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Most home service businesses can tell you:
- How many leads they generated
- What their cost per lead is
- Which platforms they’re spending money on
But very few can answer one simple question:
Which marketing channel is actually driving profit?
And that’s the only question that really matters.
Why This Is So Hard to Answer
At first glance, it seems like it should be obvious.
You run ads.
Leads come in.
Jobs get booked.
But the connection between those steps is often broken.
Most businesses:
- Don’t track lead sources properly
- Don’t connect their CRM to marketing channels
- Don’t track which leads turn into actual revenue
So they rely on partial data.
And partial data leads to wrong decisions.
The Difference Between Revenue and Profit
This is where most businesses get it wrong.
A channel can generate revenue…
And still not be profitable.
For example:
- High lead volume
- Low close rate
- Low ticket jobs
On paper, it looks like the channel is working.
In reality, it may be costing you money.
Profit is what remains after:
- Ad spend
- Operational cost
- Time and resources
If you’re not measuring that, you’re not measuring performance.
The Profit by Channel Model
To understand which channel is driving profit, you need to look at the full picture.
The Profit by Channel Model tracks:
- Leads generated
- Jobs booked
- Revenue produced
- Cost associated with that channel
From this, you calculate:
- Cost per booked job
- Revenue per job
- Profit per channel
This is the only way to understand what’s actually working.
Definition: Profit by Channel
Profit by Channel is the measurement of how much actual profit each marketing source generates after accounting for ad spend, conversion rates, and revenue from completed jobs.
It connects marketing activity directly to business outcomes.
What This Looks Like in Real Businesses
In most cases, when we analyze accounts:
- One or two channels are driving the majority of profit
- Several channels are breaking even or losing money
- The business has no idea which is which
So they continue spending across all channels equally.
Instead of focusing on what actually works.
Common False Signals That Mislead Businesses
These are the metrics that create confusion:
- High lead volume
- Low cost per lead
- High impressions or traffic
- A “busy” team
None of these guarantee profitability.
They often hide inefficiencies.
Why Businesses Continue Guessing
Because they don’t have:
- Proper CRM tracking
- Offline conversion tracking
- Consistent data entry
- Clear reporting by channel
Without these, it’s impossible to connect:
Marketing → Bookings → Revenue → Profit
So decisions are made based on assumptions.
What Happens When You Have Clarity
When you know which channel is driving profit:
- You can cut wasted spend immediately
- You can scale profitable channels with confidence
- You can improve underperforming areas
- You can align marketing with operations
This is where growth becomes controlled—not reactive.
What Good Looks Like
A business that understands profit by channel can answer:
- Which channel produces the highest-quality jobs
- Which channel has the lowest cost per booked job
- Which channel generates the most profit
And they use that data to guide every decision.
How to Start Identifying Your Most Profitable Channel
Start simple:
- Track where each lead comes from
- Track whether it becomes a booked job
- Track the revenue from that job
- Compare performance across channels
This alone will give you more clarity than most businesses have today.
Final Takeaway
If you don’t know which marketing channel is driving profit, you’re not managing your marketing.
You’re guessing.
And guessing leads to wasted budget, missed opportunities, and stalled growth.
Still Need Help?
If you’re currently spending on marketing but don’t know:
- Which channels are actually profitable
- Your cost per booked job by source
- Where your budget is being wasted
Then you don’t need more leads.
You need clarity.
FAQ’s
How do you know which marketing channel is most profitable?
You must track leads, bookings, and revenue by source, then compare the cost and return for each channel.
Why isn’t revenue enough to measure marketing performance?
Because revenue does not account for costs. A channel can generate revenue but still lose money.
What is profit by channel?
Profit by channel measures how much actual profit each marketing source generates after accounting for ad spend and conversion performance.
What metrics should I track to understand profitability?
Cost per booked job, close rate, revenue per job, and total return by channel are key metrics.