last day (15 days later) » 

4:29 PM
Hello
So you're offering a product (your application) to your customers, and you're customers have their own users?
 
That is correct.
 
and you want analytics for product, not for your customers.
 
Correct. We want to understand whether our product is working as we intend.
To learn from how the users behave to improve the product.
 
From your question, why is it important to track the email sent?
I mean why is it important to track it in GA?
 
Because a user might have received many different emails, so, we want to know if sending email 1, 2 and 3 is more effective at getting email 3 open than just sending email 3.
 
4:40 PM
So for that purpose, I think you should look at campaign tagging in your emails.
That's the standard way of analysing email performance in GA.
you'd have different campaign parameters for links within the 3 different emails.
 
Yes, we'll do that, but that will track opens and clicks, not emails sent.
 
Yup, the platform sending the email will provide you with a count of "sent, opened, rejected, etc"
Marketo would be an example of that
 
The platform sending emails is our own application that we are developing.
Through sendgrid.
 
hmm...
 
Sendgrid will offer some stats, but correlating it to google analytics is impossible.
 
4:42 PM
then maybe you can hook into a service such as mailchimp to send out the emails?
usually what happens is in our CRM, we know which clients (with id) that we send emails to, the emails are then tagged with campaign parameters.
Then we can slice our data in GA few different ways, client specific or campaign specific.
we rarely look at client-specific, because we always look at a segment of clients.
 
MailChimp doesn't do what we need. Our app generates the emails based on quite a few criteria.
 
we would then take an export of the GA data, and combine that with our CRM data on emails sent, which emails they got, how many touch points and then if they've converted or not
 

last day (15 days later) »