Google Analytics Offline Conversions
-
Hi All,
I've been searching the net for this for a while now and haven't found any suitable solutions.
I'm looking at a way of importing conversions into Analytics. For a business I work with there is currently a split between
-
Contact Form Submissions (we can track)
-
Mobile Website Calls (we can track)
-
Offline Calls (visit the website via AdWords and pickup the phone)
We currently record all call data so we can see just how many calls we are getting from the campaign, and we take notes on keywords and time of call. So manually we can figure out the conversion rate.
I was wondering if there was a way to mark certain visits as conversions manually? I'm pretty sure there isn't, but figured this would be the best place to ask!
Thanks in advance!
-
-
IfByPhone actually owns Mongoose Metrics now. I manage a fairly large amount of AdWords campaigns. I truly believe that the free conversion tool that AdWords provides outranks any other service for the simple fact that there is no cost and you get the same amount of information. I wish there was a better way to tie revenue to keywords.
-
Hi Monica,
Agreed there are no perfect tracking options out there. With CallRail, it automatically pushes an event to Google Analytics and can automatically push conversions based on simple logic. However, it does lack true revenue tracking. That being said, the list of events that CallRail pushes is very easy to map back to the revenue. I have personally implemented CallRail, IfByPhone, and Mongoose Metrics for 20+ clients and agree that none are perfect though.
Mongoose Metrics does have a cool way for an agent to log the revenue at the end of the call and likelihood that the lead will close or if they already have. However, it is still not automatic and depends on the agent remembering/entering accurate information.
A newcomer to the game that I have heard great things about is LogMyCalls. It does automatically analyze a conversation and provide very valuable summaries. It is great for training from what I have heard. However, since I have not personally used it, I did not want to recommend it just yet.
-
David, I still believe that is only half of the equation. Actually tracking the conversions back to the campaigns to include the revenue is not possible just by using the dynamic numbers. Google Conversion Tracking uses the dynamic numbers as well. There are a host of call tracking softwares out there, my favorite being IfByPhone. They all lack the ability to accurately track the revenue back to the call. Most are only approximations.
-
In order to close the gap and move closer to the Holy Grail of complete tracking, you are going to need a dynamic number insertion call tracking solution. The way this works is a small piece of code (javascript) similar to a Google Analytics code snippet is installed on your site. This allows the call tracking software to determine the source of the visit (i.e. Facebook, Google Organic, AdWords, etc.) and dynamically swap the number the viewer sees. For example, if your usual number is 800-456-7890, the software "knows" that the end-user originated from AdWords, cookies the user as an AdWords visitor, and serves a new number (i.e. 800-123-4567) that forwards to the 800-456-7890 number. When the number forwards, it will create a virtual website visit that is tracked in Google Analytics. Even if the visitor comes back later on, it will use the cookie placed to serve them the same dynamic number.
My company uses a solution named CallRail. It is as easy to set up as Google Analytics and then the account setup takes between 15-60 minutes depending on how in-depth you want to go with numbers and settings. VERY easy to use. I implemented this for many clients when I was a consultant and have been a happy customer for some time.
-
I really wish there was a way to record phone revenue from AdWords. I am using their goal conversions to track phone calls as well. I have 127 campaigns and over 5000 products so manually calculating the revenue is impossible. I spoke with a company a few months ago called Invoca, they monitor calls and manually record conversions for you. So, if someone calls from AdWords, they can screen the call and record the revenue for you. That is the only thing I have come close to as far as being able to tie conversions to AdWords.
-
Unless you have a way of marrying the conversion to a specific visit, then now. If you do have specific information (like dynamically generated phone numbers) you can use the Data import feature.
https://developers.google.com/analytics/devguides/config/mgmt/v3/mgmtDataImport
Got a burning SEO question?
Subscribe to Moz Pro to gain full access to Q&A, answer questions, and ask your own.
Browse Questions
Explore more categories
-
Moz Tools
Chat with the community about the Moz tools.
-
SEO Tactics
Discuss the SEO process with fellow marketers
-
Community
Discuss industry events, jobs, and news!
-
Digital Marketing
Chat about tactics outside of SEO
-
Research & Trends
Dive into research and trends in the search industry.
-
Support
Connect on product support and feature requests.
Related Questions
-
Clients Keep Googling Themselves
Hi, I have a common problem with my clients where they google their own business name or keywords they want to rank for and freak out when they don't show up on the first page of results. The same is true for my paid search clients. Is there a good way I can explain to them how Googleing themselves is not the best way to know if they are performing well? If there is an article out there that explains it that I can share that would be even better.
Paid Search Marketing | | GuardianOwlDigital0 -
Can Google Shopping Ads Lower Ranking due to Bounce?
I am noticing Google Shopping Ads are showing up for really irrelevant keywords on some of my products. This quite predictably causes a high bounce rate when a user comes from these ads. There is very little control over what Google Ads seems to decide are relevant keywords from what I can see. Only control is by viewing search terms and setting as negative keywords, but his doesn't help much. Negative keywords are often ignored or they come up with some other really irrelevant new keyword. Seems this high bounce rate could hurt ranking? Any experiences shared with Google Shopping ads appreciated!
Paid Search Marketing | | Chris6611 -
Google AdWords Class Action Settlement?
Has anyone received and responded to a notice of class action settlement from Google Adwords? The sender (and the website it directs to) is adwordsclassaction.com. I see that there was such a thing, I am just not sure whether that domain is the official one to respond to?
Paid Search Marketing | | Linda-Vassily0 -
Impressions - AdWords vs Analytics
Given AdWords is a paid service, you'd hope the figures are accurate. For an example (exact match) keyword last month, AdWords says there were 14,253 impressions on Google search (i.e. not search partners or display network). However, going over to Analytics, for the same month it suggests 4,500 impressions for the same keyword. Google AdWords says the following about impressions: "An impression is counted each time your ad is served on Google's ad networks, such as on Google.com or other publisher websites and apps." "...How often your ad is shown. An impression is counted each time your ad is shown on a search result page or other site on the Google Network." Google Analytics explains impressions as: "The number of times any URL from your site appeared in search results viewed by a user, not including paid AdWords search impressions." Can anyone help clarify what is an accurate way of attaining monthly search figures, i.e. what is my overall potential Google customer base? I've also tried the Keyword Planner - which averages monthly searches - and it gives me 18,100 impressions for the same keyword (almost the two above figures added). Thanks! Rob
Paid Search Marketing | | englebert0 -
Why are some restricted items showing up on Google Shopping?
Hi there, We sell tactical gear but only "Google Friendly" items in our Google Shopping Product Listing Ads. We don't include anything that goes on a rifle, including rifle scopes. However, we see that companies like ebay and OpticsPlanet can still sell riflescopes: https://www.google.com/#q=Bushnell+3-12x44+Mil+Dot+Tactical+Riflescope&tbm=shop. There's even an article by SearchEngineLand that points this out, too: http://searchengineland.com/google-weapon-listings-shopping-search-126487. So why is it that they can sell them and we can't? What advantage do they have or what have they done?
Paid Search Marketing | | PatriotOutfitters810 -
Paid Search Visits Not Showing Up in Google Analytics
Hey all, Just took over SEM for my company, and noticed a bit of a problem with GA. Whereas Adwords has registered 141 clicks on paid campaigns that go to the site, GA has tracked only 5 vists in that time. Two things of note: The GA account was not linked to the Adwords account until today, and also, auto-tagging was not turned on. I understand these two things are important to having proper GA tracking, but I just want to make sure that there aren't any other things I should check right now to make sure I start to see tracked paid visits again. Is there anything else I should try? Cheers.
Paid Search Marketing | | danny.wood0 -
How can i track keywords of Google Product Listing Ads in Google Analytics
I have thousands of products in my feed to Google Shopping (Google Merchant Center). I have also set utm source, medium and campaign in URL. I have integrated my Google Adwords(With Auto Tagging) with my Google Merchant Center. My Question is, I can see campaign in google analytics but inside campaign i am not able to see keywords (From which those click are being received) I wonder to know that does anyone can help me to track Product Listing Ads keywords in Google Analytics. Thanks,
Paid Search Marketing | | CommercePundit0 -
Google PPC Quality Score (adventures in)
We have one keyword that brings our site the most visitors. This keyword is the brand name we carry. We have several years of tracking it in Adwords. For some extended time, this keyword [exact match] has averaged 19 cents per click, 2.7 average position, 4.5% click through, and a quality score of 7/10. We wanted more clicks. We could think of what was needed to increase the quality score. Sure, we could change the meta tag title and the adwords title to be the same as the single word keyword, but this would be less informative. We decided to keep these titles as phrases which include the brand name. First change we made: we increased the bid. After all, it was profitable for the two ads above us, right? We increased our bid from .50 to $1.50. Effect? Average position increased to 2.3 from 2.7. Click through increased from 4.5% to 4.9%. Cost per click went from .19 to .51. The incremental cost for each sale was......well really really high.....this didn't work. (oh, we rank #2 organically. Our organic CTR dropped from 3.2% to 2.9% with this change as well) Reversed back to where we were and decided to focus on the quality score. We realized that the keyword was part of an add group with about 20 other keywords. This word was important.....lets put it in it's own ad group. We then made an "exact" copy of the ad and started up a new ad group. Paused the old keyword. We very quickly realized that the quality score on this "same" keyword was now 4/10. That was odd....lets give it a few days......quality score drops to 3/10 and no longer qualifies for first page. What was different we wondered? AH! We capitalized the first letter of the word. Changing this took the quality score up to 6/10 instantly. hmmm, we thought capitalization didn't matter? Seems it did. We now wait to see where the quality score goes. Saga to continue....
Paid Search Marketing | | EugeneF0