

On Vibe.co, startup marketers track CTV performance the same way they track Meta and Google: install the pixel on your site, connect the attribution tool you already use, and read your results in a dashboard built for performance marketers. Not media planners. The core metrics are familiar: CPA, ROAS, and site conversion rate. What trips people up is how view-through attribution works, and once that is clear, reporting CTV to leadership gets a lot simpler.
The three metrics that matter for startup CTV measurement are CPA, ROAS, and site conversion rate from exposed audiences. Reach, frequency, and GRPs are brand metrics designed for upfront TV buyers. You’re a performance marketer. Track performance metrics.
CPA tells you what you paid per customer acquired through CTV. ROAS tells you whether the revenue from those customers justifies the spend. Site conversion rate, measured across visitors who were exposed to your ad within a defined lookback window, tells you how effectively the creative is driving intent.
Vibe earned the G2 Best Estimated ROI award in the Mid-Market category, and measurement clarity is what customers point to most often. When Blindster, a window covering brand, ran their first CTV retargeting campaign, they measured it exactly like a paid social campaign: CPA against a known Meta benchmark. Their CPA came in at $45, compared to $89 on Meta. That number landed with their team without any attribution explanation required.
The metrics you can deprioritize early: view-through rate and impression count. These are inputs, not outputs. A 98% view-through rate is a useful signal that your creative is landing, but it means nothing in isolation. Measure the outcome first, then trace back to inputs to understand what drove it.
Vibe’s measurement and reporting dashboard shows CPA and ROAS alongside impression volume, so you can connect spend to outcome without toggling between tools.
Setup has three steps: pixel, attribution tool, and attribution window.
No analyst required to get this running. Airdog USA, an air purifier brand, ran their first CTV retargeting campaign with Shopify as the attribution source of truth. Their team was small, with no dedicated measurement function. The result: 450% ROAS and a 53% year-over-year lift in site conversion rate, verified through Shopify.
The full breakdown of setup options is in this guide to how to track and measure CTV ad performance.
CTV platforms report different conversion numbers for the same campaign because they use different attribution windows and different methods for matching TV impressions to website events. Two platforms running the same creative to the same audience can produce different totals without either being technically wrong.
The core variable is the view-through attribution window. When someone sees your CTV ad and visits your site three days later, was that a CTV conversion? At a 7-day window, yes. At a 1-day window, no. Platforms default to different windows, so their reported conversion counts diverge even when serving identical creatives to the same households.
The second variable is identity resolution. CTV reaches households through smart TVs and streaming devices. Converting a household exposure to a specific web user requires matching TV device IDs to browser or email identifiers. Platforms with deeper identity graphs match more impressions to downstream events. Platforms with lighter matching report fewer conversions, but they’re not necessarily showing you fewer real ones. They’re capturing a smaller slice of the actual attribution path.
This is why your real-time reporting dashboard and your third-party attribution tool will show different numbers. For cross-channel CPA and ROAS comparisons, trust your Northbeam or Triple Whale data. Use the Vibe campaign dashboard for optimization signals within the campaign itself. The CTV attribution playbook goes deeper on how to reconcile the two and which window settings to use by campaign objective.
Lead with a channel comparison, not an attribution methodology explainer. Your CFO doesn’t need to understand view-through attribution. They need to know whether CTV is cheaper or more expensive per customer than the channels they already trust.
Blindster’s story is the simplest version of this frame. They brought their CTV CPA ($45) and their Meta CPA ($89) side by side. Two familiar numbers, clear direction. When you bring that frame to a leadership conversation, the question shifts from “how do you even measure TV?” to “why aren’t we spending more here?”
To build that comparison: pick one channel as your cost baseline, usually Meta or Google. Run CTV on a comparable audience or retargeting pool. Report CPA and ROAS side by side from your third-party attribution tool. Add one qualitative signal, either view-through rate or branded search lift, to show the ad was actually watched.
If leadership asks about view-through attribution directly, the honest answer is this: CTV can’t produce a click trail because TV remotes don’t have a click mechanism. The measurement works by matching your ad exposure data to your conversion data over a defined time window. It’s the same principle as out-of-home or radio attribution, but with better identity resolution and shorter feedback loops.
For teams that want statistical proof before scaling budget, the Haus analytics integration and Lifesight integration both support incrementality measurement alongside Vibe’s built-in holdout testing.
For most midmarket startups, the stack has four layers:
Sijo Home, a DTC bedding brand, ran this structure with Klaviyo for audience segmentation and Northbeam for attribution verification. Their results: 304% ROAS and 57% lower new customer CAC compared to social, both Northbeam-verified. The third-party verification is what makes those numbers presentable to a CFO, because it applies a conservative credit model that’s defensible.
The incrementality step is the one most startups skip in year one and regret by year two. Attribution tells you which impressions preceded a conversion. Incrementality tells you which conversions wouldn’t have happened without the campaign. Those are different questions, and the gap between the answers is real in channels with strong view-through effects like CTV. The incrementality playbook walks through how to structure a holdout test without a dedicated data team.
The full Sijo methodology is documented in how Sijo scaled new customer growth with multi-touch attribution if you want to see what end-to-end CTV measurement looks like at a comparable-stage brand.
Most startups measure CTV ROI by connecting the Vibe pixel to their existing attribution tool (Shopify, Triple Whale, Northbeam, or Google Analytics), then comparing CPA and ROAS against a known channel like Meta or Google. The setup mirrors any pixel-based digital channel. View-through attribution assigns credit to CTV impressions that preceded a conversion within a defined lookback window, typically 7 days.
Start with two: CPA and ROAS. Both are familiar from paid social and give you a direct comparison against existing channels. Add site conversion rate from CTV-exposed audiences once you have 30 days of data. Skip GRPs, reach, and frequency until you need brand-level reporting for investors or a board presentation.
The mechanics are similar: a pixel fires on a conversion event, and the platform attributes it to an ad exposure. The difference is the attribution model. CTV relies on view-through attribution because there’s no click. A viewer sees your ad on TV, visits your site two days later, and the pixel matches the visit to the exposure. This is why CTV platform numbers often differ from your third-party attribution tool. They apply different credit windows and identity matching methodologies.
Yes. Vibe integrates directly with Shopify, Triple Whale, and Northbeam. Once connected, CTV impressions and conversions appear in your existing dashboard alongside Meta and Google. No new analytics tool or custom reporting setup required.
Lead with a channel comparison, not attribution methodology. Show CPA and ROAS alongside your Meta or Google benchmarks. Blindster brought their CPA down from $89 on Meta to $45 on CTV. That’s the conversation your CFO understands. If they ask how you measured it, explain that CTV attribution works like other view-through channels: exposure data matched to conversion data over a defined window. The result is conservative and directionally accurate.


On Vibe.co, you can target specific customers on streaming TV using Klaviyo, pixel-based segments, or demographic filters — no media agency required.
Several CTV platforms integrate with MMM tools, but coverage varies by tool. Vibe connects to Northbeam, Prescient AI, Paramark, Haus, and Fospha.
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