Now let’s talk specifically: what numbers really matter for each type of business. Metrics aren’t just numbers in a table; they’re your business health indicators. The right metrics show where you’re losing money and where there’s potential for growth.
In B2B reporting, lead quality and movement indicators come first. Lead-to-Opportunity Conversion Rate shows what percentage of leads turn into real sales opportunities. If this indicator is low, the problem could be in lead quality (marketing is attracting the wrong audience) or in the sales department’s work (managers poorly qualify leads). You want to see this indicator in dynamics and compare it across different lead sources – contextual advertising, SEO, industry conferences, cold outreach. This helps understand where to invest your marketing budget.
Sales funnel analytics is key for B2B: this is the only way to see at which stage the client “leaves” and which processes need strengthening or automation.
Sales Cycle Length is a critical metric for B2B. The longer a deal drags on, the more resources it consumes and the higher the risk that the client will change their mind. If the average deal cycle is six months, and you have leads hanging in the funnel for more than a year, that’s a red flag. Perhaps these leads are already dead, but no one has bothered to close them. Tracking this metric helps identify problematic funnel stages and reduce time to deal closure.
Average Deal Size shows how much on average you close contracts for. Growth in this indicator may mean you’ve started working with larger clients or are more effectively selling additional products and services. A decline signals that clients are cutting budgets or you’re losing large customers in favor of smaller ones.
Customer Retention Rate is the percentage of clients who continue working with you after one, two, three years. In B2B, where acquiring a new client is expensive, retaining existing ones is critical. If clients leave after the first contract, you’re losing money. A high Retention Rate means the product works, clients are satisfied and ready to extend cooperation. This metric directly affects the customer’s lifetime value and overall business profitability.
CAC or Customer Acquisition Cost shows how much it costs to acquire one customer. You take all marketing and sales expenses for a period and divide by the number of acquired customers. In B2B, this indicator is usually high – several thousand euros per customer is not uncommon. It’s important to compare CAC with customer lifetime value: if you spend 5000 euros on acquisition, and the customer will bring 15000 euros in profit over the entire cooperation period, that’s normal. But if CAC grows faster than LTV, the business is moving towards losses.
In B2C reporting, the focus shifts to mass indicators and speed. Conversion Rate is the percentage of website visitors who made a purchase. Typical conversion for an online store is 1% to 5%, depending on the niche. If your conversion is 1.5%, and your competitor’s is 3%, it means that with the same traffic, they sell twice as much. Their site is more convenient, their offer more attractive, or their prices more competitive. Tracking conversion by funnel stages (product view → cart addition → order placement → payment) helps find bottlenecks and improve each step.
Average Order Value shows how much a buyer spends on average per transaction. Increasing the average check with unchanged conversion automatically increases revenue. You can influence this indicator through cross-sell (offering related products), up-sell (offering a more expensive product version), or free shipping for orders above a certain amount.
Customer Lifetime Value (LTV) in B2C shows how much profit a customer will bring over the entire cooperation period. It’s calculated as the product of average check, purchase frequency, and average customer lifecycle duration. If your LTV is 200 euros and CAC is 50 euros, a 4:1 ratio is considered healthy. But if CAC grows due to advertising becoming more expensive, and LTV doesn’t increase, you’ll soon start losing money on each acquired customer.
Churn Rate is the percentage of customers who stopped buying over a certain period. In B2C, especially in subscription businesses (streaming services, consumer SaaS, food delivery by subscription), high Churn Rate kills the business. You can attract thousands of new customers, but if the same number leaves each month, growth stops. Reducing Churn Rate even by a few percentage points can radically improve business economics.
ROMI or Return on Marketing Investment shows how much profit you get from each euro invested in marketing. If ROMI is 3, it means that each euro of marketing expenses generates 3 euros of profit. In B2C, where marketing often consumes a significant portion of the budget, tracking ROMI for each channel helps optimize fund allocation and turn off ineffective traffic sources.
The digital tools market is developing rapidly, and if you want to implement modern methods of data verification and optimization, AI sales audit will help automate collection and verification of key metrics in B2B and B2C and suggest areas for growth acceleration.
B2B reports and B2B reporting metrics aren’t just numbers for pretty presentations. They’re your tools for making decisions: where to direct the budget, which products to develop, where to look for problems. Without them, you’re flying blind and relying on luck rather than strategy.