For years, the measurement industry has focused on building better tools.
Attribution became more sophisticated. Marketing mix modeling became more accurate. Incrementality testing became more accessible. Media platforms built increasingly advanced reporting systems.
The result is an industry with more measurement than ever before. And yet marketers still struggle with a surprisingly basic problem. Everyone is measuring performance differently.
A brand looks at one dashboard. An agency looks at another. Publishers have their own metrics. Solution providers bring their own methodologies. Finance often has a completely different view of performance than marketing.
The challenge is no longer collecting data.
It’s creating alignment.
Because measurement only creates value when people can make decisions from it. And decisions become harder when every stakeholder operates from a different framework.
The Industry Needs a Common Framework
Most measurement methodologies were built to solve specific problems.
Attribution helps explain conversion paths. Experiments help establish causality. Marketing mix models help understand the contribution of channels over time. Each serves an important purpose. The problem is that the industry has spent years optimizing individual methodologies without building enough common structure around them.
As organizations adopt more measurement tools, they often end up with more complexity, more reconciliation, and more disagreement.
The next phase of measurement isn’t about inventing another methodology.
It’s about creating the standards that allow existing methodologies to work together.
That’s why initiatives like Project Eidos matter.
Led by the IAB, Project Eidos is focused on creating a common framework for marketing measurement across brands, agencies, publishers, platforms, and solution providers. The goal is not to replace how organizations measure performance today. It’s to establish the shared structures, definitions, and standards that make measurement more interoperable across the ecosystem.
In many ways, it’s one of the most important conversations happening in measurement today.
Why This Matters
The industry doesn’t need another version of the truth.
It needs a common understanding of truth.
When marketers spend more time reconciling methodologies than making decisions, measurement becomes a bottleneck instead of an advantage.
Shared standards create something every organization wants but few have today: confidence.
- Confidence that outcomes are being measured consistently.
- Confidence that stakeholders are evaluating performance through the same lens.
- Confidence that decisions are being made from a common foundation.
That’s the opportunity Project Eidos represents.
Helping Shape What Comes Next
That’s also why we’re excited to share that Rajeev Nair, Co-founder and Chief Product Officer at Lifesight, has been appointed as a board member of the IAB Measurement Committee.
Rajeev has spent more than a decade working at the intersection of attribution, incrementality, and marketing effectiveness. As a board member of the IAB Measurement Committee, he’ll contribute alongside industry leaders helping shape the frameworks that may influence how measurement evolves in the years ahead.
“The industry needs a common measurement framework that connects spend to real, causal outcomes,” says Rajeev. “Brands, agencies, publishers, and solution providers should be able to evaluate performance through the same foundational standards.”
We couldn’t agree more.
The Future of Measurement
The last decade was about building better measurement systems. The next decade will be about helping those systems work together. The organizations that succeed won’t simply have more dashboards, more reports, or more methodologies.
They’ll have greater alignment.
Because the future of measurement isn’t just about producing better answers.
It’s about creating the standards that help the entire industry ask better questions.
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