Attribution Reporting: What It Is and What to Include
Attribution reporting is the process of showing which marketing channels and touchpoints contributed to a conversion and how much credit each interaction should receive. It turns conversion tracking data into a clear view of what is driving outcomes, so teams can decide where to invest, pause, or optimize with confidence.
Unlike basic channel reporting, attribution reporting connects marketing activity across the full buyer journey. That includes cross-channel attribution, where a buyer might click a paid ad, return via organic search, and later convert after an email or direct visit.
What attribution reporting includes
A useful attribution report is more than a list of clicks or leads. It should connect performance to business outcomes and make it easy to act. Most strong attribution reporting includes:
- Conversions tracked consistently: Define what counts as a conversion (demo request, signup, purchase) and keep conversion tracking rules consistent across channels.
- Channel and campaign breakdowns: Performance by source, medium, campaign, ad group, and creative, tied to conversions not just traffic.
- Touchpoint paths: Common journeys customers take before converting, showing how marketing attribution plays out across steps.
- Attribution model comparisons: Views like first touch, last touch, and multi-touch to show how credit changes based on the model.
- Cross-channel attribution visibility: How channels influence each other, such as paid search assisting conversions that close through email or direct.
What to include in your attribution reporting dashboard
If you are building a dashboard, focus on a small set of views that answer decision-making questions quickly.
1) Conversion performance by channel
Show conversions, conversion rate, and cost per conversion by channel. This is the fastest way to spot what is working and what is wasting budget based on your conversion tracking setup.
2) Assisted conversions and influence
Many channels support conversions without being the final touch. Include assisted conversions so you can see which channels are creating demand versus capturing demand.
3) Top conversion paths
List the most common journeys, for example:
- Paid social to organic search to demo request
- Paid search to direct to signup
- Organic search to email to purchase
This makes cross-channel attribution easier to understand and helps teams spot where buyers drop off.
4) Model based credit allocation
Display results under multiple models side by side. This helps marketing attribution discussions stay grounded, especially when teams debate whether awareness channels deserve more credit.
How to improve attribution reporting quality
Attribution reporting is only as good as the data feeding it. To improve accuracy, standardize how you collect and interpret touchpoints across tools and teams.
If you support multiple products, regions, or pipelines, it can also help to centralize reporting in one place. Attributy’s Solutions are designed for growth teams that need a clearer view of cross-channel performance.
For a deeper look at what you can track and compare, explore the platform’s Features, including reporting workflows built for day to day decision making. If you want to see how this would work with your current setup, you can Request a demo.