<b>Last-touch attribution is overcrediting your bottom-funnel</b>
The question: when last-touch attribution gives a branded search or demo form the credit, what earlier touches are being erased?
A modeling exercise compared last-touch attribution (all credit to the final interaction) against a multi-touch model on the same B2B deals. Method: re-running both models over identical conversion paths — isolating the methodology effect.
Three findings:
— Last-touch concentrated credit on branded search and direct visits — channels that capture demand others created.
— Top-of-funnel social and content, which rarely sat in the final touch, were systematically undervalued.
— Deals with more touchpoints closed at higher rates, suggesting breadth of exposure matters even when no single touch gets credit.
Caveats: multi-touch models embed their own assumptions; both are estimates, not truth — treat as directional.
What it means for B2B: if you cut the channels last-touch ignores, you may quietly starve the demand that feeds your 'high-performing' branded search. The model that looks efficient can be hiding the engine.
Bottom line: the channel that gets the credit is often not the channel that did the work.
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<b>Last-touch attribution is overcrediting your bottom-funnel</b>
Этот пост опубликован в Telegram-канале The B2B Lab Report. Подписаться можно по ссылке: @B2BLabReport.