Most creators who set up Instagram DM automation check that messages are sending and move on. Numbers like "DMs sent" or "followers gained this week" feel like progress, but they do not tell you whether your funnel is converting. Without the right metrics, you are optimising by feel, and most creators who do that leave 60 to 80 percent of their potential revenue sitting uncollected.
Why Vanity Metrics Will Mislead You
Follower count, post likes, and total DMs sent share one flaw: they are all upstream of revenue. A creator with 10,000 followers and a 15 percent DM conversion rate will consistently outperform one with 100,000 followers and no funnel at all. The size of your audience matters far less than what happens once someone enters your DM thread.
Instagram's updated Insights, rolled out in early 2026, now show post-level follower growth and views as a unified metric across Reels, Stories, and feed posts. These surface-level numbers look satisfying on a dashboard, but none of them measure whether your DM automation is doing its job.
The metrics that drive decisions belong further down the funnel: open rates, reply rates, click-throughs, and email capture rates. These are the numbers that tell you specifically what is working and what needs to change.
The DM Funnel in Five Stages
Every working Instagram DM funnel runs through the same five stages, regardless of the trigger used. Understanding this structure is a prerequisite to measuring it properly.
Stage one is a trigger: a comment keyword, a Story reply, or a DM keyword that activates the automation. Stage two is the opening message sent by your automation in response. Stage three is the reply or click that signals intent. Stage four is the delivery, a link, a resource, or an email gate. Stage five is the conversion event: an email captured, a sale made, a call booked.
Each stage leaks a percentage of your audience. Your job as a creator is to track where the leak is largest and fix that stage first, not the one that feels easiest to change.

Open Rate: the Number Everyone Cites and What It Actually Means
Instagram DM open rates run between 70 and 90 percent, compared to email's 25 percent industry average (LeadResponse, 2026). That gap is real, and it is the reason DM automation outperforms most other channels for creators selling digital products or services.
But open rate is a starting point, not a success metric. High open rate with low reply rate or low click-through rate is a sign that your opening message is not compelling enough to drive the next action. A 90 percent open rate with a 2 percent click-through rate means 88 percent of the people who read your message did nothing with it.
Track open rate weekly, but do not celebrate it in isolation. It is only meaningful in relation to what the reader does next.
Reply Rate and Its Role in Sequence Depth
Reply rate measures how many people respond to your first automated message, even with a single word. A healthy reply rate for a well-triggered automation sits between 15 and 40 percent, depending on the offer and the quality of the trigger.
Reply rate matters because replies signal intent and they keep your DM thread active. On Instagram, a thread with two-way exchanges is treated differently by the platform than one with a single automated message and silence. Creators who build reply mechanics into their opening message — a simple yes or no question, a choose-your-path prompt — consistently see higher downstream conversion rates than those who send a single link and stop.
If your reply rate is below 10 percent on a comment-to-DM automation, the issue is almost always the opening message or the call to action on the post itself, not the offer.

Link Click-Through Rate: Where Most Funnels Break
Click-through rate measures how many people who receive your automated DM actually click the link inside it. Industry data puts the typical CTR for DM automations between 5 and 20 percent, depending on offer relevance and message timing (communipass, 2026).
CTR is the most actionable metric in the funnel because it is directly tied to your message copy and offer positioning. A low CTR, below 5 percent, almost always signals one of three problems: the link is buried too deep in a long message, the offer feels unclear or low-value, or there is a mismatch between what the trigger promised and what the message delivers.
Fix CTR before you try to fix anything else. A small improvement here, from 5 percent to 12 percent, will do more for your conversion numbers than doubling your follower count.
Email Capture Rate: The Metric That Builds Long-Term Value
Email capture rate measures how many DM funnel entrants hand over their email address through an email gate or optional form. The industry benchmark is 30 to 50 percent for well-designed gates tied to a specific resource (CreatorFlow, 2026).
An email address is the most valuable outcome of a DM funnel because it moves the relationship off Instagram entirely. Accounts get restricted, reach fluctuates, and algorithm changes can cut your organic visibility overnight. An email list you own is unaffected by any of that.
Creators who track email capture rate tend to make smarter decisions about their lead magnets. If the capture rate is below 20 percent on a free resource offer, the resource itself is probably not compelling enough, and the fix is to upgrade the perceived value, not to run more traffic.
How to Benchmark Your DM Funnel
Benchmarking gives you a target to aim at and a baseline to measure improvement against. The table below shows typical performance ranges for three common funnel trigger types.
| Metric | Comment-to-DM | Stories Reply Trigger | Broadcast Message |
|---|---|---|---|
| DM Open Rate | 80–90% | 70–85% | 60–75% |
| Reply Rate | 20–40% | 15–30% | 5–15% |
| Link CTR | 10–20% | 8–15% | 5–12% |
| Email Capture Rate | 35–50% | 30–45% | 20–30% |
| Final Conversion Rate | 5–15% | 4–12% | 2–8% |
Comment-to-DM triggers consistently outperform the other types because the commenter has already shown public interest before the automation fires. Stories reply triggers sit in the middle, and broadcast messages have the lowest engagement across every metric because they are unsolicited.
"Comment-to-DM triggered automations see up to 278% higher engagement compared to standard broadcast messages, making them the highest-performing trigger type available to creators."
— ManyChat, 2026
If your numbers are consistently below these ranges, the issue is rarely the automation tool. It is almost always the content quality, the CTA clarity, or the offer relevance.

Where to Start If Your Metrics Are Below Target
Pick the one metric furthest below its benchmark range and work backward from there. If CTR is low, rewrite the first message to put the link higher and the value proposition clearer. If reply rate is low, add a choice mechanic to the opener. If email capture rate is low, upgrade the lead magnet or simplify the opt-in step.
Do not try to fix every metric at once. DM funnels benefit from single-variable testing, and changing multiple elements at the same time makes it impossible to know what actually moved the needle.
Most creators who take this approach can bring a leaking funnel to benchmark performance within four to six weeks of consistent posting and iteration. The metrics do not lie. They tell you exactly where your attention needs to go.
If you want to track all of these metrics in one place and see where your funnel is leaking, UnlockDM gives Instagram creators a purpose-built dashboard to monitor DM open rates, click-throughs, and email captures without stitching together three separate tools.