What marketing metrics should restoration companies actually measure? Lead count matters, but it is a lagging indicator and a noisy one. The signals that predict long-term health are review velocity and quality, GBP engagement trends, organic search visibility, content engine output, retargeting audience growth, email list size and engagement, owner-level community activity, and partner referral patterns. The companies with the cleanest view of these signals run a fundamentally different marketing operation from the ones chasing monthly lead reports.
Ask a restoration owner what they measure in marketing and most will say “lead count” and “cost per lead.” Maybe conversion rate to job. Maybe a monthly revenue attribution by source. That is typically the full measurement stack.
Those metrics matter. They are also insufficient, and sometimes misleading.
Lead count is a lagging indicator. It tells you what happened last month. It is noisy — weather events, competitor outages, seasonal shifts, and random luck all move it around in ways that have nothing to do with the quality of the marketing. And it measures the short-term output, not the long-term asset.
The companies that compound over ten years are the ones watching a different set of signals — ones that predict the lead count six months from now, rather than recording the lead count last month. This article lays out that measurement stack.
The Asset-Health Signals
These are the signals that measure the organic asset — the thing that produces leads durably regardless of this month’s paid spend.
Review velocity. New reviews per week, by service and location. Rising velocity is one of the strongest predictors of rising organic lead flow 60 to 90 days out. Flat or declining velocity is the leading indicator of trouble. Target: consistent weekly velocity that at least maintains review recency across every GBP the company operates.
Review star average, tracked over time. Not just the current average, but the trajectory. A company moving from 4.6 to 4.9 is a different business from a company static at 4.8. Target: 4.8 minimum, 4.9+ ideal.
GBP engagement trends. Views, searches, calls, direction requests, website clicks — all reported inside the GBP insights dashboard. Monthly trends across these matter more than the absolute numbers. Target: steady growth across all five.
Map pack ranking by query. What position the company sits in for its top 15-20 service and location queries in its service area. Tools like Local Falcon or BrightLocal make this trackable. Target: first-position or top-three for primary service + primary geography queries, top-three for secondary geographies.
Organic search traffic by page. The neighborhood pages, location pages, and service pages — which are ranking, which are climbing, which are stuck. Google Search Console is the primary source. Target: month-over-month growth in organic sessions to the site.
Content engine output. Articles published per month, pages added per month, GBP posts per week, photos uploaded per week. This is the raw activity that feeds the asset. Target: sustained weekly cadence.
Retargeting audience size and freshness. How big is the pool, how recent are the signals, how engaged is the audience? Target: audience size growing month over month, freshness maintained with pixel activity from the site.
Email list size and engagement. Subscribers, open rate, click rate. Target: subscriber growth each month, open rate above 25% for a cold-niche list (restoration-specific content audiences open at higher rates than generic consumer lists).
Social following, by platform. Followers, engagement rate, local share rate. Not vanity metrics — engagement specifically from the service area. Target: month-over-month growth in engaged local audience.
These signals, taken together, describe the health of the asset. A company with green lights across the board has an asset that will continue producing lead flow. A company with red lights has one that will start bleeding lead flow in the next two quarters.
The Community-Standing Signals
The second tier of measurement is the owner-level and team-level community activity that produces the relational underpinning of the asset. These are harder to quantify but worth tracking.
Association attendance. Events attended per quarter, by association, by attendee. The brief-and-post-mortem discipline described in the event playbook produces the log. Target: consistent attendance at the committed associations; drop-offs caught early.
Owner unblocking calls. How many times per quarter did the owner make an unblocking call for a sales rep? This is a specific activity described in the owner-as-rainmaker article. Target: at least one per rep per quarter.
Partner relationship hygiene. Number of active B2B partners, recency of last interaction, direction of recent referrals (from partner to company, company to partner). The observational B2B plan produces the database. Target: partner count growing, recency maintained on core relationships, bidirectional flow evident.
Event briefs and post-mortems completed. Every event should have both. A count of how many were actually done reflects the discipline. Target: 100% completion rate.
Speaking and content placements. Was the owner or a senior person speaking at an association, publishing in an industry outlet, or contributing content to a partner organization? Target: one to two per quarter minimum at senior level.
Community sponsorship ledger. What the company sponsored, what it produced, whether it repeats. Target: every sponsorship intentional, measured, and reviewed annually.
These signals measure the work that is hard to see but matters for long-term referral flow.
The Operational Readiness Signals
The third measurement cluster is whether the company can convert the leads it does generate. A marketing asset that produces leads the operations team cannot convert is an asset partially wasted.
Response time to inbound calls. Average and 95th percentile. Target: under 60 seconds on emergency lines, under 10 minutes on non-emergency, 24/7.
Response time to LSA and web form leads. Target: under 5 minutes on emergency leads, under 30 minutes on non-emergency during business hours.
Lead-to-appointment rate. What percentage of inbound leads convert to a scheduled appointment? Target: 75%+ for qualified emergency leads.
Appointment-to-contract rate. What percentage of appointments become contracted jobs? Target: 60%+ for residential, varying for commercial.
Same-day response rate. What percentage of inbound leads get a real response the same day, regardless of channel? Target: 95%+.
These metrics are operations more than marketing, but they determine whether marketing effort converts. Many restoration companies have marketing problems they think are marketing problems when they are actually operations problems — marketing is generating leads, but operations is not converting them.
The Paid-Channel Signals
For the paid layer, measurement should include:
Cost per lead, by channel. LSA, Google Ads, Meta, YouTube, lead aggregators — each tracked separately.
Cost per job, by channel. CPL × conversion rate. The number that actually matters for profitability.
Blended cost per job across paid. Weighted average. The overall efficiency of the paid layer.
Share of leads captured to the asset. Percentage of paid leads whose email went into the list, that consented, that ended up in retargeting. The evergreen discipline from the every-paid-lead-evergreen article is measured here. Target: 85%+.
Attribution overlap. Leads that touched paid and also touched organic before converting. Google Analytics 4 and a well-configured analytics stack can show this. Understanding overlap prevents double-counting and reveals where paid is genuinely incremental versus where it is claiming credit for organic work.
Dispute rate and recovery. For LSA specifically. Target: every bad lead disputed, recovery rate above industry baseline.
The Reporting Cadence
The measurement stack above is a lot to track. The cadence matters as much as the metrics.
Weekly. Review velocity, GBP engagement summary, content output, response times, paid performance top line. A 15-minute marketing stand-up or a simple weekly report captures this.
Monthly. Full asset dashboard — every metric in every cluster. One-hour monthly review with the owner, marketing lead, and operations lead. Pattern interpretation: what is rising, what is falling, what needs attention.
Quarterly. Strategic review. Association attendance, partner relationships, major initiatives, budget reallocation decisions. Two-hour session against the annual plan.
Annually. Full refresh of the plan. Revisit the end-in-mind org design. Adjust the measurement stack itself if the right metrics have changed.
Without the cadence, the measurement stack goes stale. Metrics only matter if they inform decisions.
The Metric Most Restoration Companies Should Stop Chasing
A final note on leads. Lead count is fine as one metric among many. It becomes pathological when it is the only metric.
Chasing lead count month to month creates a pattern where short-term spend is continually increased to hit the current-month number, while the long-term asset is continually underinvested. Lead count drives paid spend decisions. Paid spend squeezes out organic investment. Organic investment is what produces the compounding lead flow. The cycle is self-defeating.
The companies that break out of it are the ones that refuse to measure marketing primarily on monthly lead count. They measure it on the health of the asset. They spend on the asset. The lead count rises as a consequence, not as a target. Paid becomes rent on top of a growing property, not the entire foundation.
How This Pairs With the Rest of the Stack
Measurement is the feedback loop that makes every other layer of the stack get better over time. The content engine is measured by output cadence and resulting traffic. The digital three-legged stool is measured by review velocity, GBP engagement, and search visibility. The paid layer is measured by CPL, cost per job, and share of leads captured to the asset. The observational B2B plan is measured by partner count and referral flow direction. The owner’s community work is measured by attendance, unblocking calls, and speaking placements.
Without measurement, every layer drifts. With measurement, every layer improves.
Where to Start
Pick the three signals most directly predictive for your company and start tracking them this week. For most restoration companies the three are: review velocity, content output cadence, and response time.
Add one cluster per month over the next quarter until the full stack is in place. Do not try to install everything at once.
Set the weekly, monthly, quarterly, and annual cadence. Put the reviews on the calendar. Name the owners.
In ninety days, the company has a measurement system that tells you where the marketing is strong, where it is weak, and where the next investment should go. That system is worth more than any individual campaign. It is how the marketing function becomes a compounding asset rather than a recurring expense.
Frequently Asked Questions
What marketing metrics should restoration companies measure beyond lead count?
Review velocity and star average, GBP engagement trends, map pack ranking, organic search traffic, content engine output, retargeting audience size, email list size and engagement, social following, community activity (association attendance, partner relationships, owner unblocking calls), response times, and paid channel efficiency. Together these measure the health of the asset, not just this month’s lead output.
Why is lead count alone a bad primary metric?
Because it is a lagging, noisy indicator. It is moved around by weather, competitor behavior, seasonal shifts, and random luck. More importantly, chasing lead count month to month tends to push companies into short-term paid spend that starves the long-term asset. The asset is what produces compounding lead flow. Measuring only leads hides the investment picture.
How often should restoration companies review marketing metrics?
Weekly for operational metrics (response time, review velocity, paid performance). Monthly for the full asset dashboard. Quarterly for strategic review against the plan. Annually for refresh of the measurement stack itself. Without a consistent cadence, the metrics stop informing decisions.
What is review velocity and why does it matter?
Review velocity is the rate of new reviews per week, typically measured by service and location. It is one of the strongest leading indicators of organic lead flow 60 to 90 days out. Rising velocity predicts rising lead flow. Flat or declining velocity is an early warning sign. It matters more than cumulative review count because Google weights recency heavily.
Are marketing-operations metrics (response time, conversion rates) really marketing metrics?
They are crossover metrics. The marketing function produces leads; the operations function converts them. Many restoration companies have what look like marketing problems that are actually operations conversion problems. Tracking response time and conversion rates inside the marketing dashboard makes the interplay visible and keeps both functions accountable.
What is the single most valuable metric if a restoration company can only track one thing?
Review velocity. It is the closest thing to a single metric that reflects the health of multiple underlying systems — service delivery quality, review-ask discipline, staff alignment with customer experience, GBP health, and ultimately map pack and LSA placement. A company that monitors review velocity and trends it upward is doing most of the right things, whether they know it or not.
Tygart Media on restoration — an analyst-operator body of work on the systems that separate compounding restoration companies from busy ones. No client names. No brand placements. Just the operating standard.
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