Skip to main content
Log inGet a demo

What is Reverse ETL? The definitive guide

Learn how Reverse ETL works, why it's different from traditional ETL, and how you can use it to activate your data.

Tejas Manohar, Luke Kline

/

Jan 23, 2024

/

13 minutes

What is Reverse ETL? The Definitive Guide

Every company wants to be more data-driven, but actually translating your insights into action and unlocking that last mile of “analytics” enablement is really difficult. Thanks to the rapid adoption of modern cloud data warehouses, there’s more data available now than ever before.

For years, these systems have only been accessible by technical data folks, but the reality is your business teams want and need access to this data, and this operational analytics need has given rise to Reverse ETL.

In this blog post, you’ll learn

  • What is Reverse ETL?
  • How Reverse ETL Works
  • What’s the Difference Between ETL and Reverse ETL?
  • Reverse ETL Use Cases
  • Alternatives to Reverse ETL
  • Reverse ETL Tools
  • Should You Build Reverse ETL?

What is Reverse ETL?

Reverse ETL is the process of syncing data directly from a data warehouse to the operational systems used by your marketing, advertising, and operations teams. This process turns your existing data infrastructure into a Composable CDP so you can power automated and personalized customer experiences across your business.

Reverse ETL syncing data to Salesforce

How Reverse ETL Works

Most of the time, when you want to move data out of the data warehouse, you have to submit a ticket to your IT team and wait for them to pull a manual CSV file or build a custom data pipeline for you. Reverse ETL automates this process, creating a seamless bridge between data and marketing or any other business team. This means everyone across your organization can access the same rich insights and the same core customer definition that lives in your warehouse directly in the tools they use daily.

You can take the core insights and data models that live in your warehouse and sync them to any destination of your choosing in seconds. For a B2B business, this might include metrics like active workspaces, last login date, churn rate, LTV, lead score, etc.; for a B2C company, this might include traits like purchase propensity, high-spenders, shopping cart abandoners, etc. Reverse ETL puts this data directly into the hands of your business users to further unlock the value of your data warehouse so you can go beyond static reporting and take action on your data.

Syncing an MQL score to Salesforce

Syncing Data to Salesforce

What’s the Difference Between ETL & Reverse ETL?

Traditional ETL (extract, transform, load) pipelines have been around since the 1970s, and for the most part, these data pipelines have largely remained unchanged. When you hear the term ETL, you probably imagine extracting data from an external source, transforming it, and then loading it into your data warehouse. For years, ETL was thought of as the primary process of powering your analytics use cases and consolidating your disparate data across all your sources into a single unified platform.

Reverse ETL has a much different goal because the purpose of Reverse ETL is to take the rich insights that live in your warehouse and put that information into the hands of your business teams so they can drive outcomes that move the needle.

ETL & Reverse ETL

ETL & Reverse ETL

With the ETL process, you’re merging and loading data into tables using “updated_at” fields, and you’re writing to one consistent data schema that you own and manage. If you make a mistake in this process, you can simply delete the table in your warehouse and re-ingest all of your data.

The Reverse ETL process is the opposite because you’re moving data from your warehouse and writing directly to third-party APIs. Third-party tools are much more restricted compared to data warehouses because you don’t own the schema structure, which means you have to conform your data to the constraints of a third-party vendor. You also have to be really careful when you sync data because most business applications don’t have an undo or rollback button if you overwrite fields with bad data.

To make matters worse, every third-party API comes with its own special nuance and technicality, which can cause sync failures. With Reverse ETL, you have to deduplicate your data and compare the values of your current warehouse query to what you’ve previously synced to ensure you only send fields to reduce costs and unlock faster speeds. With traditional ETL, you don’t have to worry about this because data warehouses are just more flexible.

The Complete Reverse ETL Buyer's Guide

Read our whitepaper and see the most important factors to consider when purchasing a Reverse ETL tool:

  • Integrations
  • Developer features
  • Pricing
  • Implementation time
Preview of The Complete Reverse ETL Buyer's Guide V2.
Work email
Preview of The Complete Reverse ETL Buyer's Guide V2.

How Does Reverse ETL Work?

Reverse ETL works by querying against your data warehouse and writing the results of that query to the downstream tool of your choice. This destination can range from anything from a CRM like Saleforce or Hubspot to an ad platform like Facebook or Google to a lifecycle marketing tool like Braze or Iterable or really any destination that you can think of.

There are four core components to Reverse ETL pipelines: sources, models, syncs, and destinations.

  • Sources represent your data infrastructure or the location where your data is stored. Most of the time, this is a data warehouse like Snowflake or a data lake like Databricks.
  • Models consist of SQL statements that define how your data is represented and what tables and objects you want to pull from before syncing that data to your destination.
  • Syncs allow you to define the data from your model, declare how you want specific records to be mapped to the appropriate fields in your end destination, and set a cadence for how often to sync your data.
  • Destinations represent the locations where you need to send your data. The most common destinations for Reverse ETL tend to be CRMs, ad platforms, and lifecycle marketing tools.

The 4 Components of Reverse ETL

The 4 Components of Reverse ETL

The easiest way to understand Reverse ETL is to think of it as a pipeline that connects your data warehouse to the rest of your organization. This function allows you to easily provide the rich customer data that lives in your warehouse broadly across your business for teams to actually use.

Reverse ETL Use Cases

At a high level, Reverse ETL exists to reliably, scalably, and efficiently move data out of your warehouse so you can power personalization across all the tools in your tech stack. With that in mind, here are a few of the biggest use cases that force companies to adopt and implement Reverse ETL:

  • Advertising: Advertising is one of the largest use cases for Reverse ETL because, in many cases, your marketing team is the one requesting access to audience segments to upload and use for creating lookalike audiences, suppressing existing customers/users, and retargeting existing users. With Reverse ETL, you can manage all of these audiences centrally in your warehouse and replicate them across all of your ad platforms. If you manage audience exclusion in your warehouse, this can also have huge implications because you can ensure all of your audiences are up-to-date and in compliance across all of your ad platforms. You can even sync enriched conversion events from your warehouse to your ad platforms to increase match rates across your marketing campaigns and ultimately boost your return on ad spend (ROAS).
  • Lifecycle Marketing: Lifecycle marketing is probably the second biggest use case for Reverse ETL because to deliver personalized communications to your customers, you need to know everything about them. With Reverse ETL, you can sync core attributes (e.g., location, age, gender, income, etc.), traits (e.g., cart abandoners in the past 7 days), or custom data models your data science team has built (e.g., users with a high propensity to purchase). By syncing customer profiles directly to your lifecycle marketing tools like Iterable or Braze, you can build hyper-personalized journeys and touchpoints unique to each customer.
  • Sales: With Reverse ETL, you can also supply your sales teams with rich information that doesn’t natively exist in their tools. For example, you may want to sync modeled data from your warehouse that includes key attributes like product behavior to showcase how your customers are interacting with your app or what pages and products they’re looking at. With Reverse ETL, you can also send alerts directly to messaging tools like Slack to notify your sales reps when specific accounts or users reach certain thresholds or take certain actions so they can proactively reach out in real time.
  • Product: Another core use case for Reverse ETL is syncing warehouse aggregations back into your production database to power onsite personalization, in-app dashboards, or even other internal tools at your disposal.
  • Finance: Your finance teams can also benefit from Reverse ETL because you can sync reconciled financial information like revenue, invoices, orders, transactions, payment details, etc., directly to your ERP systems or even external locations like SFTP, Google Sheets, or wherever else you need that data.
  • Data: From a data team perspective, the main value that Reverse ETL provides is in the automation and reliability of moving data out of the warehouse. Reverse ETL platforms are essentially “set it and forget it” because they don’t store any data; they simply read from your warehouse and write to your destination. Rather than focusing on building and maintaining custom integrations or exporting manual CSV files every time your marketing team wants to run a campaign, with Reverse ETL, all your data team has to do is ensure that the appropriate data is available and servable in your warehouse.

Reverse ETL Alternatives

Reverse ETL is not a new technology by any means, and companies have been trying to activate their data for years via Customer Data Platforms (CDPs) and point-to-point solutions.

Point-to-Point Solutions

Point-to-point solutions like Zapier, Tray, and Workato have been around for a long time, and they can be an attractive option for moving data between systems. These solutions don’t actually enable Reverse ETL because they simply connect systems in a 1-1 capacity. They’re not actually designed to integrate with your existing data infrastructure. The downside to this approach is that it creates an intricate web of pipelines and complex workflows that aren’t scalable.

For example, if you have four applications, you can quickly find yourself with 16 pipelines (4x4 = 16). Actually, getting data to flow to and from your systems requires you to build and manage complex workflows and manage various if/then clauses along with intricate dependencies and complex business logic for every single workflow–and you have to do this for every single one.

Customer Data Platforms

CDPs are marketing-friendly tools that offer a number of features like event tracking, audience management, identity resolution, and activation, but these platforms are also not designed to integrate with your data warehouse. Traditional CDPs collect behavioral data and then route that data to your chosen destination. These platforms tend to be more efficient than point-to-point solutions because you don’t have to manage complex workflows and replicate one-off pipelines. You simply have to route your data through the platform and point it toward your end destination.

However, the platforms are very rigid and inflexible when it comes to how your data is stored and modeled, and they also only give you access to a subset of your data (e.g., the data that lives in your CDP), whereas Reverse ETL gives you access to all of your data. This is one of the many reasons why companies are using Reverse ETL to create a Composable CDP around their existing data warehouse rather than adopt a separate solution that creates a second source of truth and runs in conflict with it.

Reverse ETL Tools

While there are many different data integration tools that specialize in moving data, most traditional ETL companies don’t actually provide Reverse ETL offerings. Here’s a quick summary of the top three companies solving Reverse ETL.

  • Hightouch is the most popular Reverse ETL platform. The platform supports over 200+ destinations and integrates with modern data tools like dbt, Fivetran, Looker, etc. It offers version control, a live debugger, support for alerting, and even a no-code audience builder so your non-technical users can build self-serve audiences using a visual interface.
  • Census is a Reverse ETL platform that offers a number of features for moving data from your warehouse to various destinations, but it’s not as flexible as Hightouch when it comes to developer-friendly and marketing-friendly features.
  • Segment is a traditional CDP that offers some Reverse ETL capabilities, but given the black-box nature of the platform, the features are tightly coupled together, and the capabilities are still lacking.

Should You Build Reverse ETL?

Building custom Reverse ETL pipelines can become complicated very quickly. Every third-party API is constantly updating, which means you have to closely monitor each and every pipeline or custom integration you build because a single update can break your entire data flow. This isn’t even accounting for all of the other obscure things you have to account for as it relates to authentication, batching, rate limits, field mapping, parallelizing, error handling, monitoring, etc.

Buying a fully managed Reverse ETL tool completely solves these problems because instead of managing API integrations you can simply declare how your data should appear in your end destination. This “write once, use anywhere” architecture lets you send the same data to multiple destinations through one centralized interface.

Syncing data to multiple destinations

Write once, use anywhere

For example, imagine you want to upload a list of shopping cart abandoners to your ad platforms to run a retargeting campaign. If you built your own Reverse ETL pipelines for this use case, you’d have to create a custom integration for every ad platform in your stack. However, with a Reverse ETL tool, those integrations are already in place and managed for you, and that means you can just copy that same audience across all of your ad platforms. The question you have to ask yourself is, do you want to spend your time building and maintaining integrations or driving business value?

Final Thoughts

There’s a lot of nuance across Reverse ETL platforms. If you’re looking to invest in best-in-class tools and want to have a fully managed Reverse ETL solution up and running in a matter of minutes, schedule a demo with one of our solution engineers today!

The Complete Reverse ETL Buyer's Guide

Read our whitepaper and see the most important factors to consider when purchasing a Reverse ETL tool:

  • Integrations
  • Developer features
  • Pricing
  • Implementation time
Preview of The Complete Reverse ETL Buyer's Guide V2.
Work email
Preview of The Complete Reverse ETL Buyer's Guide V2.

More on the blog

  • What is a Composable CDP?.

    What is a Composable CDP?

    Learn why Composable CDPs are seeing such rapid adoption, how they work, and why they're replacing traditional CDPs.

  • Friends don’t let friends buy a CDP.

    Friends don’t let friends buy a CDP

    How spending the first half of his professional career at Segment drove Tejas Manohar to disrupt the 3.5 billion dollar CDP category.

  • The best Reverse ETL tools.

    The best Reverse ETL tools

    Choose which Reverse ETL tool is the best for your use case with this detailed breakdown of the industry leaders.

Recognized as an industry leader by industry leaders

Iterable logo.

Technology Partner
of the Year