Target and DirecTV built a closed-loop attribution system that connects premium video advertising directly to purchase behavior, according to Marketing Dive. The partnership moves beyond impression delivery to track whether households exposed to Target's television campaigns actually bought the advertised products.
The mechanism works by matching anonymized household viewing data from DirecTV subscribers to Target's purchase records. When a household sees a Target ad on a premium DirecTV placement, the retailer can now see if that same household bought the featured product category within a defined window. The system isolates the incremental sales lift from the video exposure, separating it from baseline purchase rates and other marketing touches.
This works because premium video still commands attention in a way that fragmented digital inventory cannot. A 30-second spot on a live sports broadcast or prestige drama reaches a captive audience in a lean-back environment. The viewer is not tab-switching or scrolling. The creative has room to build a product story. When that story connects to an immediate need, the viewer remembers the brand at the point of purchase. Target can now quantify that remembering.
The broader pattern is attribution infrastructure for traditional media. For decades, television advertising operated on reach and frequency models with no direct sales feedback. Digital channels won budget because they promised click-through rates and conversion pixels. Now retail media networks and data partnerships like Target-DirecTV are bringing sales measurement to premium video, proving that a well-placed broadcast spot drives baskets just as reliably as a search ad, often with better brand lift and repeat rates.
A small physical-product brand runs the same play by partnering with a retailer that tracks purchase data. If you sell through a chain with a loyalty program, you can negotiate a test: buy a local cable spot in one market, leave another market dark, and ask the retailer to pull purchase data for your SKU across both regions during the flight. Most regional grocery chains, hardware co-ops, and specialty retailers already have this data. They will share it if you frame the test as a joint learning opportunity and offer to split the media cost.
Start with one product and one tight geographic market. Buy a two-week flight on local news or a regional sports broadcast. Use a promo code or a specific tagline in the spot so you can ask buyers how they heard about you. After the flight, compare sales velocity in the test market against the control. If you see a 15-20% lift in the test region, you have proof that premium video works for your category. Scale the buy to adjacent markets and repeat.
The next move is to treat video as a conversion channel, not a brand channel. Premium placement works when you measure it like performance media. Build the attribution system first, even if it is a spreadsheet and a retailer's weekly sales report. Then buy the media.