The Position-Based Attribution Model (also known as the U-Shaped model) is a multi-touch attribution framework that assigns 40% credit to the first touchpoint in the customer journey, 40% to the last touchpoint before conversion, and distributes the remaining 20% evenly across all middle touchpoints. This model acknowledges that both the moment of first awareness and the final conversion nudge are critically important, while still recognizing the role of middle-of-funnel interactions. For example, if a customer discovers a brand via a Facebook ad (40%), reads a blog post and watches a webinar (10% each), and then converts via an email campaign (40%), each touchpoint receives credit accordingly.
Why Position-Based Attribution Balances Insight and Simplicity
Position-based attribution avoids the blind spots of single-touch models (first or last click) while being simpler to implement than data-driven attribution. By weighting the first and last touchpoints heavily, it naturally aligns with how marketers think about the customer journey: acquiring attention and closing the sale are the two most critical moments, with nurturing touchpoints playing a supporting role.
Position-Based vs. Other Attribution Models
Compared to first-touch (which ignores all but the initial interaction) and last-touch (which ignores all upper-funnel effort), position-based attribution provides a more complete picture. Compared to linear attribution (equal credit to all), it better reflects the outsized importance of acquisition and conversion moments. Compared to data-driven attribution, it’s less accurate but much easier to understand and explain to stakeholders.
When to Use Position-Based Attribution
Position-based attribution is most suitable for businesses with multi-step sales funnels, clear top-of-funnel and bottom-of-funnel channels, and moderate conversion volumes that may not support statistical data-driven modeling. It is especially popular in B2B marketing, where both brand discovery and final conversion moments are strategically important and distinct.
Limitations of Position-Based Attribution
The 40/20/40 weighting is an assumption, not a data-derived insight. In some customer journeys, middle touchpoints (like a demo or case study read) may be more impactful than either the first or last interaction. Additionally, position-based attribution struggles with cross-device journeys and offline touchpoints. For high-maturity teams, data-driven attribution is a recommended upgrade.
FAQs
What is a position-based attribution model?
A position-based (or U-shaped) attribution model assigns the most credit to the first and last touchpoints in the customer journey (typically 40% each), distributing the remaining 20% across middle interactions. It's a multi-touch model that acknowledges the importance of both awareness-driving and conversion-driving touchpoints.
When should I use position-based attribution instead of last-click?
Use position-based attribution when your customer journey involves multiple meaningful touchpoints before conversion and you want to give credit to upper-funnel channels that drive awareness. Last-click attribution will systematically undervalue the channels that introduce customers to your brand, leading to sub-optimal budget allocation.
How do I implement position-based attribution in my marketing stack?
Position-based attribution requires tracking every customer touchpoint across channels — email, paid, organic, social, and direct — and stitching them together into a unified journey. A Customer Data Platform (CDP) like Netcore's can unify these cross-channel signals and apply attribution logic to provide a complete view of which channels and campaigns are truly driving growth.
Take Action
Build a unified view of your customer journey with Netcore’s Customer Data Platform and apply the attribution model that best reflects your marketing reality.


