As a media mix modeling vendor, we very often tell companies not to work with us because MMM isn’t a fit for them (yet).
It’s usually because of the same three reasons:
→ Limited Channel Mix:
If your channel mix is just one or two channels (Meta and Google, for example), in-platform reporting and lift tests might be enough and you don’t need to overcomplicate your measurement strategy just yet.
→ Low Volume of Marketing Spend:
With marketing spend lower than $5M per year, there are often higher ROI activities than investing in MMM. MMM is really complicated and there’s a lot of internal organizational work you need to do to make it successful.
If you don’t have that much marketing spend, the benefits of optimization are lower and so the ROI of an MMM project is itself lower.
→ Lack of Organizational Willingness to Act on MMM Insights
Believe it or not, it's not uncommon for companies to do MMM, get some valuable insights, and be unable or unwilling to implement the recommended changes.
If your marketing team is not ready to pivot strategies, reallocate budgets, or experiment with new channels based on MMM insights, then just don’t do it at all and save yourself the effort.
Now, if you’ve read the list above and realized that your organization might not be ready to implement MMM just yet, that’s okay!
You can focus on building the foundation to help you prepare for it once you’re ready.
Start educating your team on why incrementality matters and focus on building your “experimentation muscle.” After $100k+ / month in paid media budget, it’s a good time to start building that culture with geo-lift and holdout tests, for example.
As testing, data, and incrementality become part of your company’s DNA, the transition to MMM will feel like a natural progression rather than a disruptive shift.