Post by mdsakilhasan765 on Oct 3, 2023 4:10:33 GMT
The truth is that I do not intend for this post to be a complete course on how we can set objectives or interpret them in Google Analytics. It would be… rather “it would bore you.” You may love this analytics thing or hate it. But it is true that, to understand the post , you have to know that there are two mechanisms with which we can determine the fulfillment of an objective: When you visit a specific page. This is the most common and easiest to configure. Broadly speaking, what is usually done is to configure a page to which the user will be taken when they complete the action, such as a “thank you-for-registering.html” page. Then, in Google Analytics, you tell it that when a user visits that page (which no one knows about) it means that they have successfully registered and, therefore, that a goal has been met. When a specific event occurs.
This, although more advanced, is also often COUNTRY EMAIL LIST used a lot. This is a javascript code that is placed in a button so that, when it is pressed, a notification is sent to Google Analytics where we will have configured that this event is an objective. For example, when someone clicks “share on Twitter.” Don't worry if you start to get overwhelmed. This is very, very confusing, I have spent hours researching this and I still almost don't understand it. A summary: Goals in Google Analytics can be URL (when we reach the user to a confirmation page) or Event (when the user performs an action). The MailChimp problem Well, now we are going to start getting to work. Well, the main problem in the case of MailChimp is that the registration process requires the user to leave our Website/Blog to access the MailChimp forms .
The first thing I thought of was to create a “thank you for signing up” page on the blog and configure MailChimp to direct users to that page when registration is complete. This would help us count the objectives in Analytics but it poses a serious problem: Analytics would interpret that all conversions come from an external URL, which is the previous registration step in MailChimp . Of course, if we imagine that the user has visited 5 pages on our website and, finally, has decided to register, leaving to complete the process causes us to lose all that information. According to analytics it would be something like “a user who comes from MailChimp has decided to register.” Yes, you have hit the nail on the head (I mean right on the nail): it is of absolutely no use. How to set up MailChimp with Analytics for conversion goals Damn, I really need someone to give me a class on titles because I can't figure out what titles to put so that this positions well.
This, although more advanced, is also often COUNTRY EMAIL LIST used a lot. This is a javascript code that is placed in a button so that, when it is pressed, a notification is sent to Google Analytics where we will have configured that this event is an objective. For example, when someone clicks “share on Twitter.” Don't worry if you start to get overwhelmed. This is very, very confusing, I have spent hours researching this and I still almost don't understand it. A summary: Goals in Google Analytics can be URL (when we reach the user to a confirmation page) or Event (when the user performs an action). The MailChimp problem Well, now we are going to start getting to work. Well, the main problem in the case of MailChimp is that the registration process requires the user to leave our Website/Blog to access the MailChimp forms .
The first thing I thought of was to create a “thank you for signing up” page on the blog and configure MailChimp to direct users to that page when registration is complete. This would help us count the objectives in Analytics but it poses a serious problem: Analytics would interpret that all conversions come from an external URL, which is the previous registration step in MailChimp . Of course, if we imagine that the user has visited 5 pages on our website and, finally, has decided to register, leaving to complete the process causes us to lose all that information. According to analytics it would be something like “a user who comes from MailChimp has decided to register.” Yes, you have hit the nail on the head (I mean right on the nail): it is of absolutely no use. How to set up MailChimp with Analytics for conversion goals Damn, I really need someone to give me a class on titles because I can't figure out what titles to put so that this positions well.