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Google Analytics is a marketer’s lifeline in understanding performance and making decisions based on website or app usage data.
Typical issues stem from duplicate tag implementation, tag manager setup, cross-domain tracking and so much more.
Whether you are launching a new site, redesigning an old one, or merging multiple websites, here are the top four ways to check whether Google Analytics is working.
With Google Analytics’ real-time view, you can run tests on your site to determine how many people are on there this very second.
If you’re unsure of whether your Google Analytics code is working properly, go to GA’s main page.
Click on Realtime in the left navigation and browse through the location and content reports to test tracking on different sections of your site.
Given tracking, issues tend to happen when going to specific sub-domains or going across domains, use GA’s real-time reporting functionality to see if you can identify your individual user activity on site.
Tag managers allow marketers to manage the firing of all their tracking scripts from one place.
One of the biggest benefits of using a tag manager is that if your tag management code is placed on every page on your site, then you can easily insert tracking scripts without the need to constantly bring in IT or a developer.
Google Tag Manager is the most common solution and is a free tool for all webmasters.
Another issue that marketers often face happens when they are using a combination of a tag management system in addition to manually inserting scripts onto individual pages or sections on site.
This is common because tag management systems are often introduced after a site has been implementing tags manually for some period.
This creates redundancy in tracking scripts and requires a thorough audit to move everything to a single, organized tag management system.
If you are using Google Tag Manager, here are the steps to “preview” which scripts are firing on your site.
Step 1: Log in to Google Tag Manager and click on Preview.
Step 2: Type in the page on the site you’d like to test.
Step 3: See which tags are and are not firing on that specific URL.
Within this “preview” mode, Google can also track scrolling and clicks.
So, if you are looking to use event tracking on button clicks, then this will allow you to see if clicks are triggering event tracking scripts on site.
One common mistake marketers make is inadvertently deploying tracking code across the site multiple times.
It often happens during CMS (content management system) migrations, domain consolidations, or redesigns due to a lack of documentation of existing legacy analytics requirements.
The GTM/GA debug chrome browser tool allows us to quickly see the GA and GTM tags that fire on a page as we navigate from page to page.
Here is how you can use the GTM/GA debug tool to see if there is a duplicative tracking code.
As you test this on your site, make sure that you are only seeing a single pageview from a single GA account that fires when you go to each page.
If you are seeing multiple pageviews fire when you load a single page, you’ll know that you are at least double-counting analytics data and likely throwing off all the other metrics you’re tracking in GA.
What are the accounts, properties, and views that your Google Analytics needs to flow into?
What GA tracking tags need to be used on all pages? Do certain GA tags need to be used for certain parts of the site (i.e., blog, microsite, internal knowledge base section)?
How are the tags deployed across the site? Through manual insertion within global CMS modules or through a 3rd party tag manager?
What events (i.e., button clicks or form submissions) are tracked on site that need accurate tracking?
Going through this exercise allows us to identify the pages where the Google Analytics tracking code is firing vs. not being there at all.
Screaming Frog and other crawling tools allow us to identify these issues at scale.
Here are the steps to take in Screaming Frog to run this type of crawl to identify which pages of your site that Google Analytics tracking code may be missing from:
Step 1: Click on Configuration > Custom > Search.
Step 2: Depending on if you are running Google Analytics tracking through tag manager or through direct script insertion, you’ll add in the unique identifier from the respective system (e.g. GTM-######, UA-#########-#, G-##########) here so that Screaming Frog will spider all sub-domains on-site to see where it is unable to find that identifier within the source code.
Step 3: Put in your domain and click start.
This will crawl sub-domains on your site that are linked from your root URL.
If you do have micro-sites that are not linked from your main site, then Screaming Frog likely won’t crawl those pages.
The outcome of this crawl will show you the percentage of pages on site that don’t have your tracking code on it.
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Content Source:
57 Sherway St,
Stoney Creek, ON
L8J 0J3
606, Suvas Scala,
S P Ring Road, Nikol,
Ahmedabad 380049
1131 Baycrest Drive,
Wesley Chapel,
FL 33544
57 Sherway St,
Stoney Creek, ON
L8J 0J3
606, Suvas Scala,
S P Ring Road, Nikol,
Ahmedabad 380049
1131 Baycrest Drive,
Wesley Chapel,
FL 33544
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