Data & Tracking
Track visitor behavior, capture custom profile attributes, set conversion goals, manage cookies and GDPR opt-outs, and configure cross-domain and cross-device identity. The data foundation for personalization.
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Personyze client side cookies
Reference for the cookies and local storage entries Personyze uses for visitor identity, session tracking, and frequency capping — including expiration, scope, and GDPR-relevant retention controls.
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Categories Tracking
One important factor for many types of recommendations on both content and product sites is what category is being viewed, and this is not something that is always necessarily set…
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User Profile Data Setup and Synchronizing in Personyze
Add permanent profile fields, import users in bulk from a file, feed, SFTP, or API, tie them to visitors with a key, and use them for ABM and CRM targeting.
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GDPR Compliance & Opt-Out for Personyze Tracking
How to opt visitors out of Personyze tracking for GDPR/privacy compliance using JavaScript, and how to verify and re-enable tracking when consent is granted.
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Cross-Device Tracking
Identify Your Visitors When They Browse from Multiple Devices, or Based on Offline CRM Data Overview of the User Identification Process By default, Personyze uses cookies (Session and User cookies,…
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Cross-Domain Tracking
Cross-Domain Tracking with Personyze Personyze enables automatic tracking of user activities across different domains! Doing so will enable you to track the entire activity of users throughout all your domains.…
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Grab Data from Your Site — Session, Profile & Identity
Capture values from your pages — cart totals, form inputs, emails, CRM IDs — and use them for targeting, dynamic content, and cross-device recognition.
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Setting Conversion Goals Tracking
UI Path: Account Settings > General > Goals What are Conversion Goals? Conversion goals measure meaningful user actions on your website, such as form submissions, downloads, coupon usage, or any…
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One-Page Applications
Enable Personyze tracking and personalization on single-page applications (SPAs) where URL changes don't trigger full page reloads. Plus how SPA mode interacts with cross-domain tracking.