How Does TPG Design Dashboards That Prove Campaign Value?
TPG builds executive-ready dashboards that connect spend → pipeline → revenue using a governed measurement model, clean attribution logic, and finance-aligned definitions—so stakeholders can see what worked, why it worked, and where to invest next.
TPG designs dashboards that prove campaign value by starting with decision questions (what leaders need to do next), then standardizing definitions (what counts as a lead, MQL, SQL, pipeline, revenue), and finally building a traceable data path from first touch through closed-won. We align marketing and sales to a common taxonomy (campaigns, channels, offers, lifecycle stages), apply attribution rules that match the buying cycle, and surface confidence signals (coverage, data quality, and match rates) so the story is credible—not just visually polished.
What Makes a “Proves Value” Dashboard Different?
TPG’s Dashboard Design Method
This sequence ensures dashboards stay aligned to growth decisions, maintain measurement integrity, and scale across teams without constant redefinition.
Define → Model → Instrument → Attribute → Visualize → Operationalize → Govern
- Define the executive questions: What decisions must the dashboard support (budget shifts, channel mix, ICP focus, offer strategy, pipeline targets)?
- Model the funnel and lifecycle: Agree on stages and handoffs (lead→MQL→SQL→opportunity→closed) and map campaign influence to each stage.
- Instrument the taxonomy: Standardize campaign naming, UTMs, content tags, lifecycle stage rules, and required fields to preserve traceability.
- Design attribution rules: Choose sourced vs influenced definitions, time windows, stage crediting, and multi-touch logic based on cycle length and sales motion.
- Build the KPI hierarchy: Outcomes (pipeline/revenue) → efficiency (CPL/CPA/CAC, payback) → drivers (CVR, velocity, win rate, ACV).
- Visualize for roles: Executive view (outcomes), manager view (drivers), operator view (tactics and QA) with consistent filters and drilldowns.
- Govern and iterate: Monthly measurement council reviews definitions, coverage, anomalies, and learning agenda to keep dashboards decision-grade.
Dashboard Blueprint Matrix
| Layer | Primary Question | What We Show | Quality Check | Decision Enabled |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Outcomes | Did marketing create pipeline and revenue? | Sourced & influenced pipeline, revenue, ROI/ROMI, CAC/payback | Opportunity association rate, closed-won mapping | Budget allocation and targets |
| Efficiency | How efficiently are we converting spend? | CPL, CPA, CAC, cost per stage, pipeline per $ | Spend ingestion, UTM/tag completeness | Channel mix optimization |
| Drivers | Where is performance breaking? | CVR by stage, velocity, meeting rate, win rate, ACV | Lifecycle rules and stage timestamps | Fix funnel bottlenecks |
| Programs | Which campaigns and offers worked? | Top campaigns by pipeline/revenue, offer performance, audience segments | Campaign governance and naming consistency | Scale winners, stop losers |
| QA & Trust | Can we trust the numbers? | Data freshness, match rate, unknown buckets, anomaly alerts | Identity resolution & dedupe controls | Confidence to act |
Client Snapshot: From Reporting to Decision-Grade Measurement
By standardizing taxonomy, fixing attribution inputs, and building role-based views (exec, manager, operator), teams reduce reporting disputes and reallocate spend faster—because pipeline and revenue impact is visible and explainable. Explore results: Comcast Business · Broadridge
To keep dashboards reliable, we operationalize governance for campaigns, UTMs, lifecycle stages, and CRM hygiene—then publish a shared metric dictionary so teams interpret results the same way.
Frequently Asked Questions about Dashboards That Prove Campaign Value
Make Your Campaign Reporting Decision-Grade
We’ll align definitions, instrument the data path, and deliver dashboards that connect spend to pipeline and revenue—with the trust signals leaders need to act.
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