Measuring Your Analytics And Attribution In The Right Way

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Analytics can help you understand your customers’ experience better, while attribution informs your marketing mix.

For brands with numerous online and offline marketing channels as well as cross-device campaigns and purchase paths, it’s not about choosing one capability over the other. It’s about both working together.

Big data is a game changer. Still at face value, it’s just data. It becomes powerful when it’s used not just to support decisions, but to drive actions. Marketers know that to take action on their data, they need to collect and analyze it, since it’s about uncovering how your customers engage with your brand.

Many marketers believe that strategic marketing measurement is solely about the implementation of customer analytics, including the technology that can help you measure how your audience interacts with your online properties—or doesn’t. However, analytics might not be enough. To truly make the most of your data, you need to combine your analytics insights with robust attribution insights.

“Think of attribution as the peanut butter to analytics’ jelly. Yes, each is great on its own, but for many, they’re even better together.”

Another misconception is that the use of one of these types of measurement capabilities negates the other. This is not true in any sense. Think of attribution as the peanut butter to analytics’ juice. With both analytics and attribution in place, you can establish a holistic measurement plan with unified key performance indicators (KPIs).

In doing so, you can manage your marketing spend so that you can best reach, influence, motivate, and drive your audience to those places where they can engage and convert.

HOW BETTER MEASUREMENT WORKS

To gain a better understanding of why and how a company would use both analytics and attribution, let’s take a look at the following hypothetical scenario:

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Mr. Smith is the vice president of marketing for a retail shoe business (let’s call it Smith Company). Smith Company sells its shoes both online at its website and offline in its brick-and-mortar stores. Its marketing campaigns span a variety of media channels and devices. This year, Smith Company’s goal is to sell more shoes to working women ages 18 to 24 in the US. Let’s call Smith Company’s target customers “young professional women.”

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It’s Mr. Smith’s job to figure out how to sell more shoes to these young professional women. First, though, he needs to understand how this consumer group ended up at Smith Company’s website and what they do once they get there. Do they click on paid search ads after a specific query (say, a search for “cute wedge heels for spring”)? Which parts of the website do they visit? Do they spend a lot of time looking for seasonal items (boots in the winter and flip-flops in the summer, for example)? Are they visitors to the monthly trend posts on the site? Analytics can provide Ms. Smith with the answers to all of these questions. He can then use these insights to optimize her target customers’ experience on her company’s website and improve their path to entry. The result? Young professional women are able to find exactly what they’re looking for at exactly the moment they need it. In turn, Smith Company has happy, loyal customers who will continue to return.

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Now, let’s suppose some of these young professional women haven’t been to Smith Company’s website in a while (or ever), and Mr. Smith wants to find a way to encourage more of them to come back. He’ll need more information about their overall media journey. What kind of media channels do they engage with? Do they purchase online or in-store? Which devices do they use while shopping for shoes? Mr. Smith starts by looking at Smith Company’s marketing mix—digital display ads, paid and organic search ads, social media, TV ads, and print ads—and all of the various touchpoints (any interaction he may have had with these channels). Attribution helps Mr. Smith identify patterns and trends across all marketing channels (e.g., after seeing an ad on a specific TV channel, a prospective buyer’s search takes her to Smith Company’s website). What’s more, Mr. Smith can see that social media is resulting in a positive lift for Smith Company’s email campaigns and increasing sales. The analysis also shows that buyers sometimes research products online and then make their final purchase at the local Smith Company store. That leads Mr. Smith to adjust her marketing budget accordingly so he’s properly reaching her omni-channel shoppers, and Smith Company ensures that it has even more happy customers.

ASSESSING YOUR ATTRIBUTION NEEDS

Now that you understand how analytics and attribution complement each other, let’s assume you’re already using some form of customer analytics and you want to investigate supplementing your current measurement strategy. Before you implement more robust attribution, ask yourself these four important questions:

  1. Am I seeing all of my marketing touchpoints? While it’s true that your current measurement strategy may offer some baseline attribution capabilities (tracking the end-of-funnel events that led a consumer to your website and providing conversion credit to those touchpoints, for example), your organization may require more robust attribution functionality. It really depends on the complexity of your data. How many data sources can your attribution solution support? If your digital marketing mix is simple (only a couple of channels) and you have no challenges in importing or interpreting your data, analytics may suffice. If, however, you’re working with a large number of marketing channels, media platforms, and offline channels (radio and TV, for example), you may want to consider incorporating more attribution features.
  2. What added value will attribution provide? Specialized attribution capabilities use sophisticated algorithms that help you get to the robust, statistically sound insights that can help drive impact. For example, data-driven attribution can sniff out which consumer touchpoints are the most influential for your business. When comparing each conversion path, things like the number of touchpoints in the sequence, the order of exposure, and the creative assets used are all factored into results.
  3. Does my team have the expertise needed to choose and implement attribution and then interpret and act on its insights? If you’re counting on attribution to unlock insights that will help you drive business value, make sure your team has the training and support it needs. This expertise may reside within your organization or in a third-party provider. The right resource will be able to ask the right questions and provide the answers needed about implementation, integration, optimization, methodology, type, technology, support, and more.
  4. Am I duplicating my investment by paying for two different solutions? One product may provide an adequate solution for both your analytics and attribution needs as long as the reporting is sufficient. However, if you’re a large advertiser, with a complex marketing ecosystem, investing in deep analytics and attribution functionality is likely to drive the best results.

Many challenges face today’s marketers—and there are more than enough ways to help you optimize your efforts to deal with them. The key is to begin with an understanding of the customer journey and the many micro-moments, or opportunities, for your brand to connect with your customers. Better, strategic measurement doesn’t mean choosing between analytics and attribution. It means recognizing the power of using both—and to what degree you should use them.