The metric your marketing report is missing — and why it matters more than click-through rate
Most marketing reports look the same. Impressions, clicks, click-through rate (CTR), cost per click. Tidy columns, familiar figures, a sense of progress. The problem is that these metrics tell you what happened before a conversion, not whether a conversion actually happened. And for businesses where the phone is a primary sales channel, that gap is costing them more than they realise.
CTR has dominated performance reporting for years. It is easy to pull, easy to present, and easy to benchmark. But a click is not a customer. It is an expression of interest, nothing more. If your campaigns are generating clicks that never turn into revenue, optimising for CTR is optimising in the wrong direction.
What most reports leave out
The metric that tends to be missing is call attribution. Specifically, which marketing activity drove a prospect to pick up the phone.
For many sectors, phone calls remain the dominant conversion path. Legal services, healthcare, property, financial services, and home improvements. Prospects research online, but they convert by calling. If your attribution model only captures digital touchpoints, you are working with an incomplete data set. Every phone call that goes unattributed is a gap in your conversion funnel, a lost data point that skews your cost per acquisition (CPA), your return on ad spend (ROAS), and your understanding of which channels actually work.
The result is misallocated budget. Campaigns that appear to underperform on digital metrics get cut, when in reality they were driving high-value inbound calls that never appeared in the report.
Why CTR is a flawed primary metric
CTR measures engagement with an ad, not the value of that engagement. A campaign with a high CTR but low conversion rate is not performing well. It is attracting the wrong audience or failing to follow through. Conversely, a lower CTR campaign targeting a tighter, more qualified segment can drive significantly better outcomes in terms of pipeline, revenue, and ROI.
The fixation on CTR as a headline metric creates a bias towards campaigns that generate volume over campaigns that generate value. When you start measuring what happens after the click, including the phone call conversations that follow a website visit, the picture changes considerably.
How call tracking closes the attribution gap
You can use call tracking to attribute calls to your marketing channels and campaigns. When a visitor lands on your website, call tracking software assigns a dynamic number to them, meaning you will know exactly which activity triggered the conversion.
This means the full customer journey becomes visible in your attribution model, not just the digital portion of it. Multi-channel attribution that includes call data gives you a far more accurate view of channel performance, campaign ROI, and where your marketing budget is generating real return.
The benefits of call tracking extend beyond filling a data gap. The insight feeds directly into campaign optimisation. You can see which keywords, ad groups, landing pages, and channels are driving calls, and use that data to refine your bidding strategy, adjust audience targeting, and reallocate spend with confidence.
The impact on campaign optimisation and budget allocation
Without call data, budget allocation decisions rely on incomplete signals. A Pay-Per-Click (PPC) campaign might show a high cost per click with modest online conversion data, leading to reduced investment. But if that campaign is responsible for a significant volume of inbound calls that convert at a high rate, cutting it will damage revenue, not protect it.
With call attribution in place, you can make data-driven decisions based on the full picture. Urchin Tracking Module (UTM) parameters and multi-channel campaign tagging let you track how different activities influence complex customer journeys across every touchpoint, from first click to phone call conversion. This level of granularity transforms budget allocation from a best-guess exercise into a measurable process.
Lead quality improves, too. Knowing which campaigns generate calls from high-intent prospects, rather than low-quality enquiries, allows you to focus spend on the activity that drives the most valuable pipeline. That is the kind of performance intelligence that CTR simply cannot provide.
Bringing offline conversions into your reporting
The broader issue is that most marketing reports are built around the metrics that are easiest to collect, rather than the metrics that matter most. Digital analytics platforms track online behaviour well. What they do not track, by default, is what happens when someone puts down their device and makes a call.
Integrating call tracking data into your existing reporting closes that loop. Phone call conversations become events in your data. Calls that convert to sales appear alongside online conversions. The picture of your campaign performance becomes complete.
At that point, CTR takes its proper place in the reporting hierarchy: a useful early-funnel engagement signal, not a proxy for business outcomes.
The metric your marketing report is missing is the one that connects your campaigns to actual revenue. For businesses with a significant inbound call volume, that means call attribution. Without it, your optimisation decisions are based on partial data, your budget allocation is guided by incomplete signals, and your understanding of what drives conversions is, at best, half the story. Call tracking is not an addition to your reporting. For many businesses, it is the foundation of it.

