Ask How do I track affiliate links using Google Analytics?

Logen65

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To track affiliate links in Google Analytics, start by adding UTM parameters to your links. These are tags you attach to the URL to identify the source, medium, and campaign, like your blog or social media. Use Google's URL Builder to create these links easily. Then, share these tagged links with your affiliates. In Google Analytics 4, go to Reports, then Life Cycle, and select Traffic Acquisition to see data on clicks and conversions from your links. For more details, set up custom events in Google Analytics or use Google Tag Manager to track specific actions. Testing links before sharing ensures they work correctly. This method helps you understand which affiliates drive the most traffic. What are your thoughts on tracking affiliate links this way?
 
I learned that you can track affiliate links in Google Analytics by using something called UTM parameters. These are little bits of text you add at the end of your link that help you see where your traffic comes from. You can use Google's free Campaign URL Builder tool to add things like source, medium, and campaign name. Once someone clicks your affiliate link, it shows up in your Google Analytics under "Acquisition > Campaigns." It's very helpful to know which posts or emails are actually sending traffic.
 
I use it mostly to understand what content works best. You can see which pages keep people reading the longest and which ones they leave quickly. The pages where people spend a lot of time are usually the best places to put your most important affiliate links. It tells you what your audience really cares about, so you can stop guessing and create more of what they already like.
 
To track affiliate links using Google Analytics, you can use UTM parameters to tag your URLs. These parameters allow you to track where your traffic is coming from and how your affiliate links are performing. Use a URL builder tool like Google's Campaign URL Builder to add UTM tags (e.g., source, medium, campaign) to your affiliate link. For example, you might tag it like this: ?utm_source=instagram&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=affiliate_product1
 
A simple way many people do it is by adding UTM parameters to affiliate links before sharing them on blogs, social media, or emails. That way, Google Analytics can show where visitors came from and which content is getting attention. Link shorteners and tracking plugins can also help keep links clean because long affiliate URLs sometimes look messy and can scare people away from clicking.
 

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