What is advanced attribution?

Advanced attribution will change the way we approach digital marketing forever. Is not a trend, it’s not a fad, it’s here to stay whether you chose to change and implement it or not. The longer you take the faster your competitors would  take advantage.

Advanced attribution is simply shifting the way you measure your marketing valuation. This means going from last click where 100% of the valuation for credit, ROI and revenue is attributed to the last marketing channel before a purchase, to valuating all of the marketing channels in a customer journey.

What this means is that you are giving proper credit to your complete marketing mix, instead of only one channel. Makes sense right? Why wouldn’t you.

Why advanced attribution?

Let’s start off with the name. The industry calls it ‘advanced’ attribution because the current last click model you have been using for years is also an attributed model, it’s just the most simplistic version.

When you hear advanced attribution you automatically know that the value is being attributed across the whole marketing mix. The reason why this is so important is to basically prove 100% of your marketing spends in terms of ROI across all your channels, not just one.

Not knowing which 50% of your marketing works and which doesn’t is no longer acceptable. Some of the benefits of advanced attribution are:

  • It helps you understand the value of marketing activities that build demand at the top of the funnel. For example, can provide guidance on which keywords to bid on during a marketing campaign, those keywords you had no idea your customer started their search with, because you don’t even bid on them.
  • It’s useful in discovering the true value of affiliate referrals and determining payments, no more duplicate payments. Who still pays double now a days?
  • It helps marketers find the optimal frequency of ad serving such as for display ads, meaning you don’t spam and scare your prospects by flooding them with your ads. 

The challenges: don’t become stuck here

Recently I was sitting in an Econsultancy attribution roundtable and learned from different marketers and agencies how confused the topic gets them.

These are the three things that will take the confusion away and make it simpler:

1. The  model: go for algorithmic

There are several ways of measuring advanced attribution. Essentially these divide themselves in two. First, Rules based models. Second, Algorithmic statistical models.

Please don’t become stuck here, make your decisions and move forward. If it’s algorithmic what you choose, you would be 110% better off than using your current last click model.

Rules based models are exactly what it says in the tin. You put rules based on the position of where the marketing channels are in your customer journey. For example, if you have a customer journey that looks like this:

Paid Sarch>Display Ad>Email> Conversion

Under a rules based model, you say, whatever comes first will get x% that’s assigned by a rule you make. This means that paid search will get the same percentage every time is first, as so very other marketing channel that is first. You don’t want rules based models.

Why? Because they become a self-fulfilling theory. Your marketing will work as per the rules you assign, not very smart.

Algorithmic Statistical models are what you want to get. There is a plethora of different models and how they work. Don’t get stuck here. Just make sure you go for this option.

What’s important to know here is that it’s science and it’s data based. It’s science because it’s a mathematical algorithmic statistical model. Not to worry, it just means there’s maths instead of rules doing your calculations for valuating every marketing channel.

It’s data based, because it’s based in your own customers data. This means it looks at your brand’s past customer journeys and how each channel interacts differently in getting you a conversion.

For example, if you have a customer journey that looks like this:

Paid Search>Display Ad>Email> Conversion

And another customer journey that looks like this:

Paid Search>Social>Display Ad>Email> Conversion

The first channel, which in this case is paid search, will vary significantly in its valuation. Even though each example starts with Paid Search, the customer journey is different, therefore the credit for the first channel is also different.

2. It’s not about data, it’s about what to do with it

Basically, the biggest internal organizational challenges a company has once advanced attribution has been implemented is to take decisions on the data it gives you. This basically means driving the insight. Tell me what to do and how to do it?

Boom! We have attribution implemented, all channels are integrated. We have spend, cost, revenue data, and ROI figures for every digital channel. We even integrated some offline channels like call centre data and point of purchase.

Amazing, we finally have one single source of truth. After this implementation you got  access to 354 reports. I believe data must be turned into insight, and so does Econsultancy.  

What does this mean? It simply means, tell me what to do and where to take action. It’s awesome that we now have 354 reports to look at data and customer journeys and all the amazing things advanced attribution gives me insight into.

So what? How do I really get the action I need to be a source of customer, competitive and marketing advantage?

Look for platforms that have gone a step beyond, and include a scenario planning capability that allows you to predict future behaviour which is fundamental to creating strong customer lifetime value models and optimising marketing effectiveness.

And as Econsultancy stated in the Marketing Manifesto, digital channels provide new and valuable sources of data and customer insight that can be acted upon in real time.

This is what you really need, besides the 354 reports, you really need to be told what to do with the data. Where to spend your money? how to better forecast to get £1M in revenue, or how to drive 10k conversions, or where to spend the additional £150k for the Christmas campaign.

If you do not see this feature in your platform, then you don’t have a modern platform in front of you.

3. Change management: this must come from the top down

Advanced attribution will impact the entire marketing organisation.  

The current challenge, according to Jim Sterne, founder of eMetrics Summit & Digital Analytics Association, is that too many large organizations are using incentive structures that foster (dis)integrated digital marketing by issuing bonuses to individual teams based on the performance of the marketing channels they are responsible for.  

This we all know. Now think about it, if you are a channel manager driving attribution, you will have a channel conflict with every other channel manager.

Because each team (search, social, email, display, affiliates etc.) must prove their own channel’s performance for compensation, they’re shoved into internal competition and left to seek metrics and attribution models favourable to their particular channel.

This creates both operational and data silos. This means that for advanced attribution to be successful and for channel managers to optimize, forecast and use actionable data to drive better ROI, the direction needs to come from the CMO, Marketing Director, or whoever owns the budget across all marketing channels.

Adoption of attribution modeling is accelerating because digital media keeps growing new channels, making it harder for marketers to understand what drives ad performance, meaning whatever your product or service, there’s a huge potential to better understand the other 50% of how your marketing works.

Digital marketers must step up and start things moving with advanced attribution. The longer you take, the faster your competitors will take advantage.