Why Most Marketers Don’t Trust Their Data and How to Fix It
Digital Coffee: Marketing BrewJune 25, 2025
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29:0840.99 MB

Why Most Marketers Don’t Trust Their Data and How to Fix It

In this episode of 'Digital Coffee Marketing Brew,' host Brett Deister sits down with Zeke Camusio, a seasoned entrepreneur and founder of Data Speaks, an AI-powered analytics platform. They discuss the importance of data-driven decision-making in advertising, challenges in marketing attribution, and the impact of third-party cookie deprecation. Zeke also shares detailed insights into different attribution methods, including media mix modeling and incrementality experiments, and how AI can enhance marketing analytics. The episode concludes with practical advice for small businesses and a look at the future of data privacy in marketing.

3 Fun Facts:

  1. Zeke Camusio drinks both coffee and tea—coffee in the morning and tea at night—but prefers strong Italian espresso, especially Lavazza!
  2. A whopping 61% of conversions are shared by more than one advertising platform, making attribution really tricky.
  3. Before the internet, marketers still ran ad experiments using incrementality testing and media mix modeling—old-school marketing science!

Key Themes:

  1. Challenges with marketing attribution accuracy
  2. Importance of data-driven decision making
  3. Reliability issues in platform-provided metrics
  4. The impact of third-party cookie deprecation
  5. Benefits and limitations of AI in attribution
  6. Cost-effective attribution strategies for small businesses
  7. Evolving privacy regulations’ influence on marketing

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Five out of six marketers believes it's absolutely essential

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to make data driven decisions to get the best results

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from your advertising. Only one in six actually

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trusts the data that you use to make

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decisions. And at the end of the day, so much of what

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we do is doing things well, but so much of the

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impact we cause is by choosing the right things.

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But 61% of conversions are shared by more than one

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platform and then 58% of conversions are non

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incremental. So they would have happened anyway without the ad.

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And welcome to a new

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episode of Digital Coffee Marketing Brew. And I'm your host,

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Brett Deister. If you please subscribe to this podcast and all your favorite podcasting apps,

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leave a five star review really does help with the rankings and let me

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know how I am doing. But this week

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I have Zeke with me and he is a

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serial entrepreneur, the founder of Data Speaks, an AI

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powered analytics platform that helps companies

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identify what drives her sales and invest in the right

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marketing strategies. And he has a background in economics

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and data science. Zeke has spent the last 20 years developing AI machine

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learning and data analytics solution, embedding hundreds of companies

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to make data driven decisions and accelerate growth.

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So welcome to the show, Zeke. Thank you, Brad. Thank you for having me. All

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right, the first question is all my guest is, are you a coffee or tea

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drinker? I'm both. I have coffee in the morning

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and then usually tea before going to, going to bed.

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But I would say that I drink coffee way more than a drink

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tea. Do you have like a specific favorite of coffee or is it just

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whatever you can get your hands on? I love

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Italian coffee, espresso roasts.

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I like usually

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medium roast, South American

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coffee brewed in Italy if it makes sense. You

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know, so there's a couple of brands, Lavazza that

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I, you know, really, really like is smooth and, and

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just strong but not too strong. Yeah. So you specifically like

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espresso? Because when I hear Italian coffee, it's basically always espresso.

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Yeah, yeah, it, it's. I,

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you know, was born and raised in Argentina. We have a lot of, you know,

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Italian influence and it's just stronger, you know. So if you go to

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Starb, you know, any kind of coffee

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shop, it usually feels like watered down to anybody

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who's from either Italy or Argentina. So I like

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my coffee a little stronger. So you more like the double shot or

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like when it goes into your. It's more of a double shot than a single

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shot because I think Starbucks does a single shot and you

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usually like the double shot or more? I would say

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yeah, and. Yeah, and

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a little darker rose than most people have it.

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Fair enough. But I gave a brief summary of your expertise. Can you give our

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listeners a little bit more about what you do? Sure. So

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historically, I would say I'm a serial entrepreneur. I've

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had many businesses in the tech space.

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Right now I'm the CEO and founder of Data Speaks. You

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kind of touched on that. But we help marketing teams

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understand what channels and campaigns drive their sales

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so they can invest in the right marketing strategies.

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Gotcha. Can you explain what marketing attribution is and why it's such

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a crucial, yet challenging area for marketers? Yeah, of course.

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So what happens is when you are

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advertising a lot, you know, you have a presence on multiple channels,

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you're running video ads on YouTube, you are

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on search, Google, Bing, you're doing

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social, Snapchat, Meta, Instagram,

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Pinterest, and so on. So you're doing all these different

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things. And then at the end of the day, your store sells,

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say, you know, $200,000 a week of

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widgets. And what you want to know is you want to understand

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how much of that was influenced by each channel

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and campaign, because otherwise it's,

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you know, money going out, money coming in, but you're not really

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understanding the ROI of each of these investments. So

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what we found is that in the US 54%

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of marketing budgets are spent on ads. So more than

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half. And while five out of six

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marketers believes it's absolutely essential to

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make data driven decisions to get the best results

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from your advertising, only one in six actually

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trusts their the data that you use to make

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decisions. And that's because they put all these pixels on the

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website for Google Ads, Facebook ads, and

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they make decisions based on those. And those can potentially

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be a source of truth because each of those only

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sees activity from that platform. So if the Facebook

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ads, pixel sees activity from Facebook, but

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it doesn't really know that you're also running ads on Google, that you

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are sending emails, text messages. So you

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really need an independent way to track all the activity and

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how that then impacts your bottom line.

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So what you're basically saying is it's fragmented data that you need to

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centralize so you can understand exactly where everything is

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going. It's kind of like podcasting, because podcasting

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there is a lot of different third party data, but it's not all

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centralized either. So I have to look at three or four different ones

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just to figure out, like, what's going on. And the thing is, like Even,

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even if you were so right in that it's

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really a puzzle and each of those pieces helps you see the full

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picture. But none of those can

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help you figure out the actual revenue it drove. Because you

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need to understand, essentially, it's called incrementality.

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You want to understand the incremental impact of your ads. So if you go

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and increase your spend

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by say $10,000 a month for

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YouTube, you start running more YouTube ads. You want to understand

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how much revenue that's going to drive. And

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that's really what good marketing teams are trying to do all the time.

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Figuring out where is the best

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place to invest my money, what return am I going to get from that?

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And how much can I scale

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each channel and do I have a way to actually measure that, test it

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and see it through a real life experiment?

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You know, and at the end of the day, so much of what we

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do is doing things well, but so much of the impact

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we cause is by choosing the right things.

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And that's what we do, right? We help you understand

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what it is that you should be investing in. So when you go and put

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resources behind it, you actually see it pay out. And what do

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performance metrics from advertising platforms like Google or Facebook

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fall often to provide accurate insights?

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Yeah, if you think about it, you have. They're

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the source of truth for certain things. So they can certainly tell you

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how much you're spending with them, they can certainly tell you how many clicks

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they provided, they can show you how many impressions and reach

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they had, but they have no idea how much revenue they

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actually drove. So what happens is we put

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this pixel on your website and they see, oh, somebody

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clicked an ad or even viewed an ad and then purchased.

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Therefore we drove the purchase. But 61% of

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conversions are shared by more than one platform.

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And then 58% of conversions are non incremental. So

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they would have happened anyway without the ad. So what that

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means is that maybe you got an email for

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20% off for something you wanted to buy, you went ahead and bought it,

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and then without you realizing this, you are like

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browsing like scrolling on Instagram early that day and you happen to see

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an ad, but you didn't even click on it. Well, Instagram is going to take

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credit for that. I think

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what's important to understand is that ad platforms are in the

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business of selling you ads, not necessarily in the business

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of measuring and tracking. That has to be your responsibility

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as a company to make sure that you have data

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that you can trust. Is there like a somewhat easier way of

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figuring that part out. Because I know that's like the big piece of the puzzle.

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Because like you said, meta is going to be like, oh, we did it. Or

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Google's going to be like, oh, we did it. And you're like, well, you helped,

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but you didn't really fully drive the sale, of

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course. So I'll tell you two things

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people are doing that are very

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unreliable, and then two things that actually work. So what doesn't work

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is looking at platform data, trusting that, or

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using what's known as multi touch attribution, which essentially is

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trying to piece all this into a cohesive customer journey,

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and then based on that,

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arbitrarily attributing credit to different touch points. So if you saw

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an ad on Facebook, then click Google and then did this and this and this,

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like, okay, that's four channels. Let's split the credit

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in quarters, 25% for each. That's even fair.

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Well, I mean, who it is to say that the first touch

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point had exactly as much influence as the second one, the

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third one, and so on? I mean, it's kind of ridiculous.

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So that's, you know, the first thing I mentioned

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is not having an attribution platform. The second one is probably

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even worse because if you have that kind of attribution that is

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arbitrary, you have a false sense of confidence in data that is

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actually highly inaccurate. So there's really two things

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that we could do. One is called media mix modeling. So

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media mix modeling essentially helps you understand what

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is the most likely scenario for

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the revenue you got given the variables provided.

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So given that you spend like last week, you spent this much

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on YouTube and this much on this and this much on that, and you got

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those sales, what is the most likely explanation for, you

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know, how much each one contributed to? So the way, the way it's done is

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looking at variance in spend and how it correlates to

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revenue. So if something is performing really well and you

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double your investment well, your sales should go up.

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If something has no impact, you double your investment or cut it in half

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or pos it all together, it should have no impact on your

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revenue. So what we

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do is we look at, for example, if you sell in the United States, that's

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50 states. So each day you have 50

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observations of what happened

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when spend increase or decrease

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for different states and what happened to your revenue

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and that. We usually have three years worth of

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data. So times 50 daily observations, that's 15,000

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observations. Very clear patterns emerge in terms of

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what happened in the past as you increase your decrease

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spend for different channels. The

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other way that you could do this is through

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incrementality experiments. So incrementality, or

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it's also called like a market market test where what you

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do is you say for, I want to

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test, for example, Google Ads. So if I'm running it and spending 10k

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a day, I'm going to pause it in Colorado and Michigan

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and I'm going to see for the next three weeks or so what's going to

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happen to sales in those states. Or I could say I'm

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going to double my, my, my budget in those states

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and see what happens. So when you do that, essentially you create

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an ideal environment for an experiment because you're

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saying, you know, all other things are equal. Every, everybody is getting, you

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know, my, my emails, my text messages, my social media. The

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only difference is that some states are either not seeing my ad or

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seeing my ad more often. And

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so one way, the first way, media mix modeling

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doesn't require that you do those experiments, but when you do both

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combined, that's extremely powerful. Because with media mix

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modeling, you get very, very close

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to the reality in the world. Then you run experiments,

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use those experiments to calibrate your model so it keeps getting more and

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more accurate. So it is

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not easy. Right. And we work with companies that are spending

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250,000 or more on ads per month,

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some, you know, several million. So that's a, you know,

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highly sophisticated approach to a really

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big problem. But if

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you are on a budget and you still want to

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know how well your ads are going, a very easy way of doing

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that is to actually do go ahead and

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pause your ads every now and then and see what

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happens or double down and you see what

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happens. It's really, if you can't see

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a clear impact or when you make such a drastic change,

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that should be an indication that, you know, it's not

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giving you the results that it's promising. And so how has

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the death of the third party cookies impacted marketing attribution and

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what adjustments do brands need to make? Yeah, so I think

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that it's important to know that, you know, pre Internet

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we already had, you know, incrementality

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testing, we had media mix modeling. And then

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when the Internet came out, it just allowed us to track

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individual users. And that's the key difference between

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the two methods that I talked about and what the Internet

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promised for a while. Well, that kind

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of worked for a little bit. It

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didn't actually allow us to measure real impact, but it

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allowed us to see that a visitor came from email or a

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certain ad campaign and so on. Now

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the problem in the last couple of years is that because of ad

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blockers and privacy settings in our browsers,

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these pixels are not working as well as they used to.

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So right now 42% of conversions are being blocked.

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So that means that you don't have accurate data to work with.

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It also means that the platforms that use

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algorithms to essentially optimize their own performance

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to figure out, you know, who should, what kind of consumers

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should we be targeting, what kind of creatives should we be showing

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them they're not getting the data they need to perform their best?

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So the, there's two issues with third

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party cookies. You know, one is our reporting just became

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incredibly unreliable. The second one is

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our platforms. Ad platforms can really do

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what they're supposed to do if we don't collect the data ourselves as

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first party data and then stream them to the

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platforms. If you just take the pixel they give you,

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put it on your website, your performance is going to be

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far from optimal. What factors lead to

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inaccurate revenue reporting from advertising platforms?

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Well, there's a couple of them that we already talked about. So

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one is pixels only work 58% of the times,

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so sometimes they just don't capture the true value of

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the conversions they actually should be getting credit

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for. Then there's duplication with

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multiple platforms claiming the same sales.

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There's the issue that only

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58% of conversions are incremental. So

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you know, one third of conversions would have happened anyway. I think

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that that's, that's a big one. And also like the

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pixel essentially sees somebody viewed an ad and clicked on

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that and purchased it, doesn't have

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any clue about everything else that is going on in your world, any other

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marketing you might be doing. So yeah, it's really a

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variety of all the things combined that makes,

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makes them that they're still the source of truth for again, clicks, impression,

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spend, anything that they own. But your source of truth

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for revenue is your sales, right? Like you have money in the bank, you

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know, how much order, how many orders you get, how much revenue you get.

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And yeah, no, no one

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platform can tell you how much revenue they actually

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drove. And why do some businesses rely on the

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last click attribution? And what are the dangers of doing

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so? Well, the why is because it's easy, right?

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The same with the pixels. There's a difference between

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what's easy or even most common and what's actually

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the best practice. So if you think about the

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customer journey, most of the time there are

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multiple touch points before a purchase, there

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are some exceptions for, you know, some impulse purchases, but most

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of the time people just, you know, learn about it, come to your

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website later and sign up for your emails and then

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maybe they see an ad. And eventually it usually takes about seven

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touch points for somebody to purchase. So if you're giving

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credit to the last one, you're really ignoring everything that

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preceded that. And you know, you would be over

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investing in that last touch point. But really

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it's like the first one and first few that drove people

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to the purchase eventually, you know, so you, it's, it's, it's

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easy, but it's, you know, highly

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inaccurate and it can lead to all the wrong

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decisions. And how is AI being leveraged in marketing

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attribution and what are its current limitations?

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Yeah, so with,

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I think that the, the beauty of AI is that,

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I mean, you know, what do you call a data head? But most people

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aren't, you know, and especially when it comes to

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marketing, a lot of people

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can read a report and see trends over time.

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But going beyond and really getting

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deep into, you know, what will be a data science project and looking at,

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you know, probability distributions, confidence intervals and

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how to make sense of all that, how to interpret that, what kind of decisions

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to make based on that,

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it just takes a little bit of training to do that. And I think that

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that's what the beauty with AI. Not only does

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it have access to all your data across all channels, can see the whole

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picture and can provide instant answers, but it

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could iterate with you and walk you step by step

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and maybe offer suggestions that you wouldn't have

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thought about otherwise. So for example, you could ask about your conversion rate,

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you know, why did it drop last week? And you know, maybe just, you know,

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just tell you it dropped from 4% to 3%. But it

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notices that most of that drop happened on

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mobile devices for a specific landing page. Right. So you

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can, you can say that and then offer to break it down by landing page

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or device. So it's

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essentially giving you the ability to be a

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highly trained data analyst, even if you don't have that background.

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And I would say that you also ask about the limitations.

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I think that it's such a young technology that there's like still

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a little bit of hallucinations and

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especially when it comes to math sometimes, you know,

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surprisingly it gets really basic stuff wrong, you know, so

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you really need to like check and see. I mean, we, with our

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AI models, we train them to provide

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all the intermediate steps. So you, if there's something off

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in the reasoning, you know, you, you can catch it

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because you're following along rather than just getting the, the final answer.

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So I think it's really important to, to know that and also to

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know that nobody could just give you

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the right strategy. You know, like you still have to,

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you know, you can rely on this to, to, to, to get answers, but at

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the end of the day, only you know what's best for your business, what's going

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to work for you. So, you know, just take everything AI gives you

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with a grain of salt, challenge it. But yeah,

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I am very excited about everything that AI

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is allowing us to do. And how can businesses identify which marketing

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investments are effective and which ones are draining the budget

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unnecessarily? Because we're always trying to save money. Yeah. So

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again, if you have the budget for a proper attribution

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and testing platform,

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definitely that's the answer right

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now. If you aren't really investing a lot

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in ads and need a more,

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I guess, like homemade way of doing it, like a low

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budget, then you can for sure do a

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holdout test where you just pause the channel or double

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down and just see how well it does. You know,

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it's not going to be as accurate, but it's certainly going

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to be much more informative than what the

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platforms are reporting. Gotcha. And how do

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you see the role of marketing attributions evolving in the next few

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years? I think what's happening already is that

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marketers are becoming more and more savvy about the limitations

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of the pixels that they've been using. They understand

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that they really need an

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independent way of measuring success rather than just

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taking what the platforms are reporting as face

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value. And I think that that's essentially going

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to help us just waste less and make more, you know.

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And a side effect of that is we

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won't have to bother people with ads that are not relevant to them.

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So I think that what makes for good advertising

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for companies also makes for a good user experience for

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users on their phones or computers looking

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at information ads that are relevant to them.

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And how is the shift to privacy conscious marketing, for

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example, GDPR or ccpa, involving

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the future of marketing data and AI powered attribution?

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So there's a lot to CPA

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and gdpr, but essentially what it means is

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to collect certain data, you have to let people know that your

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GDPR is a little more,

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it has more restrictions and more requirements. So for

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gdpr, for example, you explicitly have to opt in before

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any Cookies can be used with ccpa.

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You see all those banners where you just accept and then just move on.

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And then what you do

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with that data, you have to disclose how you're going

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to use it. You can't sell it, you can't

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rent it.

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So I think that

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the quick answer to that is that

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I don't see much of a link between AI

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and what data we collect. I mean, I think it's up to us,

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it's up to each company to understand

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what do I want to be compliant with, what

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markets am I in. That's going to also inform what compliance you

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need, what are the local laws, what do I need to

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disclose, how do I need to store the data? But I

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don't see AI really messing with

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that. I think that those are the two separate

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paths and those

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are more geared towards the way the data is collected and stored,

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not so much how it's processed and consumed. Got you. And then

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what are the key questions marketers should ask when evaluating

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their current data and attribution practices?

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First and foremost is what approach you use.

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If somebody tell you that they use multi

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touch attribution or mta, run away as far as can,

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that's not what you need. If somebody

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tells you their they're

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doing media mix modeling, then the questions I would ask would

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be around the model creation process and

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validation process. Do they take into account what makes your

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business unique or do they give you the same model they give

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the guy before you? What's your validation

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process looking like? How are you going to make sure that

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the model you create is not just overfitting past data, but you can

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predict a number of different scenarios, even ones that

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it's never seen before. And anybody who's

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a real data scientist should be able to answer those

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questions. And yeah, then

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there's kind of the vibe check. Make sure that you like the people you're working

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with and you see them as a long term partner in your business.

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Got you. And then how can small businesses with limited budgets and resources

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still apply the concepts of accurate attribution without getting

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overwhelmed? Yeah, so I think it depends on what we

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mean by small budgets. You know, so if we are talking about like

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you're spending less than $10,000 a month on ads,

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you don't really need any of this. If you're spending less than

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50,000, maybe do one of these like

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holdout tests, like homemade tests that we

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talked about where you just turn off a channel or double it down

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and then see what happens. But if you're spending 50,000 or

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more. Yeah, like you. You need something a

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little more sophisticated than that. Got you. And then

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people listening to this episode, they're wondering where can they find you online to learn

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more? You can learn more at data speaks AI or you

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can find me on LinkedIn. I'm sure we can put the link in the show

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notes. Yeah. Feel free to reach out if you have any

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questions. All right, any final thoughts for listeners?

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I'm going to go have some tea because I realized that I'm having too much

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coffee. So I'm going to balance that out. That's fair. That's

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fair. But thank you, Zeke, for joining Digital Coffee Marketing Brew and sharing your

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knowledge on AI and data. Thank you, Brad,

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and thank you for listening as always. Please subscribe to this podcast and all your

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favorite podcasting apps. Leave a five star review. Really just help the rankings

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and let me know how I am doing in of terms. Join me next week.

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Let's talk about what's going on in the PR marketing industry. All right,

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guys, stay safe. Get to understanding your data and your marketing attributions and

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figuring out where you're actually getting all the sales and see you next week

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later.