I took the certification practice exam the other day and would like the thoughts from the community around this specific question (and the correct answer):
I actually created a test program to see what the outcome would be when linking to two third-party sites that didn't contain our Munchkin tracking code:
Sanford (or Dan) - I know this is an old thread but can you please help me understand the meaning of "fills out a form or clicks a link in an email that directs to each domain"? Can you give me an example? I'm struggling with this because I can't picture one URL pointing to multiple domains. Nor can I imagine how a form would direct to multiple domains. I must be missing something and this question has niggled at me for a couple of years (just didn't have a reason to chase it down before).
A single URL can only point to a single domain, absolutely!
But if you can get someone to click on http://pages.example.com/some-lp.html and then send them another email from, for example, a subsidiary, and have them click on http://pages.example2.com/some-other-lp.html then you'll have them associated on both domains.
Same idea with a form: they'd have to be led to each domain individually.
Now me, I would never rely on this, as I have other tricks up my sleeve... but it is the official way (which is to say, there is no special way).
Thank you, Sanford! In that case though, what is wrong with answers B or C? In fact, your description seems to fit answer C.
Denise
Yeah, it's not very well phrased. Problem with [B] and [C] is they suggest that merely by (organically) visiting other websites, you will transfer your association to another site. But in fact it only works if you take a, shall we say, pre-gated path to another website via an email link. But you're right that this is a form of "visiting another website" from the lead's perspective, at least if they don't think about being tracked.
I guess having never worked with a Marketo instance where the company had multiple domains I'm struggling to understand the use case for this and/or the underlying setup. But Marketo puts it on the MCE test every year so I'd like to understand.
Would this be the use case? Say I have a company with 2 web sites that have separate domains:
1) www.easy-doks.com
2) www.doksolution.com
I purchase Marketo and then want to be able to track the known users across both domains because they represent the same business. Why isn't putting the munchkin code on both web sites enough to organically track the user across both of them?
@Marketo: if anyone from Marketo is reading this, please add it to the product documentation (or tell us where to find it if it's there) since you consider it important enough to keep putting it on the MCE exam.
1) www.easy-doks.com
2) www.doksolution.com
I purchase Marketo and then want to be able to track the known users across both domains because they represent the same business. Why isn't putting the munchkin code on both web sites enough to organically track the user across both of them?
Because the cookie from www.easy-doks.com (which will be set at the parent level .easy-doks.com by default) will not be present when the same visitor goes to www.doksolution.com, so they will get a brand-new, anonymous cookie. If they went to info.easy-doks.com (same parent) they would share the existing cookie, but once they get a new cookie they have to be associated again.
Again, association can be as "simple" as getting them clicking an email link to www.doksolution.com (or go.doksolution.com, etc.), or as "simple" as getting them to fill out a form on www.doksolution.com. "Simple" in quotes because that means you have to get them to re-convert, even though it's the same human. Frustrating but (with basic technology) unavoidable.
Of course, there's much the same problem when people use multiple devices: if they click a link to www.easy-doks.com from their phone, they have to click a link to the same domain (which could be the exact same link) to be associated on their laptop. At least there, though, the leads have demonstrated interest in a particular link, so you can cross their fingers that they'll open their email on the other device and re-follow the link, or that eventually they'll open an email for the same product line on the other device.
I tend to think that waiting for people to re-associate is a losing battle, which is why I use other methods to ensure that they'll be associated across a set of related domains.
Hi Sanford - Okay, I finally get it. It's all about how to figure out that the person associated with cookie A from Domain A is the same as the person associated with cookie B from Domain B. Thank you very much for taking the time and effort to educate me on this topic! Much appreciated!
Denise
P.S. Of course, I'm curious about your other methods but I imagine those are your "secret sauce."