The 6 things every monthly marketing report must include
You are paying your marketing agency anywhere from $1,000 to $5,000+ per month. In return, you deserve a clear, honest monthly report that tells you — in plain English — whether your investment is producing results. Not vanity metrics. Not jargon. Results.
Here are the six sections a good marketing agency report should include every single month. If your current report is missing any of these, it is time to ask why.
1. Lead count by source
The most important section of any report. How many new leads (calls, form submissions, messages, walk-ins) did you get this month, and where did each one come from? A proper report breaks this down by channel: Google organic, Google Ads, Facebook, Instagram, referral, direct/walk-in, and AI search if applicable.
Why this matters: Lead count by source is the only way to know which parts of your marketing are generating real business and which are not. If you are paying for SEO, ads, social media, and review management, you need to see how each channel contributed to your lead pipeline. "You got 45 leads this month" is not enough. "You got 45 leads: 22 from Google organic, 12 from Google Ads, 6 from Facebook, and 5 from direct referrals" is a report that tells you something actionable.
2. Cost per lead trend
Your cost per lead should appear in every report with a month-over-month trend line. Is it going up, down, or staying flat? A declining CPL means your marketing is getting more efficient over time — which is exactly what should happen as SEO rankings improve, ad campaigns optimize, and your review profile strengthens.
If CPL is rising, your agency should explain why (increased competition, seasonal factors, expanded service area targeting) and what they plan to do about it. A good report never presents a bad number without context and a plan.
3. Ranking changes for target keywords
If you are paying for SEO, you should see a simple table showing your position for your top 5-10 keywords this month versus last month. Not just a generic "your SEO is improving" statement — actual positions. "Dentist Dallas: position 4 (was 7 last month)" is clear and measurable. "We are continuing to build authority for your target keywords" is not.
This section should also show your Maps 3-Pack position for your primary service keywords. For most local businesses, Maps ranking is even more important than organic ranking because the Maps pack appears above organic results.
4. Review count and rating changes
How many new Google reviews were generated this month? What is your current star rating? How does this compare to last month? If your agency manages your reviews, this section should also show response rate (what percentage of reviews got a reply) and any notable positive or negative trends.
A good report highlights the best review of the month (social proof your team can share) and flags any negative reviews that need attention or pattern issues that suggest operational improvements.
5. Website traffic breakdown
Total website visits broken into three categories: organic search (people who found you through Google), paid (people who clicked an ad), and direct/referral (people who typed your URL or came from another site). Month-over-month comparison for each.
This is not about raw numbers — it is about trends. Is organic traffic growing? That means SEO is working. Is paid traffic stable with consistent lead volume? That means ads are performing. Is direct traffic increasing? That means brand awareness is growing. A dip in any category should be acknowledged and explained.
6. Recommendations for next month
This is the section that separates great agencies from mediocre ones. Every report should end with specific, actionable recommendations for what the agency plans to do next month based on this month's data. Not "continue optimizing" — that is not a plan. Real recommendations look like:
- "Rankings for 'dental implants Dallas' stalled at position 8. Next month, we will create a dedicated service page targeting this keyword and build 3 local citations."
- "CPL for Google Ads increased 12% due to new competitor. We will test new ad copy, add negative keywords, and adjust bid strategy."
- "Review velocity dropped from 6/month to 2/month. We recommend reactivating the review request sequence and testing SMS requests instead of email."
If your agency's "recommendations" section is the same boilerplate every month, they are not actually analyzing your data.
Red flags in marketing agency reporting
These warning signs should trigger a conversation with your agency — or a search for a new one:
- Reports full of impressions and reach with no lead data. Impressions are how many times your ad was shown. Reach is how many people saw your post. Neither tells you if anyone actually contacted your business. An agency that leads with impressions is usually hiding a lack of leads.
- No month-over-month comparisons. If every report shows this month's numbers in isolation, you cannot tell if things are improving or declining. A good report always shows this month vs. last month (and ideally vs. same month last year).
- "Results take time" with no milestones. This is true for SEO — results do take 3-6 months. But a good agency sets specific milestones: "By month 3, we expect to see ranking improvements for 3 of your 5 target keywords. By month 6, we expect at least 2 keywords in the top 5." No milestones means no accountability.
- Reporting on only one channel when you pay for multiple. If you are paying for SEO, ads, and social media, and the report only covers ads, ask why. This often means the other channels are underperforming and the agency is hoping you will not notice.
- No access to your own data. You should have login access to your Google Analytics, Google Ads, Google Business Profile, and Facebook Ad Manager. If an agency refuses to give you access to accounts you are paying for, that is a major red flag.
- Automated reports with no human commentary. A raw data dump from a reporting tool is not a report. If nobody at the agency is actually reviewing your numbers, writing insights, and making recommendations, you are paying for software — not strategy.
Green flags: signs of a good agency report
On the flip side, these are the indicators that your agency is doing reporting right:
- Lead source attribution. Every lead is tracked back to a specific channel. You know exactly which marketing investments are driving business.
- Before-and-after comparisons. "When we started in January, you were ranking position 12 for 'HVAC repair Austin.' You are now position 4." Clear progress, clearly communicated.
- Clear next steps. Every section ends with what the agency plans to do about it. Good numbers get plans to maintain or scale them. Bad numbers get plans to fix them.
- Honest about what is not working. A great agency will tell you "Social media generated 2 leads this month, which is below our target of 5. Here is what we are changing." Honesty builds trust. If everything in every report is always "great," someone is not telling you the truth.
- Plain English. You should be able to read the report in 10 minutes and understand whether your marketing is working. If you need a marketing dictionary to decode it, the report is written for the agency's benefit, not yours.
Questions to ask your agency every month
Do not just read the report — use it as a conversation starter. These five questions keep your agency accountable and your marketing on track:
- "How many leads did we get, and which channel produced the most?" This is your north star. Every monthly conversation should start here.
- "What is our cost per lead, and is it trending in the right direction?" You want to see CPL stable or declining over time. If it is rising, you want to understand why.
- "What worked best this month, and how can we do more of it?" Double down on what is producing results. If Google Ads are driving 60% of leads at a good CPL, discuss increasing the budget.
- "What did not work, and what is the plan to fix it?" This question reveals whether your agency is reactive or proactive. A great agency has already identified the problem and has a plan before you ask.
- "Are we on track to hit our goals?" This assumes you set goals at the start — which you should. If you did not, set them now. Example: "50 leads per month by month 6" gives both you and the agency a target to measure against.
What a good report looks like at month 1, 3, 6, and 12
Marketing results compound over time. Here is a realistic timeline for what your monthly report should show at each stage:
Month 1
The report should focus on setup and baselines. What was completed: Google Ads launched, SEO audit finished, GBP optimized, review request system activated. Baseline metrics established: current ranking positions, current lead volume, current review count and rating. Early wins from ads (if running). This month's report is mostly about what was built, not results.
Month 3
Ads should be generating consistent leads with an established CPL. SEO should show early movement — some keywords moving from page 2 to page 1, or from position 15 to position 8. Review count should be growing. The report should compare month 3 to the baseline and show clear directional progress.
Month 6
This is the accountability milestone. SEO should be producing measurable organic leads. CPL should be lower than month 1-2 as campaigns optimize. Rankings for primary keywords should be on page 1 or close to it. Key metrics should all be trending in the right direction. If they are not, this is the conversation point — ask your agency for an honest assessment of why and what changes are needed.
Month 12
By month 12, you should see significant compounding. Organic leads should be a major contributor (reducing reliance on paid ads). CPL should be notably lower than month 1. Rankings should be strong and stable for most target keywords. The report should include a full year-over-year comparison showing the total impact of the marketing program.
When to consider switching marketing agencies
Switching agencies is disruptive and should not be done lightly. But there are clear signals that a change is warranted:
- 6+ months with no measurable improvement in leads or rankings. Marketing takes time, but 6 months is enough time to see directional progress. Zero improvement after 6 months of active work means something is fundamentally wrong — the strategy, the execution, or both.
- Consistent communication failures. Reports are late, calls get rescheduled, emails go unanswered for days. If your agency is not communicating reliably, they are likely not prioritizing your account.
- Your account manager keeps changing. If you have had 3 different account managers in a year, the agency has a retention problem — and your marketing suffers from the constant restarts.
- They cannot explain what they are doing. If you ask "What did you work on this month for my account?" and get vague answers, that is a problem. A good agency can explain exactly what work was performed and why.
- You do not own your own accounts. If you discover that your Google Ads account, GBP listing, or website is under the agency's ownership and you cannot access or transfer it, start planning your exit immediately. These are your business assets.
Before switching, have a direct conversation. Share your concerns specifically. Sometimes a relationship can be repaired with clear expectations. But if the problems persist after that conversation, move on. Six months of wasted budget is more expensive than the short-term disruption of switching.
AdIQ provides every client with a live analytics dashboard you can check anytime — not just once a month. Your account manager walks you through a plain-English monthly report covering all 6 sections listed above, with honest assessments and a clear action plan for the following month. You always own your accounts, your data, and your website.
Key Takeaways
- Every monthly report must include: lead count by source, CPL trend, ranking changes, review metrics, traffic breakdown, and next month's recommendations.
- Red flags: impressions-only reporting, no month-over-month comparisons, "results take time" without milestones, no access to your own data.
- Green flags: lead source attribution, before/after comparisons, honest assessments, plain English, clear next steps.
- Ask 5 questions monthly: lead count and best channel, CPL trend, what worked, what didn't, and are we on track.
- Give SEO 6 months, ads 60 days. If there is no directional improvement by month 6, have a serious conversation.
- Always own your own Google Ads, GBP, Analytics, and website accounts. These are your business assets.
- Consider switching agencies after 6+ months with no measurable lead or ranking improvement.