In MarTech’s “MarTechBot explains it all” series, we ask a marketing question to our in-house MarTechBot, which is trained on the MarTech site archives and can also tap into the wider internet. Q: As third-party cookies disappear and B2B buying journeys become more intricate, how should “Marketing Mix Modeling” (MMM) and “Multi-Touch Attribution” (MTA) each factor into a 2026 budget cycle? For much of the last decade, B2B marketers were hooked on the “click.” Multi-touch attribution (MTA) offered a detailed, digital breadcrumb trail that appeared to link every white paper download and webinar attendance directly to a closed-won opportunity. But with stricter privacy rules and browsers eliminating third-party cookies, that trail is fading fast. On top of that, the B2B journey has shifted “into the dark.” Buyers now do a significant amount of research in private communities, Slack channels, and offline discussions that MTA cannot track. To navigate the 2026 budgeting season, marketers are turning back to a proven approach — Marketing Mix Modeling (MMM) — to help bridge the gaps left by digital tracking. Use multi-touch attribution for tactical optimization MTA isn’t obsolete, but its purpose has evolved. It’s no longer the single “source of truth” for overall ROI; instead, it’s best suited for near-term, tactical decision-making. MTA is powerful for revealing which email subject line lifted click-through rates or which LinkedIn ad variant produced more leads this week. In your 2026 toolkit, treat MTA as a “microscope” for fine-tuning campaign execution. It delivers the rapid feedback loop required for agile marketing,…