Reframing Community Metrics: What GTM Leaders Need to Understand About Value and Impact
Community metrics aren’t about proving ROI—they’re about demonstrating value. Are you showing how community impacts sales, retention, and advocacy?
“Nobody at my company thinks community is important. How do I prove ROI?”
I’ve heard this question more times than I can count. It’s the frustration of so many community leaders who feel caught between their team’s immense potential and their inability to articulate that impact in a way their stakeholders understand. Here’s the thing: you’re asking the wrong question.
Rather than chasing direct ROI, you need to shift the focus entirely—to demonstrating community’s value and business impact.
This shift isn’t just a critical mindset change for community teams; it’s one their GTM (go-to-market) counterparts need to understand as well. Community metrics can seem nebulous or disconnected from immediate business outcomes, but when used effectively, they unlock insights that touch every corner of the business.
Let’s talk about how GTM leaders, stakeholders, and community professionals can bridge that gap.
The Real Problem:
Direct ROI Doesn’t Always Apply to Community
First, let’s address the elephant in the room: community is inherently multifaceted. It doesn’t operate as a linear function like paid advertising or direct sales. It’s not always a “put $1 in, get $3 out” scenario—and this confounds teams that are used to straightforward ROI calculations.
Here’s the truth: most business functions can’t always show direct ROI. Marketing doesn’t (or can’t) always tie revenue to a specific campaign, initiative, or social post. Customer Success often can’t directly show direct causation from NPS (Net Promoter Score) changes to upsells. Yet we know these functions drive value because their metrics tie back to business goals like acquisition, satisfaction, and retention.
Community works the same way. It may not always drive immediate top-of-funnel leads or pipeline revenue, but it fosters a set of outcomes—engagement, loyalty, and advocacy—that cascade across sales, marketing, and customer success.
So GTM teams need to stop asking, “What’s the ROI of the community?” and start asking, “What value is the community bringing to the business today?”
For community professionals, the onus is on you to make that value clear—not just in engagement numbers or new members added, but in business outcomes your stakeholders care about.
The Two Pillars of Community Metrics:
Program Health and Business Impact
If you don’t define your metrics correctly, you risk reporting things that are interesting only to your community team but meaningless to the rest of your organization. That’s why metrics must fall into one of two pillars:
Program Health Metrics
These metrics evaluate how well your community itself is running. They don’t measure revenue or conversions directly; instead, they focus on the community’s foundation. Examples include:
Member acquisition: How many people are joining? What’s your attendance rate at events?
Engagement rates: How active are your members across engagement channels like forums, Discord, Slack, or events?
Retention: Are your members staying in the community, or are they disengaging?
GTM teams should recognize metrics like these as indicators of a thriving community that can support their goals. Without solid program health, deeper business outcomes aren’t achievable.
Business Impact Metrics
These metrics go beyond community health by linking activity to outcomes that matter to GTM stakeholders, such as:
Marketing goals: Increased referrals, user-generated content (UGC), or thought leadership attributed to community initiatives.
Sales goals: Revenue influenced from engaged community members or increased retention rates.
Customer Success goals: Increased product usage, support ticket deflection or NPS improvements in accounts tied to the community.
Key takeaway for GTM leaders: Your community program’s health metrics are leading indicators, while business impact metrics are the results.
Real-life examples:
Duolingo: This popular language-learning platform connects its community strategy to retention and brand advocacy. By cultivating a thriving online community of language learners and hosting forums, Duolingo encourages engagement, which directly impacts user retention and lifetime value. Community-driven word-of-mouth also bolsters user acquisition.
Zapier: The no-code automation platform actively integrates its customer community into support and education. With a help forum driven by community contributions, Zapier users can troubleshoot issues and find answers to their questions faster. This reduces the load on support teams while increasing customer satisfaction—a clear business impact metric tied to the community.
Notion: Notion measures community-driven impact through grassroots advocacy. From webinars hosted by enthusiastic customers to online communities run by passionate Notion users, their program translates engagement into product adoption and upgrades at scale.
Asana: At Asana, engaged community members were more likely to expand product usage within their teams and move to a higher-paid tier. The community team tracked retention and usage through tools like Tableau while folding in specific community data—a good example of linking program health to bottom-line business goals.
These demonstrate that community’s value isn’t limited to one area of the business. Whether it’s support efficiency, brand advocacy, or increased retention, community investments ripple across the organization.
Tailoring Metrics to Shifting Business Priorities
Community doesn’t drive the same outcomes for every organization—or even for the same organization at different points in its lifecycle. For GTM leaders, it’s important to keep in mind that community’s goals will evolve as your priorities shift.
Here’s what that shift often looks like:
Early-stage growth: When the company is in its acquisition phase, communities are tasked with boosting brand awareness and driving signups. Metrics like new leads from community members or member-to-customer conversion rates will dominate.
Scaling phase: At this level, revenue becomes the focus. The goal may shift to retaining customers through deeper engagement, minimizing churn, or increasing expansion opportunities. Community dashboards might show product usage among engaged members or account-level upsell opportunities.
Mature organizations: As the business grows its base, brand advocacy through community takes center stage. Metrics might measure contributed user-generated content, referrals, or earned media impressions.
For community leaders, the lesson here is simple: tie every report to what the business prioritizes right now—not what you (or even your community members) care about most personally.
The Tools and Buy-in Required to Measure Success
Understanding community metrics is one thing. Collecting and sharing them effectively with stakeholders is another. Here’s what GTM teams and community leaders need to prioritize:
Data silos block visibility
Community insights often live in standalone engagement tools like Common Room or spreadsheets. Without integrating these metrics into core systems like your data warehouse, Salesforce or Tableau, many insights never make it to GTM leaders.
Stakeholder buy-in is critical for integration
GTM leaders: Want to see measurable business outcomes? Most community team’s can’t deliver that without support from your data and analytics teams. Push for internal support to connect community data pipelines with your company’s existing systems.
Stakeholder-focused dashboards
Once community teams have the data, they’ll need a way to visualize and share with stakeholders, typically via dashboards. A successful community dashboard needs two views:
One for community teams, focused on program health metrics to gauge internal performance.
One for stakeholders, emphasizing correlated outcomes like revenue retention, LTV improvements, or support savings.
What’s Next?
Can community deliver measurable business results? Absolutely. The more important question is: Are you looking for the right kind of metrics in the right places?
Community isn’t just a feel-good function—it’s a strategic driver for growth, retention, and advocacy. By reframing the conversation around value, alignment, and outcomes, both community leaders and GTM stakeholders can unlock the full potential of community investments.
Excellent advice, Josh.
What a piece!
Last week I also shared this topic to my Community Marketing bootcamp participants. Indeed pairing Business Metrics and Community Metrics to prove community’s business value is important.
Thanks for writing this post! 🔥