Are you using E-junkie View/Add to Cart buttons together with our modified Google Analytics tracking code as documented here?
http://www.e-junkie.com/ej/help.tracking.htm
OK, I just read it three times and I guess I'm a little confused. I guess because I'm using your "Add to Cart" buttons, I don't need to add the Analytics Snippet to my checkout page?
I guess my confusion is with this line on your Customize Your Thank You/Product Download Page that says "Tracking code for Google, Yahoo, AdBrite or any other tracking service can be entered here."
I can remove the snippet, but I'm still confused as to how I could have a phantom conversion - it seems like the only way for that to happen would be a completed transaction?
My site is: InglesFluidoConSolo1000Palabras.com
thx! ak
It looks like your site is using the PayPal Cart version of your E-junkie-issued button codes for some reason. You don't need to use that version of the code merely to accept PayPal checkout payments, but perhaps you had your own reasons to require PayPal's cart system instead of using the E-junkie cart. Otherwise, the standard E-junkie Shopping Cart buttons will provide a PayPal checkout button inside our cart with full support all of our other cart-based features.
If you use the standard E-junkie View Cart and Add to Cart button codes on your site (not the PayPal Cart version of our codes), then you can use the special Google Analytics tracking code we provide as described on our tracking help page, which will also, as we explain there, "ensure that we don't report duplicate sales if the buyer returns to their thank-you page again."
If (and only if) you are using the special version of Google Analytics tracking code we provide (to use in your own pages to take advantage of our cart's built-in GA tracking features), then you should not also add that tracking code to your E-junkie-generated thank-you pages, as that would conflict with the special tracking code we already provide there.
If you are instead using the standard Google (or another service's) tracking code, then you would add that to your thank-you pages, but we cannot prevent phantom conversion tracking if the buyer revisits their thank-you page.
The basic rules of thumb are:
- If you're using the standard E-junkie Cart and Cart Buttons codes (where our cart appears as an overlay "inside" your page), put our special version of the GA tracking code in your site's pages, but don't add it to your E-junkie-generated thank-you pages;
- If you're using any other button codes (including if you're using our cart buttons in a manner where the cart appears in a separate window/tab), just use GA's standard tracking code in your site's pages AND add it to your E-junkie-generated thank-you pages;
- Whichever version of the GA tracking code you're using, make sure you're using only that version everywhere -- i.e., don't mix'n'match using our version of the GA code on some pages with GA's standard code on other pages, and certainly don't put both on the same page! :^)
I'm getting a mix of false conversions and actual sales not getting tracked. I use Wordpress for my site and put the e-junkie Analytics code in the page template, but there is no /body code on that template, so maybe that isn't where I should put it. When I do "view source" on my purchase pages, though, the code is there.
I also wonder if I've just set up my Analytics funnel wrong - my goal is my ejunkie common notification URL.
Any help in understanding this would be hugely appreciated!
Jennifer
The concerns you raised are addressed on our Tracking help page here:
1http://www.e-junkie.com/ej/help.tracking.htm1
You would use our version of the GA tracking code instead of the standard code provided by GA. The only difference is that our version allows GA to track cart button clicks, and we would provide some hidden E-commerce Tracking data in the thank-you pages we generate for GA to pick up from there; this also means f you use our version of the GA code, you should NOT add it to your E-junkie-generated thank-you pages, as that would conflict with the code we already provide there.
I know this is an old thread, but I'm hoping you'll still be able to answer my question ...
I followed the instructions to use the e-junkie version of the GA code, therefore I did not add anything to my e-junkie thank-you pages. But I have since made sales that are not being tracked as conversions.
When I view the page source of my e-junkie cart, should I see any GA code? I don't see anything that looks like it, so I'm wondering if something is wrong.
Thanks.
In order to use our version of the GA tracking code, you must be using our standard Add to Cart and View Cart button codes that display the cart as an overlay "inside" your own page. Make sure every page that has any number of Add to Cart buttons also has one complete block of your View Cart code, which loads some javascript into your page for managing the overlay-style cart display as part of that page. Also, make sure you use only our version of the GA tracking code in every page where you want to use any GA tracking at all -- i.e., do not mix'n'match our GA code on some pages with Google's own GA code in the same or other pages.
However, if you prefer to use any standard GA tracking code as provided/documented by Google (including Google Website Optimizer), you should use only that code on all pages (instead of using our version of the GA code), and add that code to your E-junkie-generated thank-you pages as explained here:
1http://www.e-junkie.com/ej/help.custom.thankyou-page.htm1
See also the tips on conversion tracking covered here:
1http://www.e-junkie.com/ej/tips.tracking.conversions.htm1
Finally, bear in mind that browser settings/extensions which affect cookies or javascript can interfere with Analytics-style tracking, which is therefore mostly only useful as a relative metric for more/less and before/after types of comparison, rather than an absolute precision-headcount metric. Across a large enough number of visitors, the variables of cookie/javascript blocking will be a fairly consistent factor regardless of any variables you control in your site or marketing. Even though the numbers are not precise, the degree of imprecision or "margin of error" will be fairly consistent, so you can compare when changes to your site or marketing efforts result in significantly more or less traffic or conversions than before, or when more or less traffic and conversions appear to come through one part of your site vs. another.
Thanks for your response. I realized that I two instances of the tracking code running on my A and B test pages (though not the goal/download page on fatfreecartpro.com). So hopefully removing the one that wasn't e-junkie's will allow conversions to start tracking.
I understand what you mean about some users' settings interfering with the tracking and that it will even out over a large number of visitors, and for my purposes that's fine.
Can you please confirm that I should NOT see anything that resembles GA tracking code in the page source of the conversion (fatfreecartpro.com) page?
Thanks again.
If your pages are using our version of the GA tracking code as provided on our Tracking help page, and if the buyer's browser lets that code set a tracking cookie, then our thank-you page will detect that cookie and insert GA tracking and ecommerce-tracking code accordingly; otherwise, if no GA tracking cookie is present when the thank-you page is loaded, no GA tracking code would be added to that page.
I had a look at your nomeatathlete and pinolerecipes sites, and I wasn't finding our GA code on any sales pages using our cart buttons that I could find there, although some pages had other GA code (Website Optimizer or Content Experiment code, maybe inserted via WP plugins?), which would probably conflict with our version of the GA code. If you could post or email us a link to any page(s) where you're using our GA code, we'd be glad to take a look and confirm our GA code is set up and working properly there.
Thanks again. I have no idea how the code got deleted from the pages, but I confirmed that it was missing and I added it again to every page on nomeatathlete.com which has Add to Cart and View Cart buttons from e-junkie (ignoring pinolerecipes.com for now).
Here's where I'm stuck now. The reason I'm setting this is up is so that I can do some A/B testing with Google Website Optimizer (now integrated into GA). When I set up an experiment, GA asks me to add the GA Content Experiment Tracking Code to my original version of the page I'm testing. Are you saying that this additional code will conflict with the e-junkie GA code? If so, how do I run an experiment?
When I do try to add the Experiment code to the original page (which already has e-junkie GA code installed), I get this error when GA tries to validate that the experiment is set up correctly:
"Experiment code missing the cookie domain name declared in tracking code:line:57, column:14.
Your page customizes the cookie domain name in the Google Analytics tracking code. The same customization should be present above the experiment code."
Here's the url of the page I'm referring to: http://www.nomeatathlete.com/half-marathon-roadmap/
I appreciate all your help!
If you are using any GA tracking code provided/documented by Google (including Website Optimizer/Content Experiment), you cannot use our version of the GA tracking code at all. You would use only the GA tracking code provided by Google, and you would also need to add that code to your thank-you pages.
Last I knew, GWO requires a thank-you page on the same domain as the sales pages you're testing, so you would add the GWO conversion tracking code to a thank-you page hosted on your site (rather than customizing your E-junkie-generated thank-you pages), and follow the instructions we provide here:
http://www.e-junkie.com/ej/tips.tracking.conversions.htm
I've already responded to your other post on this topic:
http://www.e-junkie.com/bb/topic/6238/pg/0#post22266
If you require more assistance with setting up Google Analytics on your site, we can recommend the competent, E-junkie-experienced developers for hire listed at the "developer directory" link at the top of our site.