An Integration With Feedburner

Tuesday, November 17, 2009 | 4:51 PM

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The FeedBurner team has just announced an integration with Google Analytics. We know what many of you are saying. "About time!" We'll take it.

If you are using both Google Analytics and FeedBurner, you will automatically see campaign attribution for item clicks tracked by your AdSense For Feeds or your Google FeedBurner account. To read more and get details, please see the blog post here and take a look at the below image:

It works in the same way as URL tagging. You can see how many people click through to your site from the content sent by you in your feeds. FeedBurner is now automatically inserting Google Analytics tracking codes into the URLs of your items, or content. For instance, if you publish a blog and a subscriber reads it and then clicks through to your site, you will see that the source of that visit is Feedburner. And as you can see, it gives even more granular information, such as the type of feed reading software or email.

Taking a step back. What is a feed? From the help article, feeds "are a way for websites large and small to distribute their content well beyond just visitors using browsers. Feeds permit subscription to regular updates, delivered automatically via a web portal, news reader, or in some cases good old email. Feeds also make it possible for site content to be packaged into "widgets," "gadgets," mobile devices, and other bite-sized technologies that make it possible to display blogs, podcasts, and major news/sports/weather/whatever headlines just about anywhere." The most popular types of feed formats are RSS and Atom feeds.

If you're publishing content like this blog, then feeds are probably half the story. Feed subscribers are a very important audience to be aware of. If people are really interested in what you have to say, they'll subscribe to your feed or RSS so they can be automatically updated every time you publish new content. They don't want to miss it, and don't want to have to keep visiting your page to check if you've published new content. FeedBurner is the way you can measure how many people are using your feed and who they are. It's could be called Google Analytics for feeds :-) Or Google Analytics could be called web...analytics...burner?

Anyway, FeedBurner shows you not only how many subscribers your feed has, but also metrics like geography and reach, with a breakdown by each piece of content (or "item") you publish. It also tells whether they clicked on a link in that content or went to the actual piece of content on your site. You can also see where the subscriber is reading your feed; whether in email or some kind of feed reader, such as Google Reader.

Another thing to be aware of is AdSense For Feeds, which allows you to monetize your feeds by placing AdSense ads in them.

This integration is the first step towards using these two very similar tools together. You still need to log in to FeedBurner to actually see how many subscribers you have and the rich detail around your feed usage FeedBurner provides.

14 comments:

Kin Lane said...

Feedburner integration makes sense. I often see feeds forgotten when managing site traffic.

I will setup a FeedBurner account for people and get them using the proper feeds.

Although most people forget about their account and monitoring subscription reports.

Integration with Google Analytics and mainstream online marketing will help push RSS further into the mainstream and encourage adoption.

Jan-Loek said...

sounds great!
But what happens if you were already doing this and where adding campaign attributes by hand? Will the new automatic attributes be seen in Google Analytics or my old ones?

Family Friend Poems said...

I see Feedburner is tracking the link from the Title of my feed.
They are NOT however tracking clicks from links within the content of my feed.

Am I correct about this? If so why can't these inbound links be tracked also?

Jose Uzcategui said...

About time! ;)

Now we can make a better case for Feedburner - Thanks Google.

Jose

Katerina said...

Just noticed this today and this is awesome, and makes it way easier to track. Thanks!

Dave Nielsen said...

Jan-Loek: I had the same questions about "what if I'm already doing this?"

I found the answer in the post on the Adsense for Feeds blog that's linked to from this post:

-----
Again this will happen automatically except in one specific case: if you are already tagging your feed item URLs with Google Analtyics tags such as "utm_source" and "utm_medium" - we have disabled this feature and you will have to turn it on manually by selecting "Track clicks as a traffic source in Google Analytics." Note that if you do this, we will replace any existing "utm_" tags that may be in your permalinks with the values generated from FeedBurner.
-----


Thanks for thinking of us, Googlers. :)

Donald said...

I've considered using Google Adwords to drive traffic to my Feedburner Email Subscription form.

The problem is I have no way of tracking conversions for Feedburner Subscribers.

The conversion process is long
1.Submit email
2.Correctly fill out Captcha
3.Verify email


I can use Event Tracking with Google Analytics to track the number of click on the sign up form, but I have no way of knowing if the visitor I just paid for actually submitted and verified their email.

Also, what percentage of clicks actually lead to becoming a subscriber? I can track clicks in Google Analytics and Subscriber count in Feedburner. Why can't I see my Subscriber count and reach within Google Analytics?

There is no conversion tracking integrated with Feedburner, and no easy alternative.

Considering the state of the economy and the $100 credit for Adwords I just received in the mail, I am extremely surprised that Google doesn't make it a priority to enable Webmasters and Bloggers who use Feedburner to evaluate the value of new subscribers.

It would also be convenient to track if a visitor is a subscriber and how many times he visits.

MARUF AHMAD said...

hi dis is my site http://www.eee-lab.com how can i optimize my site in google. ?? plz help me.

Steve Olechowski said...

@Jan-Loek - if you are already doing this, we should have automatically deactivated this service for you, and you would have to manually turn it on to take advantage of it. See here for directions.

@Family Friend Poems - you are correct, FeedBurner has never tracked links inside the content itself, but you are right in that there is no reason we couldn't. It's something we'll think about as an option

Sebastian said...

Yeah, about time, and congrats!

Unfortunately, parts of your implementation are totally flawed. Sorry to be that blunt. Adding query strings to URIs is the worst concept you could have chosen.

Changing URIs will always break something. Thou shalt not manipulate URIs you don't own!

You even add query strings to query strings. Are you aware that two "?" delimiters make the URI invalid?

Please consider alternatives. Thank you in advance!

Sebastian

Ray Jr. said...

why my feedburner feed always error when I put my feed on webmaster tools?

http://fotounik.net/
http://oilandparts.cpm/

Thanks

Lauroca said...

is there a way to share your Feedburner account with another user? With Google Analytics, you can simply allow someone with a Google account in without having to share your password. It would come really handy when a whole marketing team is working on the same project. I would really appreciate a prompt :) answer.

Thanks in advance,

Steve said...

@lauroca. Unfortunately there is no way to share a FeedBurner account right now

Birdman said...

I'd like to second what @donald had to say.

I'm using Feedburner as my email subscription manager and I want to set up Conversion tracking through my Google Adwords Account to check that the clicks make it to conversions.

I need to put the code on the thank you for subscriber thank you page that Feedburner produces.

I understand that getting it to track when a user confirms the email address (although you would just include that on the email confirmation page rather than the first one), but I'd be happy with the first.

Actually, why not just leave it as an option to include it on one or the other (or both).

thanks,

justin.