Most companies can eventually build a dashboard that shows how much pipeline they have and how many deals have closed.
But once those reports exist, leadership almost always asks the next question:
What actually created this revenue?
Was it a marketing campaign? A webinar someone attended months ago?
A piece of content they downloaded before ever speaking to sales?
For many B2B organisations, this is where visibility starts to break down.
Sales might remember where a deal came from. Marketing may have a sense of which campaigns performed well. But connecting those interactions across the entire buyer journey isn’t always straightforward.
This is exactly what HubSpot attribution reporting is designed to solve.
While standard reporting shows how deals move through your pipeline, attribution reporting helps you understand which marketing and sales activities influenced those deals in the first place.
And once teams can see that clearly, decisions about budget, campaigns, and strategy become far easier to make.
HubSpot attribution reporting connects marketing activity to the revenue that follows.
Instead of only looking at the final interaction before a deal closes, attribution tracks multiple touchpoints across the customer journey.
This allows teams to understand how different activities influence deals, including:
By analysing these touchpoints, attribution reporting shows which marketing activities contribute to revenue, not just leads.
HubSpot provides several attribution models that distribute credit differently across the buyer journey. Understanding these models is essential for interpreting attribution reports correctly.
First-touch attribution assigns 100% of credit to the first interaction a prospect has with your business.
Example:
A prospect discovers your company through a blog post and later becomes a customer after multiple meetings.
In a first-touch model, the blog post receives all credit for the deal.
This model is useful for understanding which channels introduce new prospects to your business.
Last-touch attribution gives full credit to the final interaction before conversion.
Example:
A prospect attends a webinar, downloads a guide, and later books a demo after receiving a sales email.
In this model, the demo request or email interaction receives full credit.
This helps teams understand what pushes prospects to take action.
Multi-touch attribution distributes credit across several interactions throughout the buyer journey.
Instead of assigning all credit to one touchpoint, it shows how different activities contribute collectively.
This model is particularly useful for B2B companies with longer sales cycles, where multiple marketing and sales interactions influence the final decision.
HubSpot provides several attribution reports designed to analyse marketing influence on revenue.
The most commonly used include:
This report connects closed deals to the marketing interactions that influenced them.
It helps answer questions such as:
This report focuses on how new contacts are first generated.
It highlights which channels introduce prospects into your database, including:
This is useful for understanding top-of-funnel growth.
Deal attribution shows which marketing interactions occurred before a deal was created.
This helps teams understand which activities are influencing sales-qualified opportunities, rather than just early-stage engagement.
Attribution reporting depends heavily on clean CRM data and consistent tracking.
If campaigns, lifecycle stages, or deal properties are inconsistent, attribution reports quickly become misleading.
Common issues include:
Without structured data, attribution reports may still exist—but they won’t provide reliable insights.
This is why attribution reporting almost always follows CRM optimisation and pipeline reporting improvements.
Many organisations expect attribution to identify a single winning channel.
In reality, most B2B deals involve multiple interactions across marketing and sales.
Attribution works best when it reveals patterns of influence, rather than a single source.
In long B2B buying journeys, early marketing interactions may occur months before the deal closes.
If attribution reports focus only on short time windows, they may miss the true influence of earlier campaigns.
Attribution reporting should inform both marketing and sales teams.
When used properly, attribution helps organisations understand:
HubSpot reporting and attribution serve different but complementary purposes.
Standard reporting shows:
Attribution reporting shows:
Together, they give organisations a complete view of performance, from first interaction to closed revenue. To learn how you can start building HubSpot reports that give you a clear view of attribution, book a free consultation.
HubSpot attribution reporting analyses how marketing interactions influence contacts, deals, and revenue across the customer journey.
HubSpot supports several attribution models, including first-touch, last-touch, and multi-touch attribution.
Attribution helps businesses understand which campaigns and channels influence revenue, allowing teams to allocate marketing budget more effectively.
Advanced attribution reports are typically available in HubSpot Marketing Hub Professional and Enterprise, though some basic source reporting is available in lower tiers.