Clickthroughs aren’t success. - Shinyverse
Shinyverse

Clickthroughs aren’t success.

If your analytics dashboards still treat clickthrough rate as a primary win, you’re grading yourself on the easiest test — not the most important one.

A click tells you that someone was curious enough to tap. It doesn’t tell you if they understood the product, if they’re a good fit, or if they ended up getting the help they needed to make a decision – which is critical in financial services. In fact, that gap between “I clicked” and “I got the help I needed” is where trust is either built or quietly eroded.

CTR is popular because it’s simple

CTR is easy to track. Easy to compare across campaigns. Easy to improve with tweaks to headlines and buttons. For a long time, that felt like progress: more clicks meant more engagement.

But today, in crowded categories like credit cards, checking, loans, and insurance, customers are drowning in choice. Their question isn’t “Will I click?” It’s “Will this actually help me?”

Relying on CTR alone creates a comfortable illusion of success. But it doesn’t tell you if prospects are moving toward the product that’s right for them or a better financial position.

Why that breaks in financial services

Financial decisions aren’t casual. They’re wrapped up in anxiety, trade-offs, and long-term consequences.

Finsights, Shiny’s proprietary study of U.S. adults, set out to understand how people think and feel about financial services—and what they expect from providers. The research uncovers the mindsets, emotions, and attitudes that shape how individuals approach money and financial institutions. Many of those emotions are heavy:

  • 45% are concerned about inflation
  • 37% struggle to save
  •  88% report at least one significant money challenge

Against that backdrop, a click is a weak signal. Someone can tap on a “low-rate card” or “simple checking” and still hit friction, question their eligibility, or worry they’re missing a better option.

PwC’s research on customer experience found that 32% of U.S. customers will walk away from a brand they love after just one bad experience, and 59% will leave after several bad ones. A high-CTR campaign that leads into a confusing or misaligned journey doesn’t just fail to convert — it actively harms loyalty.

Treat CTR as a signal, not the story

CTR is a signal. It tells you your creative and targeting were good enough to generate curiosity. So the real danger isn’t looking at CTR – it’s stopping there and calling it success.

Your job is to drive outcomes – that is, customers choosing products that are a genuine fit for which they’ll be approved and are a good long-term fit.

To break the clickthrough obsession, treat CTR as a waypoint, not the destination. Redefine success around whether customers are engaging with the right product and the right experience, not any product and any experience.

Start with a focused set of measures:

  • Right-fit engagement: Of everyone who clicks, how many move into a product that matches their needs and your underwriting?
  • Friction in the flow: Where do they stall, bounce, or loop back — and why?
  • Confidence in the decision: Add a simple pulse question after submission: “I feel confident this is the right option for me.”

Design and language choices should support those measures: clear eligibility up front, plain language about product trade-offs, simple comparisons, and fewer dead ends.

How to get started

Pick one high-visibility journey — a flagship card, a checking account, an auto loan — and ask:

  1. Where are we treating clickthrough as the hero metric?
  2. What do we know about who is clicking — and whether they’re a good fit?
  3. What’s the simplest way to add a right-fit or confidence signal into this flow?

Then make one trade-off explicit: you’re willing to accept a flat or slightly lower CTR if it means higher completion among qualified customers, fewer people stuck in the wrong path, and better confidence scores.

That’s the shift from shallow wins to deeper ones — from “We lifted CTR” to “We helped more people choose products that genuinely meets their needs.”

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