Strategic Case Study
My Work in Case Studies

Print as a Digital Traffic Engine: Proving Measurable Attribution in India's eCommerce Era

My Role: National Vertical Head, Response — The Times of India Period: 2014–2016 Sector: Media / eCommerce Advertising Geography: India — Metro Markets
30+
eCommerce Sites Tracked
2 Yrs
24-month Data Period
3-Ad
Sequence for Staircase Effect
Named
Framework: "Staircase Effect"
Sources: Google Trends; ComScore; client-shared site analytics; physical newspaper edition records. All metrics directional and generalised; no proprietary client data disclosed.
Context & Commercial Opportunity

India's ecommerce sector entered its first high-growth phase in 2014, triggering a massive reallocation of advertising budgets toward performance-driven digital channels. For traditional print media, the risk was categorical: a new generation of ecommerce marketing managers operated entirely in a digital-metrics paradigm — sessions, CTR, CPC, bounce rates — and held no structural affinity for print. Digital platforms offered real-time, granular attribution; print offered none. Without a credible, data-backed answer to the question "does print drive web traffic?", the Times of India's response vertical stood to be bypassed by one of the fastest-growing advertising categories in the country.

Structural & Commercial Pressures
How the Attribution Framework Was Built
Business & Commercial Impact
What This Revealed About Media & eCommerce
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Key Learning

In a market where measurement wins budget, the ability to speak a buyer's language — and substantiate it with data — is the most powerful commercial tool available. Building proprietary attribution logic was not a research exercise; it was a strategic defence of a revenue category at a moment of structural industry disruption. The medium was not in decline — the measurement was.