The situation: you are responsible for a couple of sites on different domains. Tracking is pretty much the same on all of these pages, but there are some small differences (e.g. each site tracks into a separate report suite). A new version of the s_code has come out and you want to update all your … Continue reading Quick Tip – One s_code.js for Multiple Sites
Category: Javascript
Postings dealing with any Javascript-related tracking aspects
Quick tip: 20 Char Limit
If your friendly marketer asks you to implement purchase IDs or to serialise events, you'll have to generate 20-character IDs that should be as unique as possible. The straight-forward approach is to use some existing IDs that the back-end provides, but often those can be longer than 20 characters. So what can you do? Hash … Continue reading Quick tip: 20 Char Limit
With DTM you don’t need Data Elements
Slight deviation this week, but we're still on the path to glory a setup of Adobe Analytics and Dynamic Tag Manager (DTM) that is as close to perfection as possible. The deviation today has to do with a question I was asked about a month ago: how can I track an attribute of a clicked … Continue reading With DTM you don’t need Data Elements
With DTM you don’t need Plugins! – Part 2
Let's continue on the journey and replace one more plugins with DTM goodness. I even get to introduce an almost hidden feature! getVisitNum I was slightly disappointed last time because I couldn't find an easy way of replacing getVisitNum. This plugin keeps track of how often someone comes to the site. Very useful for segmentation purposes. … Continue reading With DTM you don’t need Plugins! – Part 2
With DTM you don’t need Plugins! – Part 1
Today's article is a bit of an experiment. I have set myself a goal, and I'll try to reach that goal and document it. The goal: getting rid of plugins in the s_code.js file. Why would I do that? Couple of reasons: Plugins in the s_code.js file make it more difficult to move to DTM. … Continue reading With DTM you don’t need Plugins! – Part 1
Data Elements vs Data Layer
Have you used a Tag Management system yet? And a Data Layer? Both are good ideas in our business, for a variety of reasons. The one I think is most relevant in this context here is that defining a Data Layer makes a lot of requirements, possibilities, assumptions and limitations explicit. I think in a … Continue reading Data Elements vs Data Layer
Tagging Forms (w/o Losing Money)
Our post today will touch on two separate subjects (tagging of forms and limiting server calls (and therefore cost) in certain situations). Those two work together very well, so I decided to mix them together. Two subjects in one posting. Surely that's a good deal! Forms A lot of web sites live entirely to provide visitors … Continue reading Tagging Forms (w/o Losing Money)
Visitor ID Service Revisited
(Ah, the title... see what I did there?) Just two days after my article about the Visitor ID Service, my colleagues in Engineering and Product Management released a new version of Reports & Analytics and made a couple of nice changes to the Visitor ID Service. So, essentially, forget everything I said last time. Maybe not … Continue reading Visitor ID Service Revisited
The Visitor ID Service
What I write about mostly on this blog has to do with analytics, specifically Adobe Analytics, fka SiteCatalyst. But this is just one in the large collection of tools your friendly marketer uses to do her job. Analytics allow her to capture data for analysis and observation. She can also use the data to drive aspects … Continue reading The Visitor ID Service
How to Use Merchandising Variables
Merchandising variables are a special feature of Adobe Analytics. The Reference page in the help section says "Merchandising variables let you configure an eVar to hold multiple values." To be precise: a Merchandising eVar can hold one value per product. If you want to know why you'd use Merchandising eVars, or if you want to … Continue reading How to Use Merchandising Variables