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Back in April, Michael Loban and I presented a webinar on the 10 Steps to Selecting a Tag Management System. We received some great feedback from attendees, some of which was from tag management system vendors themselves. If you didn’t have a chance to make the webinar, have no fear, I’ll take you through the 10 steps we covered!
It’s important to understand where you are currently with tag management. There are a few ways to think about it:
Assessing your current situation will help you understand your wants and needs of a tag management system.
Selecting a tag management system, like any other type of software within your organization, will require you to understand the stakeholders within your company. It will be important to understand:
There are likely the most vocal advocates for using a TMS.
The end users are the ones that will be using the tag management system on a daily basis. However, others will still need to have access. This is typically middle-management.
This really depends on your company’s size, but stakeholders from multiple departments like marketing and IT may need to be involved as it might directly affect their work as well.
Most often this is the C-Suite — Your CEO, CMO, CIO, and/or CFO. These are the people you will need to convince a TMS will alleviate the current analytics and tag management pain points.
Next, its important to understand your current tag management process (or lack thereof). Ask yourself a few questions:
These last three bullet points can be tough for many organizations to evaluate. The question we get all the time is, “how do we know what tags are on our site in the first place?” The easiest way to take tag inventory is to scan your site with Tag Inspector. Find out what tags are on your site NOW!
If you don’t have a defined tag management policy, you’ll need to create one. All the technology in the world won’t help your organization unless you have processes in place first to manage the tags deployed by your TMS.
Here are the components that make up a tag management policy:
This is extremely important. What are your short-term and long-term objectives with a tag management system? The features and functionality of your TMS will need to map back to your business requirements:
Let me give you a basic example of mapping features and functions to a business requirements: A short-term objective could be to move all Google Analytics tags to our new tag management system. Therefore, one requirement of the TMS would be template tags for all types of Google Analytics tags and configurations. We don’t want to have to create custom tags for each Google Analytics tag we need to implement.
Now you know what features and functionality your tag management system needs to have. But who will manage the implementation and ongoing support? There are two main types of service options:
The tag management industry is still young, but growing rapidly. With rapid growth has come consolidation within the industry:
There are tons of resources from companies like E-Consultancy on tag management systems, so I recommend taking your time to research all options.
Schedule time for a product demo. You won’t be able to fully evaluate a solution unless you can hear presentations from all your candidates on the features and why each is different from the others. Also, its really your job to help the vendor make the best presentation possible.
We always recommend that clients ask for a testing environment to fully evaluate whether each tool will work in our clients’ environments. This is also a great way to get feedback from all the end users who will actually be using the product every day. We also recommend you contact existing clients for each vendor. This gives you the opportunity to talk with companies that have gone through a similar evaluation process and can give you the pros and cons of their selection. Have a list of questions ready to ask:
The answers to these questions might just be crucial to your selection process. Step 8b is obviously to choose the solution that is right for your company. The tag management system must:
So you have chosen your tag management system, congratulations! Your work is done, right? No, silly Sally, it’s not. Now it is time to get to work! You’ll need to use your organization’s current change management process to implement the tag management system and ensure it is set up for success in the long-term. You’ll need to:
Question: How do you protect your organization from random people making random decisions? We spoke about this earlier on in this post, you need to implement a tag management policy!
But, once you have a tag management policy implemented, how will you enforce it? Glad you asked! By using the Tag Inspector’s Tag Policies feature, of course! It will allow you to create a policy using rules and conditions to scan your site regularly and report on policy errors across your site.