Comcast Advertising, Adara Debut Deterministic TV Attribution for Travel Brands

Comcast, Adara Launch TV Attribution for Travel

Comcast Advertising is teaming up with Adara to tackle one of TV’s most stubborn problems: proving return on ad spend with real booking data.

The two companies announced what they describe as a first-of-its-kind deterministic measurement solution for the travel and tourism sector, connecting premium video exposure data to verified hotel bookings and revenue. The goal is simple but long elusive—close the attribution gap between TV impressions and actual travel purchases.

From Modeled Proxies to Real Bookings

Travel marketers have long relied on modeled attribution, geo-proxies, or blended media mix reports to estimate campaign performance. In a world of fragmented screens and cross-device journeys, that often means guesswork.

The new integration links Comcast’s addressable and streaming viewership data directly to Adara’s first-party booking data. Instead of relying on probabilistic modeling, the system measures whether a traveler exposed to a campaign later searched, booked, and generated revenue.

For advertisers, that means moving from directional performance signals to booking-level accountability.

Dawn Williamson, Chief Revenue Officer at Comcast Advertising Media Solutions, emphasized that the solution creates a connected data thread—from TV exposure to online search behavior and ultimately confirmed bookings—allowing travel brands to optimize by geography, timing, and audience segment.

In short: not just who saw the ad, but who packed a suitcase.

Why Travel Needs Deterministic Attribution

The timing matters.

Travel is both high-consideration and highly seasonal. Campaign effectiveness depends on destination demand cycles, regional targeting, and traveler intent. Without precise attribution, marketers risk misallocating spend during peak booking windows.

Adara brings scale to the equation. The company maintains two billion traveler profiles, processes three billion searches, and captures 180 million bookings annually. It also applies a proprietary Traveler Value Score (TVS) to assess the financial impact and quality of each customer—not just conversion volume.

Jay Wardle, President and GM at Adara, framed the partnership as delivering booking-based accountability for TV and streaming at scale, fundamentally reshaping how travel brands measure cross-screen ROAS.

That’s a notable shift in an industry where digital channels have historically dominated performance measurement, while TV operated in a more upper-funnel role.

A 13x ROAS Case Study

A tourism bureau serving Florida’s Space Coast region tested the joint solution in a multi-screen campaign targeting family travelers interested in domestic trips.

The results:

  • 505,571 hotel searches
  • 62,000 hotel bookings
  • Nearly $23 million in hotel revenue
  • Approximately 13x return on ad spend

For local and regional tourism boards—often working with public funding or tightly scrutinized budgets—that level of measurable accountability can influence future media planning decisions.

Peter Cranis, Executive Director of the Space Coast Office of Tourism, cited the value of having performance-based reporting tied directly to bookings rather than proxy metrics.

A Broader Measurement Shift

The partnership reflects a wider industry movement toward deterministic attribution as advertisers demand greater clarity across connected TV (CTV) and streaming environments.

As linear TV declines and streaming platforms proliferate, measurement fragmentation has intensified. Travel brands, in particular, need to understand which screens and placements influence high-value bookings.

By connecting exposure data with transaction-level outcomes, Comcast Advertising and Adara are positioning TV and streaming as accountable performance channels—not just awareness drivers.

That repositioning could have ripple effects across verticals. If travel can reliably tie bookings to video exposure, other industries with transaction-heavy models—retail, automotive, financial services—may follow suit with similar deterministic integrations.

For now, the solution is available to Comcast Advertising travel and tourism clients. But the bigger story is this: in a cross-screen world, advertisers no longer want estimates. They want receipts.

Get in touch with our Adtech experts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *