Webinars & Events

Beyond registrations: measuring webinar ROI and impact

Read about how to measure what your virtual events really drive, and what to do next.
8 min read

Published on April 09, 2026

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If you’ve ever been asked to “share the webinar results” and the only numbers you have are registrations, attendance, and a few engagement stats, you’re not alone.
 
You put the numbers on a slide, do your best to tell the story, but the inevitable question comes up: “Okay, but what did this actually lead to?”
 
That’s a hard question to answer, even with detailed performance data. It’s challenging to know what to look for, how to connect the dots, and tie the data back to business outcomes. And when you can’t connect the event to real outcomes, how do you know what needs to change?
 
Meanwhile, money is lost on best guesses and good intentions, like overspending on untargeted promotion, choosing webinar topics based on internal hunches, or sending the same follow-up email blast to everyone. A recent Demand Gen Report survey of senior B2B marketing leaders found that around 25% of marketing budgets go toward campaigns that look productive but don’t drive revenue.
 
If any of this sounds familiar, it’s time to stop wasting your marketing budget and make some adjustments. Start looking at events differently by measuring event ROI in a way that delivers insights to your marketing team, intelligence to your sales team, and outcomes to your leadership. Not with a dozen new KPIs, but with a few important metrics that help you connect the dots between attention, intent, and outcomes, and then you can improve what you do next and allocate budget accordingly.

Volume metrics aren’t wrong, they’re just incomplete

Registrations and attendance still matter. They tell you if your topic, promotion, and timing are working. The problem is when they become the only story.
 
A poll taken during a recent Zoom webinar showed that more than half of respondents’ top success metric for virtual events was attendance, with another group focused on registrations. Only a smaller percentage pointed to qualified leads or net-new sales pipeline — the outcomes leadership is actually interested in.
 
So, keep reporting your volume metrics, but also include metrics that show who leaned in, what they liked, and where the momentum shifted.

The simple ROI story that leadership really wants

When you’re reporting up, success lands best when you can clearly answer these four questions:
 
  1. Did we attract the right audience (not just the largest one)?
    Example signals: target accounts, buying roles, the right industries
  2. Did they engage with us in meaningful ways?
    Examples: downloading a high-intent resource you shared, asking questions about your product, requesting a follow-up call in your post-event survey
  3. Did we create usable next steps for sales and marketing?
    Examples: a prioritized list of attendees/organizations based on actions, a list of who goes to sales for follow up vs. who goes to a nurture campaign
  4. Did it increase interest and momentum after the event?
    Examples: more visits to key pages that day or week, more demo or trial clicks, higher reply rates or social media engagement, more replay views

The fourth question is the toughest, especially when sales don’t usually happen the day after the webinar. That’s why the smartest approach is one that ladders up: intent → follow-up → pipeline impact.
 
And that’s where the right event analytics can make all the difference. Zoom’s analytics are designed to help you understand what’s working, who’s engaged — at the individual and company level — and how your events drive business impact without manually digging through data.

4 event metrics for deeper insights and pipeline fulfillment

Having data isn’t the challenge; it’s gaining better insights into that data that you can actually use to improve, grow, optimize, and extend the impact of your events.
 
Metrics such as time spent viewing, attendee interactions, segment-level engagement, on-demand views, repeat views, and audience behavior by topic or format are easily viewed on the Zoom platform. But those are just part of the story; you can go even deeper.
 
Here are four KPIs from Zoom Webinars Plus and Events that can help you track and improve ROI.
 
1. Cross-event analytics because one event doesn’t tell the full story
 
Cross-event analytics provides a consolidated view of performance across your program, so you can compare registrations, attendance rates, and engagement without pulling separate reports or switching tools.
 
When you look across multiple events, patterns surface quickly. You can see which topics consistently resonate, which formats drive stronger engagement, and where registration volume doesn’t translate into participation.
 
For marketers, this makes reporting clearer and decision-making smarter. Instead of reacting to one-off results, you can confidently show leadership what’s working — and what you’re optimizing next.
 
How to use it:
Identify the topics, formats, speakers, and event lengths that consistently drive strong attendance and engagement. Next, flag patterns such as events that receive high registrations but low participation, or events that generate high engagement from the wrong audience.
 
Then, make one change at a time (timing, title framing, format) and see the trend over the next 3-5 events.
 
2. Engagement scoreto find the people who actually leaned in
 
Your best leads usually aren’t the people who just showed up. They’re the ones who participated by asking questions, answering polls, chatting, or staying for most of the session. That’s a much stronger sign of interest than someone who left after five minutes.
 
Zoom’s engagement score consolidates multiple actions into one overall rating to show who was actively participating and how. It takes into account factors like time engaged, questions asked, poll responses, chat activity, reactions, and resource downloads.
 
Engagement scores help you focus your time on prospects where conversion is more likely to occur.
 
How to use it:
Create two follow-up paths:
  • Highly engaged attendees: Send a more direct next step — offer a quick demo, share a relevant clip, or send a personalized response (i.e., “Here’s the slide you asked about”).
  • Less engaged attendees: Send a simple recap (recording + key takeaways) with a softer call-to-action.

Then, share the highly engaged list with sales so they know who to contact first and why.

3. Attendee profileto measure momentum over time, not in one moment
One event is a snapshot. Repeated engagement is momentum.

When you can see an attendee’s history across events, you gain visibility into growing interest. Instead of treating each webinar as a standalone interaction, you start to see patterns: repeat attendance, deeper engagement, and sustained participation from target accounts.
 
Centralized attendee profiles bring that engagement history together, making it easier to identify who is progressing from casual interest to serious evaluation.
 
How to use it:
Track repeat attendance and engagement over time. If the same target accounts keep showing up, and they’re engaging more each time, it’s a strong sign you’re building real buying interest. Use that history to personalize outreach, rather than sending a generic follow-up.
 
Then, report it to leadership as “audience growth we can trust” — not just new names, but returning attendees and increased interest and intent.
 
4. Top companies attendedto see company-level interest, not just individual leads
 
Leadership and sales care about account growth and pipeline, not just attendee totals or chat activity. This metric connects event results to how account-based marketing actually works: multiple stakeholders from key companies showing individual and combined interest over time.
 
Company Insights for Zoom Webinars Plus and Events groups attendees by organization using their business email domain, aggregates engagement at the account level, and shows which target companies showed up, the number of individuals that attended from each company, and how engaged they were.
 
How to use it:
After each event, send sales a short list of engaged companies, including:
  • Which companies attended
  • How many company participants engaged and in what ways
  • Which companies have continued to show up and engage across multiple events
Then, use those insights to guide sales and marketing follow up, as well as future topics. If your target companies often show up for one theme and ignore another, that’s a clear sign of what they care about and what to focus on next.

The bigger picture: ROI and disconnected tools

One of the biggest ROI wins from virtual events is often operational. If your team is piecing together an event with separate tools for registration, collaboration, production, video streaming, and analytics, you’re not just paying in software costs. You’re paying in valuable resource time. From context-switching and manual handoffs to messy data, knowledge silos, troubleshooting and fire drills, the friction created by tool sprawl makes it nearly impossible to follow an efficient, repeatable framework.
 
Consolidation is key. When all of your event tools, including analytics, live in one place, you spend less time exporting CSVs and more time acting on what you learn. It’s faster improvement, cleaner reporting, and more consistent and targeted follow-through that can drive pipeline impact and positive event outcomes.
 
Final thoughts
 
If a metric only tells you what happened, you’ll keep running events on vibes and hope. But if it tells you what to do next and with whom, you can improve your program, increase engagement, and compound the overall impact. That’s the difference between “we hosted a webinar” and “our event program is a growth engine.”
 
Want to turn your webinar data into a story your CFO believes?
 
Join our webinar to learn more about why most webinar measurement falls short, which signals actually connect engagement to pipeline, and what it takes to build a story leadership will buy. Register here >

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