Marketing teams generate an enormous amount of activity, and HubSpot Campaigns help centralize that work, so teams can see it.
But visibility alone doesn’t explain impact.
To understand what marketing activity led to, you need proper attribution reporting.
Not a simplistic version that counts engagements, but the deeper mechanics that reveal influence, momentum, and revenue outcomes. Attribution shifts the focus from what happened to what it caused, clarifying how marketing shapes the customer journey and contributes to down-funnel results.
And the truth is, every organization needs a different lens on that story, which is why there’s no single “right way” to approach attribution.
Most marketing reports tell you what happened. Attribution exists to tell you what those actions actually led to. It connects engagement to outcomes, giving teams a clearer understanding of how marketing influences and supports revenue.
A landing page view, an ad click, or an email open is not inherently meaningful in isolation. Attribution connects those interactions to outcomes, showing whether they created new contacts or deals, accelerated opportunities, or contributed to revenue. Teams use attribution to understand:
These are the questions that give marketing real credibility inside a revenue organization.
When teams understand not just what happened, but what it led to, they can plan smarter, invest more confidently, and communicate marketing’s role with much more clarity.
Campaign attribution in HubSpot shows how marketing interactions influence contact creation, deal creation, and revenue. Attribution reports are built on tracked interactions and use attribution models to assign credit based on when and how those touchpoints occurred in the buyer’s journey.
To understand campaign attribution in HubSpot, you need to understand the components they are built around.
Types of attribution reports
Interaction types
Interactions are the individual touchpoints a contact has with your marketing and sales efforts across their journey. All campaign influence and attribution reporting is based on these interactions, with attribution models assigning credit based on their role in contact creation, deal creation, and revenue.
Interaction positions
Interaction positions identify which interactions occurred closest to key conversion events. A single interaction can hold multiple positions if it’s the closest touchpoint to more than one milestone.
Contact create attribution
Deal & revenue attribution
Attribution models determine how credit is distributed, not what actually happened. Changing the model changes how influence is interpreted based on the question being asked.
HubSpot attribution models include:
No single model can serve all reporting needs equally. Teams should choose attribution settings based on what they are trying to understand and how they measure success.
Attribution dimensions in HubSpot
Dimensions are the categorical data fields used to segment and analyze attribution results. Rather than determining how credit is assigned, dimensions determine how performance is grouped and viewed.
In HubSpot, attribution can be analyzed by dimensions such as:
Dimensions help marketers identify trends and allow teams to answer questions like which channels influenced the most revenue? Which campaigns consistently appear in successful journeys? Or, how did performance vary across regions?
Attribution is often treated like a technical setting that must be configured correctly, but it is a storytelling tool. The right attribution model is the one that reflects how your organization thinks about growth and what your leaders need to understand about performance.
Different GTM motions require different storytelling. A marketing-led organization cares most about what created new interest. A sales-led or account-based organization cares more about the touches that moved deals forward. A long-cycle B2B model needs to understand influence across many interactions. A product-led motion may look for signals of activation and usage.
Your attribution strategy should reflect:
Attribution and customer journey reporting are closely related, but they answer different questions. Attribution explains impact. It shows whether marketing interactions influenced contact conversions, opportunities, or revenue. Customer journey reporting tells the story of how that impact occured. It reveals the sequence and context behind those outcomes.
This distinction matters because attribution on its own can tell you that something worked, but not why. Journey reporting connects individual interactions into a narrative that shows how buyers actually move from awareness to decision.
Most buyers do not move through a funnel in a straight line. They interact across multiple channels, return to certain assets more than once, and often take several steps before they are ready to convert. Customer journey reporting visualizes this behavior so teams can see the order, repetition, and timing of meaningful engagement.
Consider this example:
A contact clicks a LinkedIn ad and briefly visits your landing page. They ignore the form at first but return through a nurture email two days later. After revisiting the page, they convert and enter a workflow that delivers more context. By the time they speak with sales, they understand the offer and the problem it solves. Later, they are included in a closed-won deal.
None of these touches alone created the outcome. The outcome was created by the sequence.
This is where attribution and journey reporting work together. Attribution confirms that these interactions influenced revenue. Journey reporting explains how each interaction contributed along the way.
That is why attribution becomes storytelling. It is not just about assigning credit. It is about understanding how content, channels, and messaging worked together to move someone from awareness to intent to revenue.
Journey reporting reveals patterns teams would otherwise miss, including:
Attribution becomes most valuable when it is paired with journey reporting. Together, they move teams from explaining numbers to explaining behavior. And behavior is what ultimately drives revenue.
If you are ready to bring more clarity and predictability into your funnel, talk with an accelant expert.
Q: What is marketing attribution?
Marketing attribution identifies which marketing interactions contribute to creating contacts, influencing deals, and driving revenue across the buyer’s journey.
Q: What are marketing attribution models?
Marketing attribution models define how credit is assigned to different interactions, such as first-touch, last-touch, or multiple touchpoints throughout the funnel.
Q: What is the best marketing attribution model?
There’s no single best model. The right choice depends on your goals, sales cycle, and whether you’re measuring awareness, conversion, or revenue impact.
Q: What are the benefits of using data-driven attribution models?
Data-driven attribution provides a more accurate view of campaign influence by weighting interactions based on how they actually contribute to conversions and revenue.