A metric can be quantitative or qualitative.
It is easier to measure quantitative metrics, like build time. And there is actually a benefit in measuring build time, and I have seen that. For example, you might discover that build time goes above the reasonable limit, what impacts "feedback time", which is essential for productive coding, so you might act on "exceeded limit trigger". For example in this particular case, consider to split your solution into multiple components or do "staged" integration or something else.
It is harder to measure qualitative metrics, like project visibility, team happiness. For example, CI makes things (build/test/release/deployment/etc process/status) visible to everybody and visible earlier. So, CI ROI depends on ROI of increased visibility. And outcome of visibility is difficult to measure but it is possible, and it is qualitative metric. One way of capturing qualitative metric is doing regular surveys. It is separate science to develop right surveys, but for example in this case, you might ask people to rate from 1 (not true) to 5 (completely true) the statement: "Notifications from CI system helped me to do better and earlier decisions."
Hope it helps.