Home AdExchanger Talks The Case Against Last Click

The Case Against Last Click

SHARE:
Andrew Covato, founder & managing director, Growth by Science

If there’s one thing that makes advertising measurement consultant Andrew Covato roll his eyes and shake his head, it’s the endurance of last-click attribution.

Or, more accurately, it’s the fact that many marketers continue to rely on a metric that only gives credit to the last click a customer makes before converting, even though this undermines ROI and doesn’t prove incrementality.

“There’s still a ton of advertisers out there obsessed with last click. They think it’s so simple, so deterministic and easy … that it’s just really tidy,” Covato says on this week’s episode of AdExchanger Talks. “But the reality of it is that marketing measurement is not tidy, and if you try to make it tidy, you’re probably doing it wrong.”

It’s not surprising that Covato isn’t a fan of last click.

He runs an ad tech and measurement consultancy called Growth By Science, where he helps his clients, including buyers and sellers, take a more scientific, incrementality-oriented approach to advertising measurement.

But he also has a lot of firsthand experience at the walled gardens, which are big beneficiaries of the last-click approach.

For more than a decade, Growth By Science was Covato’s side hustle while he worked in measurement and marketing science roles at eBay, Google, Facebook (pre-Meta), Netflix and, most recently, at Snap as global head of measurement and insights.

In October, he made Growth By Science his full-time gig. His mission, Covato says, is to “proliferate smarter measurement” into the ad tech ecosystem.

And smarter measurement starts with marketers accepting a few home truths, including that it’s finally time to toss last-click and post-exposure attribution onto the ash heap of history.

Because beyond being an antiquated approach to measurement, Covato says, it’s also “very dangerous.” The only thing last click is efficient at doing, he says, is transferring ad dollars from the pockets of advertisers into the coffers of large ad platforms.

“Without exaggeration, [last click] is negatively impacting the GDP of any country, of our country,” Covato says, “because it’s causing inefficiencies in the connection of supply and demand and therefore slowing down the machinery of the economy.”

For more articles featuring Andrew Covato, click here.

Must Read

Comic: Gamechanger (Google lost the DOJ's search antitrust case)

Judge Mehta’s Remedies For Google’s Search Monopoly Won’t Cure What Ails Publishers

Remedies in the federal search antitrust case against Google landed with a thud earlier this week. Most publishers and ad industry pundits were sorely disappointed.

Conversion APIs Are Becoming Table Stakes – But Not All Brands Have Bought In

CAPI integrations have moved from a nice-to-have to a necessity for anyone operating within walled garden environments. Now they’re laying the groundwork for an outcomes-driven ad ecosystem.

Peppa Pig

The Media And Retail Deals Behind The Peppa Pig Franchise Expansion

Peppa Pig is everywhere. Whether or not you have children, you likely know the little girl pig from the kid’s cartoon show. But the Peppa media franchise is just getting started.

Privacy! Commerce! Connected TV! Read all about it. Subscribe to AdExchanger Newsletters

How A For-Profit College Is Using CTV Ads To Win Over New Students

The American College of Education partnered with performance TV company MNTN to better reach its audience of adults seeking higher education.

Critics Say The Trade Desk Is Forcing Kokai Adoption, But Apparently It’s Up To Agencies

Is TTD forcing agencies to adopt the new Kokai interface despite claims they can still use the interface of their choice? Here’s what we were able to find out.

Why Big Brand Price Increases Will Flatten Ad Budgets

Product prices and marketing budgets are flip sides of the same coin. But the phase-in effects of tariffs, combined with vicissitudes of global weather and commodity production, challenge that truism.