Your CMO just spent $2 million on attribution software. Your team spent 6 months implementing it. You have 14 dashboards tracking every micro-interaction. And you still have no idea what's actually driving revenue.
Meanwhile, Revenue Marketing leaders stopped chasing the attribution unicorn years ago. They accepted a simple truth: Perfect attribution is a fantasy. Revenue is reality.
74%
of Revenue Marketing leaders measure pipeline and revenue impact directly—while others are still arguing about first-touch vs. last-touch attribution.
Source: Revenue Marketing Index 2025
Here's the dirty secret the attribution vendors don't want you to know:
You will NEVER achieve perfect attribution. Ever.
Not because your tools aren't sophisticated enough. Not because your team isn't smart enough. But because modern B2B buying doesn't work that way.
Your buyer's Slack conversation with their peer who used your competitor. Untrackable.
They heard your CEO on a podcast during their commute. Untrackable.
A 5-minute chat at a conference that changed their perspective. Untrackable.
Your competitor's customer shared a dashboard screenshot in a private WhatsApp group. Untrackable.
They saw your ad 6 months ago, forgot about it, then Googled you directly. Misattributed.
Your sophisticated attribution model captured none of this. But it did generate a beautiful report.
Months building models
Tracking every touchpoint
Arguing about attribution models
Analysis paralysis
Revenue declining while perfecting tracking
Days on simple tracking
Driving pipeline and revenue
Planning revenue initiatives
Consistent growth
Making money while others make models
Based on Revenue Marketing Index 2025 maturity analysis
You're trying to achieve precision in a world of chaos. B2B buyers interact with your brand in dozens of ways you'll never track. The more precise you try to be, the more wrong you become.
You have dashboards showing attribution by channel, campaign, content piece, and keyword. But when the board asks "What drove that deal?"—you still can't answer.
Your team spends more time debating attribution models than creating revenue. First-touch? Last-touch? Multi-touch? Time-decay? U-shaped? W-shaped? Meanwhile, your competitor just closed three deals.
Marketing claims the lead. Sales claims the close. Customer Success claims the expansion. Everyone's fighting for credit while no one's fighting for the customer.
Privacy laws are making tracking harder every year. GDPR, CCPA, cookie deprecation, iOS changes—your attribution model is becoming more fiction than fact.
Revenue Marketing leaders haven't given up on measurement. They've given up on perfection.
Measure aggregate impact, not individual touches
Run controlled experiments to prove causation
Track speed through stages, not source of entry
Simple math: investment in, revenue out
Actually ask customers how they found you
It's not perfect. But it's profitable.
While you're calculating fractional attribution across 47 touchpoints, Revenue Leaders use kindergarten math:
Did pipeline increase? Yes/No
Did revenue grow? Yes/No
Did CAC improve? Yes/No
Did sales cycles shorten? Yes/No
If the answer is yes, keep doing it. If no, stop. You don't need attribution software to figure this out.
Stop all attribution projects. Cancel the vendor demos. Delete the attribution slide from your board deck. Focus only on pipeline and revenue.
Implement basic tracking: How much did we spend? How much pipeline did we generate? What's our win rate? That's it.
Run simple tests. Turn channels on and off. Double down on what generates pipeline. Kill what doesn't. No attribution model required.
90 days to break free from attribution addiction
You have two options:
Option 1: Spend the next year perfecting your attribution model. Track every click, every view, every interaction. Build beautiful dashboards. Lose to competitors who are focused on revenue.
Option 2: Accept that perfect attribution is impossible. Focus on what you can control: pipeline, revenue, and customer value. Make money while others make models.
The companies obsessed with attribution are building better dashboards.
The companies obsessed with revenue are building better businesses.
Revenue Marketing leaders made their choice. They chose revenue over reports. Growth over graphs. Profit over precision.
They stopped chasing the attribution fantasy and started chasing revenue reality.
What are you chasing?
See how Revenue Marketing leaders are winning without perfect attribution