Sourced vs. Influenced Revenue: What’s the Difference?
Define attribution clearly so marketing impact is measurable and trusted.
How sourced and influenced revenue differ
- Sourced revenue credits opportunity creation and pipeline origination.
- Influenced revenue credits journey impact across multiple touches.
- Sourced is usually a single-source field or first-touch rule.
- Influenced often uses multi-touch attribution weighting rules.
- Both require governed definitions to prevent double counting.
Key facts and definitions
| Item | Definition | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Sourced Revenue | Revenue from opportunities created by a channel | Measures pipeline origination accountability |
| Influenced Revenue | Revenue impacted by marketing and sales touches | Shows contribution to conversion and velocity |
| Attribution Model | Rules that assign revenue credit | Makes reporting consistent and defensible |
| Lifecycle Governance | Defined stages, fields, and touchpoint rules | Prevents double counting and metric drift |
Expanded explanation
Sourced revenue answers the question: Who created this opportunity? It typically assigns 100 percent of revenue credit to the channel, campaign, or team responsible for originating the opportunity in the CRM. In most systems, this is tied to opportunity source fields or first-touch attribution logic.
Influenced revenue answers a different question: Who helped move the deal forward? Marketing programs, content, events, nurture campaigns, and sales development touches may all influence a deal after it is created. Influenced reporting often uses multi-touch attribution models, distributing partial credit across interactions.
The confusion between sourced and influenced revenue usually comes from unclear governance. Without defined lifecycle stages, standardized opportunity source fields, and documented attribution rules, teams risk double counting revenue or inflating performance metrics.
TPG’s POV: Sourced revenue should measure pipeline creation accountability, while influenced revenue should measure acceleration and contribution. Blending the two obscures performance insight and makes it harder to decide what to scale.
Why TPG? The Pedowitz Group designs attribution frameworks and lifecycle governance across Salesforce, Marketo, Oracle Eloqua, Salesforce Marketing Cloud, Pardot/MCAE, Microsoft, and HubSpot ecosystems to ensure sourced and influenced revenue are measurable, auditable, and trusted by finance.
Which reporting approach should you use?
| Option | Best for | Pros | Cons | TPG POV |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sourced-only reporting | Early-stage teams needing clear ownership | Simple, accountable | Misses mid-funnel contribution | Use for pipeline accountability, not marketing ROI |
| Influenced-only reporting | Teams proving contribution across the journey | Captures multi-touch impact | Can inflate credit without rules | Use with strong governance and caps |
| Dual model (recommended) | Mature RevOps and multi-channel GTM | Balanced origination + contribution | Requires disciplined definitions | Best practice when leadership wants trusted insight |
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes. A channel can source the opportunity, while multiple programs influence the deal’s progression and close.
Often. Influenced revenue typically relies on multi-touch attribution logic to assign partial credit across touches.
Neither alone. Sourced shows creation accountability; influenced shows contribution depth and acceleration.
Document attribution rules, standardize CRM fields, and govern lifecycle stage transitions with RevOps.
RevOps should govern models with executive alignment from marketing, sales, and finance.
