We have been doing attribution a certain way for a while and we are worried that we are starting to have a narrow vision when it comes to attribution. So I wanted to get some feedback about how you are handling attribution and ROI reporting in your org when leads are converting in the same place, but are originating from different channels.
For example, let's say you have a gated whitepaper on a non-marketo landing page that you are pushing traffic to via multiple channels like Social, PPC, Display, etc. How do you appropriately give credit to those different channels? Do you create a different program for each channel-asset combination(ugly but effective)? Do you use UTM parameters and lead source information in place of program specific fields like Acquisition Program? Like I said, we have our way of doing things right now, but curious to hear how others are thinking about it.
We are looking for the cleanest way to handle attribution without sacrificing important depth in reporting. Is there any good (and recent) content on this subject? Any and all help is appreciated.
It's an interesting question. There are five main approaches here that I am aware of. I've worked with them all with various clients, and they each have their pros and cons.
1) Separate Programs for Offers and Channels
In this case you create a distinct program for every marketing initiative at the level of granularity you want - e.g., one program for your white paper, for each social campaign, for each PPC campaign, etc. When someone engages with your offers, add them to the relevant programs for both offer and channel. I consider this the "traditional" way of doing it.
Pros
Cons
2) Program for each Offer + Channel Combination
This is the method you alluded to - if you have an Ebook, you create a separate program (or a master program with a separate SFDC campaign) for each possible combination you care to track. E.g., Ebook ABC_Organic Social_Twitter, Ebook ABC_Organic Search_Google, Ebook ABC_Paid Search_Adwords...etc.
Pros
Cons
3) Stamp Channel Data on Campaign Member for Offer Campaign
In this approach, you capture channel data into UTM / web referrer fields on the person record and then stamp them on the campaign member in Salesforce when you add someone to the offer program.
So for example, when someone fills out the form to download Ebooks ABC, you capture utm_medium=paid-search and utm_source=adwords and then when the person is added to the corresponding Salesforce campaign, you write those utm values on the campaign member with Apex.
Pros
Cons
4) Bizible
Bizible has a completely different data model that helps resolve a lot of these complexities. Instead of the program / campaign being the fundamental unit of attribution, the Touchpoint (which represents a discrete marketing interaction) is the unit of attribution. Each touchpoint contains the relevant channel data AND metadata that indicates the offer. This is all created automatically as long as you have a solid process for UTM tagging (which is also a requirement for all the other solutions).
Pros
Cons
5) Send Data Directly to a Warehouse / BI Tool
You can concatenate all the touches into a person field in a structured way (e.g. a JSON array) and bring that field into an external database where the data can be parsed into separate rows for summary reporting.
Pros
Cons
In addition to Justin's comment, you can track paid channels (or other channels like email) in addition to offers. In case for adwords campaign, you will have two salesforce campaigns - one detecting the channel that only tracks clicks through UTM data and another one as described for option 3) — logging lead source data into campaign member object. The first campaign will have cost associated with it. You will also be able to see paid and inbound sources on offer campaign. In terms of attribution, it's possible to separate offer and channel weigh via campaign type if that is the goal.. I hope it helps!
Agreed with Justin Norris on the above. My last company used the in-house solution for #3. The company I just started at uses Bizible, and I'm right now trying to wrap my head around whether we have superflous campaigns that will skew our attribution.
Justin Norris are you familiar with Bizible? If so, does it make sense to have an SFDC campaign for every single email send? Likewise, would an SFDC campaign for every channel (social, SEM, etc.) - to me, it seems these shouldn't be necessary since Bizible does the work in the background when you have accurately tagged UTMs on your links from email, social, online ads, etc.
If you have thoughts here, would love to hear your take and any pros/cons, or constructive banter on the merits of having these campaigns in place.
Hi Jackie Gragnola,
Yes I'm very familiar with Bizible.
I agree with your position - I wouldn't suggest having an SFDC campaign for each email send if you are using UTMs properly on all links in those emails. If you are using UTMs, the traffic sent from the emails will get properly credited when a person takes action on your website (by filling out a form) and a Bizible touchpoint will be created associated with the email Marketing Channel.
The main challenge here might be with emails that have a success action that isn't tracked by Bizible - e.g., a reply. A tool like Siftrock could fill this gap.
Some people might want a campaign for each send to track clicks, but given how unreliable this metric is becoming, I don't think that's worthwhile and it will also result in double-counting (two touchpoints) if someone fills out a form.