For years, digital marketers have relied on last-click attribution models to measure ad performance.
However, these models often fail to capture the full impact of offline media like radio advertising, leading businesses to underestimate its effectiveness.
A study by Radiocentre and Colourtext found that 92% of radio’s impact occurs outside the standard short-term attribution window (Radiocentre and Colourtext).
Traditional digital tracking methods typically measure ad response within minutes or hours of exposure. But radio’s influence builds gradually, with the majority of its effect materializing over 19 hours after the ad airs (Radiocentre and Colourtext).
This delayed response means that businesses relying solely on click-based attribution models may see little immediate impact from radio and assume it's underperforming—when in reality, its contribution is simply being misattributed to other marketing channels (Radiocentre and Colourtext).
Many businesses, especially those focused on direct-response advertising, hit a performance plateau—a point where additional investment in digital ads fails to produce proportional returns (Kite and Roach).
🔹 Key Findings from the Study on Demand-Generation Media:
Despite this, many businesses allocate the majority of their budgets to highly trackable digital ads, overlooking radio’s role in priming demand.
This reliance on short-term metrics creates a bias toward immediately measurable performance, even if it comes at the expense of long-term growth (Kite and Roach).
One of the most overlooked aspects of radio advertising is its ability to amplify the performance of other digital channels, including organic search, paid search, and paid social (Radiocentre and Colourtext).
📊 Study Results on Cross-Channel Effects:
This suggests that rather than acting as a standalone channel, radio enhances the overall effectiveness of digital performance marketing—a factor that is often missed in standard attribution models (Radiocentre and Colourtext).
To accurately measure radio’s impact, businesses need to move beyond last-click attribution and consider alternative models that capture delayed and indirect responses (Radiocentre and Colourtext).
A useful approach is the Radio Cost-Efficiency Ratio (RACER), which compares radio’s cost per additional web session against other media (Radiocentre and Colourtext).
✅ If RACER > 1, radio is more cost-efficient than digital media.
✅ In 3 out of 4 cases studied, radio outperformed other demand-generation media (Radiocentre and Colourtext).
By incorporating multi-touch attribution models or regression-based analysis, businesses can better understand how radio advertising contributes to long-term brand growth and digital engagement (Radiocentre and Colourtext).
Radio advertising is often misjudged due to flawed attribution models that favor short-term performance tracking (Radiocentre and Colourtext).
However, when analyzed correctly, the data shows that radio not only drives direct web traffic but also amplifies digital marketing efforts, making it a highly cost-effective component of an omnichannel strategy (Radiocentre and Colourtext).
For businesses looking to break through the performance plateau, integrating radio with digital campaigns and adopting a more comprehensive attribution approach can lead to sustained growth and higher ROI (Radiocentre and Colourtext).
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.