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Measure Your Twitter Campaigns with Conversion Tracking

Measure Your Twitter Campaigns

Conversion tracking is the most important and valuable aspect of digital marketing. It lets you track the actions on your site that drive value for your business, whether those are purchases, content downloads, lead form fills, or video views. Without it, digital marketers would be spending money blindly and probably losing their jobs in the process.

If you’re advertising on Twitter, you probably want to know if your promoted Tweets are actually getting you a positive ROI, right? Or if you have several campaigns using different targeting options, you’re probably wondering if your follower targeting campaign is more or less efficient than your keyword targeting campaign. Luckily, Twitter has two solid conversion tracking options that let you measure the success of your paid campaigns: the Universal Website Tag and the Single Event Tag.

Interested in learning more about the basics of website tagging? Check this article out!

Tracking conversions with the universal website tag

Twitter’s primary form of conversion tracking is done through its Universal Website Tag. Similar to the Facebook Pixel and Bing UET tag, Twitter’s Universal Website Tag is placed on all pages across your site (before the </body> HTML tag).

Once the tag is implemented, you can track conversions when users reach specific URLs, like a “thank you” or “confirmation” page. Additionally, you can create re-marketing audiences once the tag is implemented.

To create a Universal Website Tag for your site, head to the Tools tab in the Twitter Ads UI and click on conversion tracking:

Twitter will then provide you with a code snippet for you to place on all pages of your site. This is really easy to do with Google Tag Manager or any other tag management platform.

As I mentioned earlier, Twitter’s Universal Website Tag lets you track conversions on certain URLs. Let’s run through a scenario: tracking whitepaper downloads on a confirmation page.

On the conversion tracking page, click on create new conversion event. You should reach a screen like this:

Here you can select the type of conversion you want to track (purchase, sign up, download, site visit) along with the type of tag you’re using to track it. In this case, we’re tracking a download with the universal tag that was just placed on the site. Additionally, you can specify the URL that you want to track. The most reliable option is to select URL contains, then insert the unique portion of the URL. Since we’re tracking the whitepaper download, that URL can be “whitepaper/thank-you.” Once you save the conversion event, a conversion will be tracked whenever someone reaches that specific URL after clicking on your Twitter ad.

Note: If you want to track purchase revenue to determine campaign ROI, you need to modify the universal code on the purchase confirmation page so it pulls in order quantity, currency, and value. Twitter has more info on that code modification in the advanced conversion tracking section here.

Tracking conversions with the single event website tag

Twitter’s second tracking option is done through the single event website tag. This form of tracking is mainly used to track non-page loading events, like a button click.

When creating one of these conversion events, head to the create a new conversion event page again, but select use a single event website tag when choosing the type of website tag for the conversion. In this example, we can track a mailing list signup that doesn’t have a confirmation page. Here’s what the setup will look like on the conversion creation page:

I’ve chosen sign up as my conversion type and the single event tag as my tracking method. One cool feature of the single event tag is that you can create an audience of the converters. For example, you could exclude the mailing list subscribers from certain campaigns if need be.

Once you create the conversion, Twitter will give you a unique snippet of code to place on your site. In the mailing list signup example, you would only want the code to fire when the sign up button is clicked. This is a bit harder to configure, but totally doable in Google Tag Manager and other tag management platforms.

How to verify conversion tracking

If you want some peace of mind after implementing your tracking tags, check out these options:

  • Twitter Pixel Helper(Chrome Extension)
    • Allows you to see whether the Twitter tag is firing on a certain page
    • Also shows what parameters are being sent to Twitter
  • View the status of your conversion event in the conversions tab in the Twitter UI
    • You can check the status of single event tags and the universal website tag

Key takeaways

  • Conversion tracking is super important
    • Makes it easy to figure out what’s working and what’s not
    • Lets you measure and (hopefully) improve your performance
    • Allows you to experiment effectively
  • Universal Website Tag—apply to all pages of your site
    • Lets you track conversions on specific URLs
    • Create re-marketing audiences with the universal tag
  • Single Event Tag—apply only to certain pages
    • Lets you track non-page loadings events, like button clicks
      • Make sure that the code only fires when the desired event takes place
    • Verify your conversion tracking!
      • Twitter Pixel Helper (Chrome Extension)
      • View the status of your conversions in the Conversions tab

To learn how we can help you best optimize your Twitter ads, reach out today! Also, check out some of our other paid social blog posts to find out more about what Seer is up to.

Published: January 11, 2019
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Source: Seer Interactive

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SEER brings a wealth of knowledge that collectively spans decades of Search Marketing, SEO and Analytics experience. Our team likes to win—A LOT, and not in a trip-an-old-lady-down-a-flight-of-stairs-to-win way. Search engines are our scoreboards. We’re able to use our Twitter, Facebook, and YouTube channels to reach every facet of the Search and Business communities. By freely sharing best practices, strategies, and insights, we lift the industry as a whole and call out spammers, scammers and overall snake oil salesmen.

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