleGrowth.Digital

How to use the scorecard effectively

Step 1: Set it up before Month 1. Share the scorecard with your agency during onboarding. Tell them the 6 dimensions, the weights, and how you’ll score. Transparency about evaluation criteria improves performance from day one. Step 2: Score monthly, review quarterly. Fill out the scorecard within 3 business days of month-end while the work is fresh. Share scores with the agency in your monthly review call. Use the 3-month trend for quarterly strategic reviews. Step 3: Track the trend, not individual months. A single bad month (score below 300) is a conversation. Three consecutive months below 300 is a warning. Six months below 300 is a termination signal. One great month doesn’t offset three weak ones. Step 4: Adjust weights to your reality. If you’re in the first 3 months with a new agency, weight Communication and Deliverables higher. If you’re 12+ months in, weight Strategic Value and KPI Performance higher. The framework flexes to your stage.
Interpretation

What do the total scores mean for your agency relationship?

Monthly Score Rating Action
400-500 Excellent Retain and consider expanding scope. This agency is a genuine partner.
300-399 Good Solid performance. Identify the 1-2 lowest dimensions for improvement discussion.
200-299 Below Standard Needs immediate attention. Set a 60-day improvement plan with specific targets.
100-199 Poor Serious concerns. One more month at this level should trigger termination planning.
Below 100 Critical Begin transition planning immediately. This relationship is not recoverable.
Pitfalls

What mistakes do brands make when reviewing agency performance?

1. Only reviewing performance at renewal time. If you wait 11 months to evaluate, you’ve wasted 11 months of retainer on an underperforming relationship. Monthly scorecards catch problems in Month 2 or 3, not Month 11. 2. Scoring based on how busy the agency seems. Activity is not performance. An agency that sends you 20 emails a week but doesn’t move your KPIs is a busy underperformer. Score outputs and outcomes, not inputs. 3. Not sharing the scorecard with the agency. A secret scorecard helps you but doesn’t help them improve. Share it. The best agencies welcome structured feedback because it tells them exactly where to focus. Demand Metric’s 2025 Agency Evaluation Report found that agencies who receive formal monthly scorecards improve their scores by an average of 18% over 6 months. 4. Letting one dimension mask others. An agency might deliver great KPI results (score 5) but have terrible communication (score 2). The weighted total might still look acceptable, but the communication gap will eventually undermine the KPI performance. Don’t ignore individual dimension scores just because the total is acceptable. 5. Comparing agencies to each other instead of to targets. If you have 2 agencies, don’t rank them against each other. Score each against the targets you set. Both could be underperforming. Both could be excellent. Relative ranking obscures absolute performance.
Related Resources

What else do you need to manage agency relationships?

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Download the Agency Performance Scorecard

Spreadsheet format with auto-scoring, trend tracking, and a 12-month view. Download Free Scorecard

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FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

How often should I score my agency?

Monthly. Score within 3 business days of month-end while the work is fresh. Share scores with the agency during your monthly review call. Use 3-month rolling averages for quarterly strategic reviews and contract renewal decisions.

Should I share the scorecard with my agency?

Yes. Share it during onboarding so they know how they’ll be evaluated, and share monthly scores in your review meetings. Agencies that receive formal scorecards improve their performance by an average of 18% over 6 months, according to Demand Metric. The best agencies welcome structured feedback.

What’s a good agency performance score?

A weighted total of 300-399 out of 500 is good. 400+ is excellent and indicates a strong partnership. Consistently scoring below 300 signals material problems that need addressing. Look at individual dimension scores too, as a high total can mask weakness in one area.

Can I use this scorecard for multiple agencies?

Yes. The 6 dimensions apply to any type of marketing agency: SEO, paid media, creative, PR, or integrated. You may want to adjust the weight distribution slightly based on what each agency was hired to do. For a creative agency, weight Deliverable Completion higher. For a strategic consultancy, weight Strategic Value higher.

When should I fire my agency based on scorecard results?

A single bad month is a conversation. Three consecutive months below 300 is a formal warning with a 60-day improvement plan. If the agency doesn’t improve to 300+ within those 60 days, begin transition planning. Exception: if the agency scores below 200 in any single month, that’s serious enough to warrant immediate escalation.

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