Reputation: 20350
With Google Analytics I can push a custom event to the service with code like this in JavaScript:
_gaq.push(['_trackEvent', 'Videos', 'Play', 'Gone With the Wind']);
Is there a way to do this with Eloqua in conjunction with their JavaScript tracking code?
I found that I can do this:
_elq.trackEvent('http://example.com/documents/whitepaper.pdf')
But the example is specific to Outbound Link Tracking, and I'm not sure what the other parameters would be, if there are any?
Upvotes: 5
Views: 1776
Reputation: 1
I would recommend to use the latest Oracle documentation https://docs.oracle.com/en/cloud/saas/marketing/eloqua-user/Help/EloquaAsynchronousTrackingScripts/Tasks/TrackingCustomURLs.htm
Eloqua reports reference page views so rather than custom events, you could use custom URL's to push any custom data. Two methods exposed are:
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 5217
I went on their website and checked the function, it has 3 parameters:
> _elq.trackEvent
function (a,b,c){t(a,b,c)}
They all get passed to the URL:
> _elq.trackEvent('test111', 'test222', 'test333')
undefined
Resource interpreted as Image but transferred with MIME type text/html: "http://s33.t.eloqua.com/visitor/v200/svrGP?pps=10&siteid=33&elq=test222&ref=test111&ref2=test333&ms=786"
This is just reverse engineering, they don't have any official documentation about it that I can find.
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 9603
Judging from the Eloqua Asynchronous Visitor Tracking Scripts, Eloqua doesn't support Google Analytics-like event tracking.
You can track:
Upvotes: 2