DM News: Attribution management- Impacting the Bottom Line

Wednesday, February 10th, 2010

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Attribution management is a practice that is starting to get more attention from online marketers, fueled partly by the pressures they are under to make smart decisions on online ad spending.

Attribution is a method of determining which of your online ads lead a customer toward a purchase decision, and pinpointing the level of influence of each of these ads. Traditional web analytics has been helpful in determining which sites are “sticky,” and which sites draw qualified traffic, but attribution goes a step further…  continue reading on DM news site

The Attribution Opportunity – Widening the Top of the Funnel

Friday, January 15th, 2010

By Joy Brazelle, Director, Product Marketing and Professional Services

Background

Back in the good old days of marketing, marketers made decisions solely based on their gut feelings. They’d create their marketing and media plans, and then print out a huge spreadsheet filled with marketing launches, ad buys, and creatives for the year.  The agency and the client would gather around the conference room table and debate one approach versus another until they came to an agreement on the marketing plan for the year.   The campaigns would be launched, budgets would be depleted and next year, it happened all over again.

But there were very few ways to accurately gauge the success of a particular campaign and to correlate it to increases in sales.  The marketers’ own experience and gut feelings were about the only criteria on which marketers based their decisions, as there was no effective way of gathering credible information on who actually saw their ads and campaigns and what they did as a result.  Basically, you spent the budget, and next year, if the company was still around, the budget was renewed or maybe even increased.  And then the planning process repeated itself.

Enter Web Analytics and the Last Click Mentality

Thankfully, things changed when web analytics entered the marketing picture early in the 21st century.  Web analytics is great for helping marketers make decisions, especially those decisions related to improving the user experience once a visitor gets to your Web site.  One way that web analytics does this is by showing you the sites that are driving traffic to your Web site, also known as the referrers.

Web analytics also does a decent job of evaluating the success of your online marketing campaigns, but the information it is able to provide in this area does have its limitations.  Because most web analytics packages were built to monitor traffic once it arrives at your web site, they do not give you the full picture of everything that happened before a visitor got to your Web site—these packages can only show you the ‘last click’ referrer.

The reality is that only a small portion of your visitors do one thing–like visit one Web site, click on one ad, or do one search on one search engine–before they get to your site and convert.  The average visitor is likely to take several steps on the way to your website.  Unfortunately, web analytics is incapable of showing you the full path your visitors took before arriving on your site.

Attribution Management Widens the Funnel

By focusing only on the last click analytics that typical web analytics programs provide, savvy marketers may inadvertently be strangling the top of the funnel.  Consider a common trend of user behavior within a conversion process.  The graphic below shows hypothetical funnel statistics for a site with a well-designed checkout process:

Step 1 – Step 2                 Less than 10% conversion (add to cart)

Step 2 – Step 3                  Greater than 70% convert from this point (begin checkout)

Step 3 – on                         Greater than 90% convert from this point

Think about this:  If you could get even a slightly higher conversion rate from Step 1 to Step 2, you could exponentially increase overall conversion rates based on the conversion rate of the subsequent steps.

By counting on last click attribution that typical web analytics packages provide, most marketers cannot justify widening the top of the funnel with general keyword ads or banner buys.  This is because last click analytics focuses on the last thing that a visitor did before he/she converted.  Generally this is either clicking on a branded search result or coming back directly to the site by typing the URL into the browser or having the site bookmarked.

But smart marketers, armed with accurate attribution knowledge, can make the case for the more general keywords and the banner buys.  They know that many people need to do research before they make even a small purchase online, and they recognize that often, this research starts off with a very general search or an exposure to a banner.  Then, as the potential customer learns more about your brand and company and gets closer to making a purchase decision, they are more likely to get back to your site via a branded search when they are ready to purchase or convert.

Attribution Data Helps You Catch them Early

When the stakes are high and competition is fierce, marketers must seek out any advantage you can find.  Accurate attribution data presents one such advantage.  By having access to visitors in their early steps in the research, marketers who use attribution data are able to widen the top of the funnel AND market to potential customers earlier in the sales cycle.

Forrester-ClearSaleing Webinar Examined the ROI Benefits of Emerging Science

Monday, December 7th, 2009

By Amy Hooker, Maven Communications

During a fascinating and insightful hour-long webinar December 1, account managers, brand managers and search marketers from advertisers and agencies listened to Forrester Research analyst Emily Riley and ClearSaleing co-founder Adam Goldberg explain why attribution management is a discipline that should be applied to marketing spend at all budget levels.

Webinar participants learned that attribution is the practice of distributing credit for an action or conversion across multiple ads rather than assigning full credit to the most recent ad.  ClearSaleing’s Adam Goldberg is an evangelist for eliminating ‘last click’ thinking, and moving marketers toward the concept of using attribution modeling to give proper credit to all touchpoints that contribute to a conversion.

Searching for Accuracy

The webinar also focused on the role of search in attributing credit for conversions. Typically a consumer can conduct several searches before moving toward a purchase. Paid search is a very effective closing vehicle, but often, it is not where a customer’s Purchase Path begins, said Goldberg.  Search often gets overvalued because shopping engines, email campaigns, social media and other touchpoints are not measured along the Purchase Path, Goldberg explained.

Purchase Path

Attribution Modeling

Advertisers and agencies have options on what type of attribution they choose to employ.  First click attribution is useful for determining which touchpoint created momentum toward a conversion. Equal credit attribution assigns the same value to each touchpoint. Algorithmic attribution is a higher investment but the most accurate because each touchpoint gets the most accurate credit.

ClearSaleing’s model is based on algorithmic attribution, which employs a sample size large enough to be statistically relevant.  ClearSaleing and its partner, Vetra Analytics, analyze hundreds of thousands of touchpoints along a Purchase Path.  These touchpoints include organic and paid search, shopping engines, email response and social media sites – all points along a Purchase Path that contribute to a conversion.  With this data, ClearSaleing is able to assign a weight to each touchpoint that is a realistic predictor of influence.

Last Click and Even Attribution

Why Attribution?

Attribution moves marketers further away from ‘last click’ thinking, which does not represent an accurate picture of how consumers act or buy.  By applying attribution, marketers can see what ads are working to bring in ROI and eliminate those that are not working, making the necessary adjustments to their marketing spend.

The best practice is to recalibrate your marketing mix based on seasonality and other key factors relating to your particular business, said Goldberg, who noted that ClearSaleing often works with clients quarterly to calibrate the effectiveness of their marketing spend.

Regardless of the level of marketing spend, the webinar presented a clear case on why attribution can help all advertisers and agencies not spend more, but spend smarter.

During the webinar Riley referred to her Q4 2009 Forrester Wave Report on Interactive Attribution, in which ClearSaleing was named as a leader.  For more information visit www.ClearSaleing.com

Ecommerce Know How: Avoid The Last Click Effect

Monday, October 5th, 2009

In recent months, many more online marketers have realized that the “last click effect” can be hazardous to the success of their online marketing campaigns.

This article from Practice Ecommerce details the problems surrounding the last click effect along with ways to avoid it. Some of the solutions include using the latest attribution management tools and technology.

Read the entire article from Practical Ecommerce…

Industry’s First Use of Attribution in Automated Bid Management

Tuesday, August 11th, 2009

ClearSaleing Announces Industry’s First Means of Using Attribution in Automated Bid Management at Search Engine Strategies Conference

ClearSaleing at SES San Jose

SAN JOSE, CA Search Engine Strategies Conference, (PRWEB) August 11, 2009 — ClearSaleing, a technology and thought leader in attribution management, today announced the availability of an automated bid management module that allows marketers to not only factor in profit measurement to keyword buying decisions, but also move past “last click” thinking to open up the funnel of keywords along a purchase path that previously would have been missed.

Built on top of ClearSaleing’s industry-leading attribution management platform, ClearSaleing’s automated bid management module lets marketers automatically control their keyword’s bids using profit metrics based on its attribution model. It also takes into account conversion latency – the period of time between the customer’s first visit and a conversion. ClearSaleing can track profit down to the SKU level, and profit rules set by the marketer can be as complex as needed.

“Most bid management solutions are optimizing bids based on imperfect or incorrect information,” explains Luke Tuttle, ClearSaleing’s Chief Information Officer. “What we have done is automate bid management using the most accurate data possible by taking into account profit, attribution, back end data feeds and conversion latency. Our bid management platform makes predictions about conversion latencies for each day of the year and factors those into the bid decisions to make the best bids possible with the information on hand,” he adds.

“We are giving marketers a way of capturing all those profit-potential keywords, including ones that do not have an immediate result but eventually lead to a purchase,” says Tuttle. “ClearSaleing captures all effective keywords in the funnel, not just the last click.”

All Clicks Count

ClearSaleing’s automated bid management is the only industry solution that fully incorporates attribution along the entire purchase path, not just the first or last click. These options allow marketers to expand keyword use to include those keywords at the ‘top of the funnel,’ to facilitate brand awareness as well as conversions. The solution employs ClearSaleing’s unique system of keywords, organized into three categories:

  • Introducers (First Click) – The first search term that results in a visit to your site. These terms generally are more generic and almost never result in an immediate purchase. Because these terms are more general, they are usually more expensive terms.
  • Influencers (All clicks in between the first and the last click) – Until ClearSaleing, these clicks were generally ‘invisible’ to bid management solutions. However they are extremely important since they are what continues to move a customer along a purchase path. These terms tend to be longer phrases, often including a combination of a version of the brand name teamed with a more general term
  • Closers (Last Click) – These are the terms that historically bid management systems (and analytics) see as getting ‘all of the credit for a sale’, which is incorrect. These terms are often times simply the branded terms.

“After reviewing the results of many automated keyword rules, we found that many solutions were simply ignoring important keywords or eliminating them if they had long latencies between a customer’s first visit and their purchase. Our research showed that more often than not, even extremely complicated, seemingly powerful rules resulted in bid changes for less than 1% of all keywords,” Tuttle explains.

Automated Bid Decisions

ClearSaleing offers bidding decision capabilities that differentiates the system from typical industry bid management rules. In addition to ClearSaleing’s unique capability to optimize on profit and true ROI, ClearSaleing also offers the capability to optimize on CPA or CPL if required by the business. It is flexible enough to allow a marketer to use the most appropriate optimization method.

“By using the measures unique to ClearSaleing, marketers can create rules that are based on business goals, ROI and profit. ClearSaleing’s attribution-based rules take into consideration not just marketing budgets but the actual costs of doing business,” says Tuttle.

About ClearSaleing
ClearSaleing’s advertising portfolio management platform helps marketers identify ways to more effectively and profitably allocate ad spend across a complex mix of online advertising investments. ClearSaleing’s technology enables attribution management through its patent-pending Purchase Path technology. Purchase Path accurately attributes profit (ROI) across the multiple marketing touch points that contribute to and influence a sale.

ClearSaleing is a thought leader in the growing scientific field of attribution management and founder of the Attribution Management Forum, the profession’s e-community for interactive marketers. The Company also publishes www.AttributionManagement.com, a website that provides a rich repository of ClearSaleing and externally published articles, white papers and other material focused exclusively on attribution management.

ClearSaleing’s unique ability to give marketers telescopic insight into their online ad investment is attracting major brand customers such as American Greetings and Nationwide Insurance. The company was founded in 2006 and is headquartered in Columbus, Ohio. For more information, please visit www.ClearSaleing.com

Total Economic Impact: Attribution Webinar


Forrester Consulting recently examined the total economic impact and potential ROI that enterprises may realize by deploying ClearSaleing's advanced advertising analytics and attribution management platform. Register for the webinar to see the full analysis and the benefits from implementing an attribution management solution.

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Independent technology research firm Forrester Research, Inc. selected vendors for a 44-criteria evaluation to determine the leaders in the attribution management field.
ClearSaleing Takes "Top Honors"
ClearSaleing received the highest scores in both the “Current Offering” and “Strategy” categories.
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About Attribution Management

In the world of online marketing, Attribution Management is the process of properly identifying and valuing the chain of marketing initiatives and advertisements that lead to a sale or conversion.

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