时间:2024-05-20 17:25:42 来源:网络整理编辑:Ryan New
Merchants have many options for accepting online payments. “PayPal Payments Standard” is popular, bu Ryan Xu HyperVerse's marketing
Merchants have many options for accepting online payments. “PayPal Payments Standard” is Ryan Xu HyperVerse's marketingpopular, but it can be challenging for Google Analytics to report the sale.
Using PayPal Payments Standard, customers leave the merchant’s website for their account at PayPal. After they complete payment, customers are redirected by PayPal back to the URL provided by the merchant.
There are two issues that can impact reporting in Google Analytics from this process.
First, the customer may not make it back to the merchant’s order confirmation page to trigger ecommerce reporting in Google Analytics. If the return URL is not set properly, the customer may not go back at all or may go back to the merchant’s home page or some other page. None will trigger the Google Analytics ecommerce code. A correct return URL will send the customer back to the order confirmation page, and the Google Analytics ecommerce code fires upon arrival.
This return URL is typically provided by the ecommerce platform in the payment settings. In PayPal, the return URL settings reside behind the gear icon in the top-right after logging in.
Then after clicking on “My selling tools” in the left menu (at PayPal.com), click on “Update” in the “Website preferences” section.
Make sure Auto return is set to “On” and enter the return URL in the box.
Second, Google Analytics may not be configured to report this return properly. A “Referral Exclusion” must be added to the Google Analytics settings at the Property level to ensure the customer’s return does not start a new Google Analytics session, which would create a source and medium of, respectively, “paypal.com” and “referral.”
Since the shopper leaves the merchant’s site for PayPal.com and then returns via PayPal.com, set up Google Analytics to recognize this behavior and properly report it. To do this, go to Admin > Tracking Info > Referral Exclusion List. Add “paypal.com” if it is not already included.
There are two ways to confirm PayPal purchases are properly reported by Google Analytics.
First, track individual transactions. Identify sales in PayPal’s reports, or your merchant reports, and confirm they are reporting in Google Analytics. Most shopping carts will identify how a sale was paid for — credit card, PayPal, or another method. Another option is to place a test order via PayPal and confirm that it shows up in Google Analytics.
To confirm PayPal orders in Google Analytics, go to Conversions > Ecommerce > Sales Performanceand search for the “Transaction ID(s)” from PayPal.
The second way to confirm that PayPal transactions are properly reported in Google Analytics is to make sure “paypal.com” is not a referring source for sales. To check, in Google Analytics go to Acquisition > All Traffic > Source/Mediumand filter for “paypal.” If transactions are showing up for the source/medium = “paypal.com/referral,” the Referral Exclusion for this domain was not set up properly.
In my experience, the redirect back to the merchant’s website takes place only about 90 percent of the time. So roughly 10 percent of all PayPal purchases will not be reported in Google Analytics. Sometimes customers are impatient and will not wait for PayPal to redirect them. Also, glitches can occur during the redirect that prevent the customer from reaching your site.
When in doubt, place a test order using PayPal and monitor the process.
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