Do QR Codes Have an Accountability Issue in Marketing Use Cases?

Widespread use has produced a set of performance indicators for tracking clicks and engagement. These metrics describe interaction rather than outcome. Without a clear link between scans and business impact, QR codes remain positioned as a channel that performs visibly but not necessarily measurably.

Around 98% of marketers report a positive impact from QR codes, yet only 12% connect scans to revenue, exposing a gap between widespread adoption and measurable value creation. 

According to The State of QR codes 2026 report by Uniqode, based on surveys of marketers and consumers and an analysis of 188 million scans, QR codes have firmly transitioned from a functional add-on to an embedded layer of the customer experience. Adoption is no longer a barrier. With 98% of marketers reporting a positive impact and a majority planning to increase usage, the channel has moved into standard practice across industries.

Yet, as with many technologies that scale quickly, the next challenge is not expansion but accountability.

Only 12% of marketers can connect QR Code interactions directly to revenue. The implication is not that QR codes are underperforming, but that they are being measured in ways that fall short of their potential. Activity is visible. Value is not always.

Adoption has Outpaced Measurement

The current state of QR codes reflects a familiar pattern in marketing technology, where rapid adoption creates the impression of maturity before the underlying systems are fully aligned. QR codes are now deployed across packaging, retail environments, advertising, and post-purchase journeys, often by multiple teams operating independently.

This widespread use has produced a consistent set of performance indicators, with marketers tracking clicks, engagement, and conversion rates as primary measures of success. However, these metrics describe interaction rather than outcome. Without a clear link between scans and business impact, QR codes remain positioned as a channel that performs visibly but not necessarily measurably.

The report points to a structural gap between what is being tracked and what needs to be understood. When interactions are not connected to revenue or lifecycle progression, they remain isolated signals. This limits the ability to justify investment, particularly as budgets come under greater scrutiny.

It is in this context that Sharat Potharaju, Co-founder and CEO of Uniqode, reframes the role of QR codes in more operational terms, suggesting that their value lies not in access, but in understanding.

“QR codes are no longer just a way to get people somewhere. They’re how you learn who your customers are, what they want, and whether your marketing is working. The brands that build systems around creation, management, and tracking will turn scans into the most measurable channel in their stack.”

The emphasis here is on systems rather than usage, highlighting that the difference between adoption and performance is determined by integration.

Usage Is Expanding Faster Than Strategy

Consumer behaviour reinforces both the opportunity and the gap. QR codes are no longer approached with hesitation. Around 70% of consumers scan them at least once a month, and 71% describe them as helpful in their daily lives. This level of familiarity has fundamentally changed expectations.

Consumers no longer evaluate whether a QR Code is worth scanning. They assume it will deliver something useful, load quickly, and reflect the context in which it appears. When it does not, the experience is not seen as a technical limitation but as friction.

The most common reason for scanning, cited by 75% of users, is to access information. This insight reveals a clear intent, but also exposes a mismatch. Only 36% of marketers use QR codes to deliver information in a way that aligns with that expectation.

In many cases, QR codes continue to direct users to generic destinations, such as homepages or static landing pages, rather than context-specific experiences. This disconnect reduces the effectiveness of the interaction, particularly in environments where customers expect relevance as a default.

The opportunity lies not in increasing scans, but in aligning the experience with the reason behind them.

The Data Opportunity Remains Underdeveloped

QR codes also represent a direct pathway to first-party data, particularly at a time when organisations are seeking to strengthen customer relationships without relying on third-party signals. The report indicates that 83% of consumers are willing to share data when consent and control are clearly provided. However, this willingness is not being fully converted into trust.

Only 34% of marketers clearly communicate how collected data will be used, leaving a significant gap between consumer openness and organisational transparency. The issue is not whether consumers are prepared to engage, but whether the interaction provides enough clarity and value to justify that engagement.

Data collection, in this context, is not a technical process but a relational one. The moment of interaction becomes a test of credibility, where transparency and relevance determine whether the exchange feels justified.

Scaling Is an Operational Challenge

As QR Code usage becomes more widespread, the barriers shift from adoption to execution. The report identifies several operational challenges that limit scale, including fragmented tracking across teams, code duplication, and integration gaps between systems.

  • Fragmented tracking across systems creates inconsistent visibility
  • Duplicate codes reduce control and clarity across campaigns
  • Integration gaps limit the ability to connect interactions to outcomes

These challenges are not driven by the technology itself, but by the way it is managed within organisations. QR codes are often deployed across multiple functions without a unified structure, making consistency difficult to maintain.

At the same time, a subset of organisations report no significant barriers to scaling, suggesting that the issue is not capability but coordination. Where systems are unified, QR codes function as part of a cohesive engagement framework rather than as isolated touchpoints.

From Access to Advantage

QR codes have reached a point where their value is no longer defined by adoption but by execution. Their role is evolving from a simple connector between physical and digital environments to a channel through which organisations can observe behaviour, capture intent, and shape experiences in real time.

This shift requires a corresponding change in how success is measured. The emphasis must move beyond the volume of interactions toward the outcomes those interactions enable.

As QR codes become a standard feature across industries, differentiation will depend on how effectively organisations integrate them into a broader system of engagement, data, and measurement. Those that succeed will not necessarily generate more scans, but will be able to demonstrate what those scans are worth within the context of their overall strategy.

The scan was never the finish line. It was always the starting point of a measurable relationship.

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