How Do We Prove Marketing Influence vs. Marketing Sourced?
The difference is measurable when you define one revenue event, standardize touch capture, and apply consistent rules for first-touch creation versus multi-touch contribution—then validate with audit samples and experiments (not opinions).
You prove marketing sourced by showing marketing was the first identifiable creator of the opportunity (or the first conversion that created a sales-qualified record) under agreed rules. You prove marketing influence by showing marketing touches occurred before key pipeline milestones (meeting set, opportunity created, stage progression, closed-won) and that those touches correlate with better outcomes (higher win rate, faster velocity, larger ACV), using a consistent attribution model plus validation (deal audits, cohort comparisons, and holdout tests).
What You Must Define (Or the Debate Never Ends)
A Playbook to Separate “Sourced” from “Influenced” (and Make It Auditable)
This sequence creates defensible metrics leadership can use for budget decisions—without overstating marketing’s role or discounting sales.
Align → Instrument → Classify → Attribute → Validate → Operationalize
- Align on definitions: Document what “sourced” means (creation) and what “influenced” means (pre-milestone contribution) plus exclusions (existing customers, renewals, channel partners).
- Instrument touch capture: Standardize UTMs and campaign hierarchy; ensure email, web, paid, events, and offline touches are timestamped and reliably tied to contacts and accounts.
- Classify touches by role: Separate creation touches (first conversion / first sales-accepted) from progression touches (before stage changes) and acceleration touches (near milestone moments).
- Apply dual reporting: Report marketing sourced as a first-touch (or first-conversion) metric and marketing influence as a multi-touch metric or milestone-based influence rule.
- Validate with evidence: Run deal audits (sample closed-won and closed-lost), compare cohorts (influenced vs. not influenced), and use holdouts where possible to estimate lift.
- Operationalize governance: Assign owners, add QA checks (missing campaign, missing association), and lock changes to rules through a revenue council process.
Influence vs. Sourced Measurement Matrix
| Category | Marketing Sourced (Creation) | Marketing Influence (Contribution) | Primary Evidence | Best KPI |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Definition | Marketing created the opportunity (per agreed rule) | Marketing touched the journey before key milestones | Timestamped touch → associated contact/account/opportunity | Sourced Pipeline, Sourced Revenue |
| Attribution Model | First-touch or first-conversion (strict) | Multi-touch or milestone-based influence | Campaign hierarchy + eligible touch list | Influenced Pipeline, Influence Rate |
| Common Failure | Opportunity created late or by SDR without linkage to marketing | Missing offline touches / missing associations | Deal audits, gap analysis | Coverage %, Match Rate |
| Decision Use | Budgeting for acquisition and net-new creation | Budgeting for conversion, velocity, and win-rate lift | Cohort comparisons, holdouts | Win Rate Lift, Velocity Lift |
| Confidence Level | High when rules are strict | High when validated with lift tests | Governed rules + QA | Decision-Grade Score |
Client Snapshot: Ending the “Who Gets Credit?” Argument
A revenue team implemented strict sourced rules (first conversion that created an accepted opportunity) and a milestone-based influence model tied to stage progression. After auditing closed-won deals and adding QA checks for missing associations, leadership gained a stable view of sourced pipeline and the lift from influenced deals—enabling monthly budget shifts with confidence.
The fastest credibility win is to report both: marketing sourced for creation, and marketing influence for contribution and acceleration—each with clearly documented rules and an audit trail.
Frequently Asked Questions about Marketing Influence vs. Marketing Sourced
Turn Attribution into a Decision System
We’ll define sourced vs. influenced rules, standardize taxonomy, fix identity and associations, and operationalize QA—so your revenue metrics stay trusted.
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