The Important Initiative For Real Digital Marketing Results

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Sergio Alvarez is a performance marketing expert, digital attribution leader and CEO and founder of Ai Media Group.

The results gleaned from digital marketing will closely align with the quality of data you put into creating a campaign. Future campaigns are built on the results of past campaigns. The ability to attribute where a sale (or other completed goal) has actually emanated from is key to the success of digital marketing. However, attribution should never be about only the last click your customer makes. It’s a complex initiative that should be approached holistically.

Going Deep

In my experience, pulling levers based solely on last-click information is a shallow tactic. It may be tempting to assume that the fastest way to replicate a sale is by drawing all customers back to the point at which most sales seem to be occurring. But when customers make purchases online or spend a good part of their sales journey there, they do not interact exclusively with that channel. There are almost always multiple touchpoints across various channels that contribute—perhaps even more significantly. If your method of attribution is only looking at where they ended up, you’ve missed three-quarters of the picture.

When you’re working with surface-level data, it’s more likely to be inaccurate and guide you down the wrong path when deciding which levers need to be pulled in future campaigns. When you allocate a greater percentage of your budget to that last-click platform (in the false belief that it is the one bringing in the sales), you automatically disadvantage the capability of the other platforms that helped your customer get there.

Even if your marketing efforts are solely digital, it is still important to include any offline methods of communication your customer may have used to gather information and make their decision. Telephone calls are one of the offline channels that are often forgotten in attribution, which can lead to a loss of valuable information. Many consumers are still using telephone communication, especially for high-value purchases.

Single Source Of Truth

When marketers rely on platform-specific data to make decisions for future campaigns, they run the risk of over-funding platforms that aren’t playing that big a role or underfunding those that are acting as pivotal channels. This often happens due to platform-specific data being skewed to represent that channel as more valuable than it is.

Facebook, for instance, will not show you which platform your customer came from or where they ended up. They will only indicate their own role in the customer’s journey. Likewise, Google is very often over-funded, as so many customers will use the platform to make their final search for a product before purchasing. If a marketer does not take all the other touchpoints into account, this could result in inaccurate attribution.

To provide a very simple overview of what is required, each platform-specific report needs to be mashed up on its own then mixed together with other platform-specific data. In the end, you should have a holistic dataset that you can start mining for real, valuable information.

Multi-Channel Attribution

Businesses need to be working with a single source of truth. Ground zero is to have a consolidated report of activity on all platforms (online and offline). From there, you can start to build a multi-channel attribution system that provides you with data that is truly valuable for your business and not just for one of your marketing platforms.

Establishing cross-functional teams is key for this type of work. Your teams should collaboratively gather insights to grasp a full understanding of the customer journey. Ensure that business objectives are aligned across all teams, clearly specifying whether the priority is boosting sales, amplifying brand awareness or nurturing customer loyalty. Take a deep dive into understanding your target audience’s preferences in order to guide your media allocation strategy effectively. When it comes to data, I recommend assessing the quality and privacy compliance of your available sources and investing in technology and tools that seamlessly integrate with your existing systems.

As with everything in business, it’s important to know your strengths. Building a holistic attribution system internally may not be an easy feat, so consider sourcing out to agencies who’ve already become masters of multi-channel attribution. (Full disclosure: My company offers these services, as do others.) Be sure to select an agency that has demonstrated its ability to see the whole customer journey, not just read algorithms. The right agency will be able to show you the math they used to arrive at the conclusion, not just the endpoint.

Stricter Protocols Are Coming. Act Now.

As digital privacy protocols become more stringent, data is likely going to become more watered down. If we have shallow attribution systems, marketing efforts could be left flailing. By diving into the complex but necessary tools of holistic attribution now, you can help ensure your company still has an upper hand in terms of data quality even as protocols tighten.

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