Multi-Channel Attribution
Multi-Channel Attribution is an approach to marketing analytics in which the value of a conversion is distributed among multiple channels of user interaction, rather than only one (as in First Click or Last Click models).
Simply put:
the entire customer journey is taken into account, not just a single touchpoint
How It Works
A user’s journey:
- Saw an ad on social media
- Visited the website
- Returned via search
- Clicked on an email
- Made a purchase
In multi-channel attribution, the conversion value is distributed among all these channels, not just the first or the last.
Main Multi-Channel Attribution Models
- Linear Model — distributes value evenly across all channels
- Time Decay — gives more weight to interactions closer to conversion
- U-shaped (Positional) — emphasizes the first and last touchpoints
- Data-Driven — distributes contribution based on data and algorithms
Why Multi-Channel Attribution Is Needed
It helps to:
- see the real contribution of each channel;
- allocate marketing budgets correctly;
- evaluate the impact of the top of the funnel (Awareness);
- optimize the entire customer interaction chain;
- make more accurate marketing decisions.
Advantages
- more accurate picture of the customer journey;
- accounts for all touchpoints;
- improves marketing efficiency;
- reduces distortions in analytics.
Disadvantages
- more complex to set up and analyze;
- requires high-quality data;
- results can sometimes be difficult to interpret.
When to Use
Multi-Channel Attribution is especially useful if:
- multiple marketing channels are used;
- the customer journey is long and complex;
- optimizing the entire funnel is important, not just the final stage.
Key Takeaways
Multi-Channel Attribution is an approach in which the contribution to conversion is distributed among all channels of user interaction.
It provides a more complete understanding of marketing effectiveness and helps make more informed decisions.
