In This Article
The Limitation of Self-Reported Metrics
Self-reported metrics are generated and presented by the provider being evaluated. A provider who reports a 90% contact rate has no obligation to verify that figure, and the buyer has no independent basis for confirming it. The same is true for conversion rates, vertical coverage claims, and compliance assertions. Self-reported data is not inherently false, but it is structurally unverifiable. A sourcing decision built on self-reported metrics is a sourcing decision built on trust rather than evidence.
What Independent Verification Measures
Trestle verifies individual leads at the point of submission, checking contact validity, data freshness, and delivery consistency. These checks are performed on actual lead data, not on aggregated claims provided by the provider. The result is a dataset that reflects what a provider's leads actually look like, rather than what the provider reports them to look like. LeadPI aggregates that data at the provider level, producing an index that reflects verified lead quality rather than self-reported performance.
Consistency Over Time vs. Point-in-Time Claims
A provider can self-report strong performance at any point in time. A single strong campaign, a favorable period, or a selectively chosen sample can produce metrics that look compelling without reflecting consistent quality. The Lead Performance Index is built across multiple rating periods. It reflects how a provider performs over time, across volume, and across multiple batch submissions. A provider with a strong index has demonstrated consistent quality across recurring independent verification, not a single point-in-time claim.
The Credential as a Verifiable Standard
The LeadPI performance credential is awarded based entirely on a provider's Lead Performance Index at the close of each quarterly rating period. It cannot be purchased, applied for, or self-awarded. A buyer who sees a LeadPI credential on a provider profile can confirm it directly on the platform and review the underlying index data behind it. That is a different standard than a self-reported badge or a directory listing, where the presence of a credential reflects payment or self-submission rather than verified performance.