Forcing Function (Leading) vs Vanity Metrics (Lagging)
Leading indicators precede outcomes and steer behaviour early; lagging indicators confirm results but arrive late. Vanity metrics are a common lagging trap — they move without implying durable value. Forcing functions are structural levers that change behaviour before the scoreboard updates.
Key Differences
| Dimension | Forcing Function (Leading) | Vanity Metrics (Lagging) |
|---|---|---|
| Timing | Early; predictive | Late; confirmatory |
| Controllability | Often more controllable day-to-day | Outcomes of many inputs |
| Gaming risk | Medium — can distort process | High — easy to inflate superficially |
| Examples | Ship cadence, sales conversations, activation rate | Follower counts, raw traffic, impressions |
| Management use | Coaching and systems design | Board reporting and benchmarks |
When to use Forcing Function (Leading)
- When you need weekly operational focus
- When lagging revenue masks product breakage
When to use Vanity Metrics (Lagging)
- When validating long-term strategy and positioning
- When communicating to investors who demand outcomes
Frequently Asked Questions
Leading vs lagging indicators — simple example?
Leading: qualified pipeline created per week. Lagging: quarterly revenue. Leading metrics tell you whether the machine is healthy before the P&L reflects it.
Why are vanity metrics dangerous?
They optimise attention without tying to retention, revenue, or learning. Teams hit the vanity target and still fail — sometimes faster because they avoided hard metrics.