Many businesses assume that web traffic surges are driven exclusively by digital ads, overlooking the role of offline media like radio.
This misattribution occurs because traditional digital tracking models rely on immediate responses—clicks, conversions, and form fills.
However, radio's influence operates on a delayed response curve, meaning the impact of an ad is often attributed to another channel simply because it happens hours later (Radiocentre and Colourtext).
A comprehensive study found that 92% of radio's effect is missed by standard attribution models because it occurs outside the short-term response window.
On average, radio-driven web traffic builds up over 19 hours after an ad airs, with only 8% of responses occurring in the first 20 minutes (Radiocentre and Colourtext).
This means that when a consumer hears a radio ad in the morning and searches for the brand later that evening, traditional analytics platforms credit the search ad or direct traffic—rather than recognizing the radio spot as the true source of engagement (Radiocentre and Colourtext).
Unlike digital display ads, which can generate instant clicks, radio operates through subconscious brand reinforcement and delayed response patterns.
This is largely due to parallel listening—the tendency of consumers to engage with radio while performing other tasks such as driving, working, or cooking.
📊 Key Behavioral Insights from Radio Studies:
This means businesses that rely solely on immediate click-through rates (CTR) to measure ad performance are significantly underestimating radio's effectiveness.
Instead, radio advertising should be evaluated using multi-touch attribution models that account for delayed and indirect responses (Radiocentre and Colourtext).
To better understand radio’s impact on digital performance, researchers analyzed real-world data from multiple brands running integrated campaigns.
The results showed that radio acts as a powerful demand-generation tool, driving increased search activity, website visits, and conversions across multiple digital channels.
📈 Key Findings from Demand-Generation Media Studies:
✅ How Radio Boosts Key Digital Channels:
These findings reinforce that radio does not compete with digital—it amplifies it.
Businesses that integrate radio into their omnichannel strategy see better overall performance across their search, social, and paid media investments (Kite and Roach).
Marketers who focus only on click-based attribution models are missing a major part of the story.
Radio advertising creates brand demand that often materializes hours or even days later, leading to significant misattribution in web analytics (Radiocentre and Colourtext).
By adopting advanced measurement techniques—such as multi-touch attribution, regression modeling, and tracking long-term web traffic trends—businesses can unlock the full value of radio as a digital performance driver (Kite and Roach).
Kite, Grace, and Tom Roach. The Performance Plateau: When Performance Activity Is No Longer Enough. Radiocentre, 2022.
Radiocentre and Colourtext. Radio: The Performance Multiplier. Radiocentre, 2022.