Questions

How can I accurately tell if the "Direct" traffic conversions I'm seeing in GA MCF is actually coming from my "Paid Search" (Adwords UTM) campaigns?

I use UTM parameters to do my own ROAS analysis by different paid advertising channels. I'm able to collect some customer conversion data from different advertising channels like Adwords, but I get a lot of "Direct" customer conversion data to whic I then don't know if Adwords had anything to do with these conversions. Since UTMs are cookie based, I'm sure I'm not 100% capturing all my UTM data accurately. I then took a look at Google Analytics MCF section, and I can see all the different reports from "Top Conversion Path" and "Model Comparison Tool", but I don't really feel 100% confident making marketing budget decisions based on the data I see here. So when I do my ROAS analysis, if I just compare my Adwords advertising spend against the Adwords UTM parameters channel my ROI is horrible (negative ROI). However, if I combine my Adwords UTM parameters channel and "Direct" conversions against my Adwords advertising spend for customers that signed up during that period, my ROI looks a lot better (positive ROI). So my question is, should I be grouping "Direct" conversions with my Adwords UTM tagged conversions when measing my ROAS for Adwords advertising spend? How do I accurately know that these "Direct" conversions actually came from my Adwords campaign through a multi-channel funnel?

3answers

Make sure you've setup advanced analytics. You'll get a better picture of which conversions were direct, and which ones were assisted by another channel. Use tags and make sure your urls include all the detailed parameters - note that savvy users might truncate that link, so use a link shortener (like bit.ly) to mask it.


Answered 9 years ago

Remember that direct doesn't mean "came to my site." It means "Google couldn't ascertain what campaign this was part of." For example, many links that come from Facebook mobile flow into direct, because the mobile app wipes the cookie. (this is part of what's known as "dark social.")

One way to get at this is to look at assisted conversions and multi channel funnel analysis in GA, which helps you start to understand how the channels interact.

Also, when adding UTM params to an Adwords campaign you can cause issues. Google can delete that stuff when it adds its own if you aren't careful.


Answered 8 years ago

Hi there - I'm a certified Google Partner and manage about $60k in spend a month.

I would first of all not use custom UTM tracking URLs for AdWords. Since Google AdWords and Analytics are tightly integrated, go with the default tracking and see what your data looks like.

If you are still not seeing the data you'd expect, next take a look at your conversion path. For instance, if you are running an ecommerce site, and you hop from www.mysite.com to store.mysite.com, there may be a break there. Another common issue is using a third-party gateway, i.e. www.mysite.com > PayPal > www.mysite.com/confirmation-page (which can be resolved using the admin feature: Referral Exclusion List).

Another thing to look at is Google Analytics > Landing Pages. You can pull up one of your AdWords-fueled landing pages, and a secondary dimension of Source/Medium to see if in fact you are correctly tracking AdWords to that page. If that traffic seems to disappear on your site, and otherwise possibly end up as Direct, then the disconnect is on your site, not in the UTM tracking parameters.

Regarding Direct traffic, you can generally expect that about half of it is unattributed organic search (depending on where your traffic normally comes from). The balance of is it direct traffic, bookmarks and some amount of unattributed (for whatever reason) traffic. I would not group Direct with your Paid Traffic spend in order to calculate ROAS.

Regarding your last question, if your traffic is coming directly from AdWords, then conversions should be attributed to AdWords. You can also take a look at your multi-channel attribution to see if AdWords contributed to any purchases with a different 'last-touch' attribution.

Bottom line is that you have to get your tracking tightened up, and not make assumptions about Direct traffic. Start by going with default UTM tracking on AdWords, and don't create custom UTM tracking URLs. See how your data looks from there (both at the landing page level and through conversions) and that should help identify where things are breaking down. From there you can move on to how you're tracking your other channels, be they paid or organic.

Hope this helps and good luck!


Answered 8 years ago

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