Hello all,
As my company has begun using Marketo for events, our sales team has sent along emails with names of clients that would like to register and our events coordinator went ahead and registered these people before I could realize what was happening and the consequences.
Now we have a lot of leads that are "mis-cookied." As in, they are cookied to our events coordinator's IP address and her web activity is showing up as if it belonged to these leads.
Has anyone else dealt with this? How can I clearly explain that we cannot do this in the future? And, most importantly, how can I fix this?
Thanks!
Emily
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What I'm seeing is that the leads she registered have her activities in their activity log. We have one lead that's up to over 200 page views because he is cookied to someone in our marketing department...
When she registers these clients, she puts in their name, their email, etc. so that they will receive the auto-responder telling them that they are registered.
Does that make more sense? If her activity log was polluted, I wouldn't mind a bit. But the way it stands now, I keep getting false lead alerts about clients doing things that they're not really doing...
I guess that as long as we get them to click a link or fill out a form, the problem would be solved - now getting them to do one of these things will be the challenge...
Thanks,
Emily
Erin - that is exactly the problem we're having. I highly doubt that one of our current clients has been on our website 200+ times...
Evan - this all sounds good. I'll have these marketers and AEs clear their cookies and attempt to re-cookie the leads. In the future I will certainly work to ensure that we do not "help out" by registering clients in this way and that we just change their progression status within the program in Marketo. It's not an issue with SFDC because we do not have it.
The form proxy is a good suggestion, but I know that we would never have the time to implement, and really, we should be working harder to force clients to register themselves and not say, "no problem, we can register you."
Thanks,
Emily