Mobile app version of vmapp.org
Login or Join
Cofer257

: Are there any downfalls to having my Google Adwords landing pages on a subdomain? I wish to keep all of my landing pages on a subdomain, like c.domain.com. Visitors end up on those landing

@Cofer257

Posted in: #GoogleAdwords #GoogleAnalytics #GoogleSearch #Subdomain

I wish to keep all of my landing pages on a subdomain, like c.domain.com. Visitors end up on those landing pages by clicking a Google ad.

A follow-up question to this, is: How do I properly set this up in Google Analytics? I'm thinking that traffic to the campaign pages may very well lead to the main site, even though that isn't the intention.

The reason I have for keeping the campaign pages on a subdomain, has to do with the CMS, i.e. it's a purely technical reason.

10.02% popularity Vote Up Vote Down


Login to follow query

More posts by @Cofer257

2 Comments

Sorted by latest first Latest Oldest Best

 

@Megan663

Subdomain or subfolder

It depends. You say "Visitors end up on those landing pages by clicking a Google ad."

By this, do you mean that you users will only reach those pages by clicking on ads? And that you then don't really need these pages indexed? Because if that is the case you can of course noindex the pages and put them on whichever subdomain you like.

If the landing pages would also be useful to a user clicking through from another site or organic results, then it's generally better to use a subfolder. See the answer linked to in Stephen's comment.

Tracking in Google Analytics

Assuming you do use a different subdomain, a visitor will land on c.domain.com and may click through to domain.com. When they do this, their session on c.domain.com will end, and a new one will begin on the domain.com property. Setting them up as different properties won't fix this problem.

Instead, set up cross-domain tracking. This means the same tracking code is used across the different subdomains. There are a few different ways to set that up—see the official documentation here—but if in doubt about how to proceed I'd strongly recommend using Google Tag Manager (described in detail on that page).

Once you've done that, all the hits on the subdomain and the main domain will belong to the same GA property. So you need to watch out for page paths.

Google Analytics only reports page paths by default, so when you look in the landing pages report you won't see c.domain.com/some-page listed there, but just /some-page. There's no way to distinguish whether the page was on c.domain.com or domain.com. You can get around this in one of two ways:


Give your landing pages on c.domain.com distinctive page paths. For example, don't have a /contact page on the subdomain and on the main domain, because this will make your reports difficult to interpret.
Get domain names to appear in your reports, by consulting this section of the documentation.

10% popularity Vote Up Vote Down


 

@Speyer207

I would suggest that instead of having c.domain.com, do for domain.com/c - The reason is that Google treats each subdomain as a new property and you will lose out on a lot of SEO sauce as well.

If you want to set it up on GA, you will have to setup each subdomain on Google Analytics as a new property.

10% popularity Vote Up Vote Down


Back to top | Use Dark Theme