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Attributing value in the affiliate channel

Written by Samantha Sherer on 4 minute read

Rumors of last click’s death have been greatly exaggerated. For the past decade, industry commentators have said it leaves much to be desired. 

Piecing the value of affiliate marketing together

Last-click attribution is a model that underestimates the complexity of multiple digital touchpoints an average consumer may have on their way to purchase. For affiliate marketers this can be confusing. Last click is what our business is based on; without it what are we left with? More often than not this confusion is from a misunderstanding of what ‘last click is dead’ really means.

First off, last click wins – when the last referring marketing channel is credited for the sale – is a commercial model for the affiliate channel. Without it affiliates don’t get paid. But if other paid-for-marketing channels are involved they still incur a cost. Under this model, to actively run an affiliate program you are basically saying you’re comfortable with this concept.

But very often when people talk about last click’s demise, they mean it’s not a good way to define measurement and contribution – two very different things.

To better understand, it’s important to consider what advertisers are trying to measure.

Certainly sales, and that’s easy. But advertisers also want to assess where their money is best spent and generating the biggest bang for their buck. That in itself can mean different things to different advertisers.

For new retailers this may just be sales, but for more mature businesses it could be a certain type of customer. Because of this, combining post-transaction customer data (frequency of purchase, length of phone contract, upsold add-ons, etc.) with pre-transaction information shows we need to measure more than just a sale.

This is one of the reasons it’s often easy to resort to last click as a measurement function. As soon as the ideal advertiser outcome is agreed upon, piecing together the required data can be a significant project on its own. Many advertisers are far down the path of allocating budget on informed spend, but typically for the affiliate channel it comes down to numbers on a spreadsheet. For those working in the channel this can be frustrating as we try to show how valuable affiliate sales can be.

At a basic level we can look at another measurement alongside sales: clicks and impressions.

For affiliates, this is interesting because while other channels may say credit for sales they contribute to is ignored (while still getting paid for their activity), historically affiliates have really never promoted anything that isn’t rewarded by the conversion.

This is also an interesting area for advertisers to explore. If they want to move away from just acknowledging last click, there are a number of affiliate “quick wins” that can be put in to place:

  • Recognizing influence: some advertisers have started paying for early funnel contribution. This could be in the form of ‘top up’ payments for affiliates heavily influencing, but not converting, sales. Awin’s system enables you to easily switch this on today.
  • Latency: how close are non-converting affiliates to the sale? By using Awin data we can explore if one affiliate’s content drove someone to another converting affiliate in the space of a few minutes, suggesting that both were important in converting the sale. By totalling up this contribution, an advertiser could offer an additional payment or reduce commissions overall for those affiliates who are overwriting all others, freeing up budget to reward others.
  • New vs. existing: As mentioned, many advertisers are looking at qualitative rather than just quantitative measurement. If one affiliate drives 100 customers and 10 are new, is this as valuable as another affiliate who drives 15, of which eight are new? Clearly the latter is less valuable for overall revenue, but is a much better fit for an advertiser’s campaign target. Start passing this parameter back to us today.
  • Cross device affiliates: Awin’s pioneering cross device tracking solution offers a look into how consumers are switching between multiple platforms in an age where the technology makes it difficult to definitively map interactions. The complexity of a program radically changes when next generation cross device tracking is switched on, often showing how blogger and social media content has long been undervalued.
  • Other data points: Many advertisers have an ideal customer they want to attract. It may be based on demographics. It may be to understand what affiliates are best suited to targeting these shoppers. Just because networks have typically not tracked this information, it doesn’t mean they can’t. It’s really easy and straightforward, so speak to Awin today. The more who do, the more Awin can use our unrivalled network to benchmark performance. (Case Study: Affiliate Channel Optimization through Advanced Data)
  • The impact of other channels: While it’s great to know as much as possible about what is happening in-channel, without knowing how affiliates both impact and are impacted by other marketing activity (paid for or free), we’re working with partial insight. Find out about how to integrate this data with Awin today.