Start with a strong tagging infrastructure
Benefits of sitewide tagging
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LähiTapiola’s use of first-party data results in an increase in conversions
How sitewide tagging works
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Sitewide tags, such as the Google tag, place first-party cookies on your website.
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Customers interact with your ad and the sitewide tag stores first-party cookies with info about the interaction.
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When the customer converts on your website, the tag reads this cookie and records the conversion in your Google Ads account.
Get started with sitewide tagging
Want to learn more?
Watch a Google Ads Tutorial on sitewide tagging
Take a learning course on tagging excellence
Frequently asked questions
Google Ads only collects data on pages where you have deployed the associated tags. It’s important to provide users with clear, comprehensive information about the data that you collect on your website, and to get consent where legally required or required by Google’s policies.
To help you keep pace with industry changes and continue measuring performance, Google has further improved the tagging experience. The Google tag is a single, reusable tag that replaces the global site tag and simplifies measurement with new capabilities that don’t require additional code. If you have the global site tag set up already, you will not need to make any changes. Your existing tag implementations will continue to work and will be automatically updated to the Google tag.
If you need to manage multiple tags on your website, we recommend using our comprehensive enterprise tag management system, Google Tag Manager. It allows you to configure and deploy tags from a variety of Google and non-Google products within the same interface. If you’re looking for a simpler implementation directly on your site, we recommend setting up sitewide tagging via the Google tag to power measurement across Google Ads and Google Analytics.
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