Referral Tracking – How To Set Up And Track Your Referrals With Template


Once you defined your sales and marketing goals, you can tailor your referral program to get you the results you want to achieve. You can use several methods to record your data and track your referrals.

Why should you track referrals?

The simple answer is “he said, she said”. Whether you use the old methods of tracking a referral manually or the newer ways by using a referral software, you need to be able to trace back who is referring you.

There are various reasons why you should track referrals. Like figuring out if who you need to reward, and when you need to reward them. But more importantly, building a referral tracking system can help you make better decisions to further increase your referral marketing growth. Here are some other reasons.

Gauge customer satisfaction

Tracking your referral program will help identify a few key analytics to help you see the satisfaction of your customers. If customers are satisfied with your program, you’ll likely see a good amount of referral flow. Metrics like Net Promoter Score (NPS), Customer Satisfaction Score (CSAT), Customer effort score (CES) can help you track your customer satisfaction. A satisfied customer is more likely to refer than one who is not satisfied (this is true whether a reward is present or not).

View participation rate

You need to keep track of the participation rate to help you measure the success of your referral program. By looking at participation rates or the number of program sign-ups, you can determine if what you’re doing is working. If the rate of participation is low, you can try revamping your current referral marketing approach to up participation rate again.

See the share rate

Reveal the number of advocates sending the referrals. You can analyze the sharing channels preferred by your advocates, such as email, social media, dedicated link, etc. You can then provide more content sharing ideas for your advocates and maximize the ease of use and conversion.

A satisfied customer is likely to refer. Plus, if you offer a reward you’ll be able to gauge satisfaction there as well. A customer will refer if the reward is enticing enough.

Keep track of the referral share rate

How many referrals are your advocates generating? You may be able to push this number higher by creating a tier-based reward system. The main difference a referral rate and a share rate is that your member might share their referral code 1000 times with people on social media and only actually receive 1 referral, which would be only .1% referral rate.

Remember a new customer will buy if they are also satisfied with what you are offering.

Track conversion rate

As we mentioned, your member might share many times, but only get 1 or 2 referrals. You’ll be able to see how many referrals follow through and purchase your product. Based on this number you can determine if there are any changes you need to make in the program or promotion strategy. Many people use this number to determine how successful their program is.

This can also link up to how long it takes the referred customer to purchase a product after clicking on their referral link or code to determine how well your redirect, landing page, and sales funnels are.

Tip: If this number is low, you may want to revamp your reward to the referral or restructure your program to fit their needs better.

Track referrals to help create a referral program model

There can be a variety of ways you push referrals to happen. For example, you may want to create an expiration date for members to promote your business or provide certain discount code and or credit. If this is the case, you need to keep track of all the moving parts that go into your referral program.

Tracking your referral information is probably one of the more difficult and confusing aspects of referral marketing. But, there are a few options whether it be tracking via spreadsheet, forms, or cookies.

Not all referral programs are created equal, and they shouldn’t be. You might need a simple solution rather than something more complex based on your business needs. We’ll discuss how tracking your referrals work and the most important parts you’ll need to understand.

Referral tracking models

The diagram above shows an example of a referral program and how it works. Why is creating your referral tracking model important? As mentioned before, you’ll want to measure every single component. Tracking how A moves to B can help you understand where you are the strongest or the weakest.

Your sales have been blowing up lately and you’re thrilled but still unsure about what is causing the spike in sales. You have a feeling it might be the referral program you’ve set-up but you’re not tracking them effectively to find out if you’re right.

The other reason why you need to track your referral program is to be able to connect with each experience. From the time the referral has been initiated to associating the referral with the coupon, the date or cookies to help monitor the time of the payout. Let’s break this down a bit:promoters

  1. Registering your Promoters
  2. Assigning a referral code for your Promoter
  3. Connecting Referrals with the Promoter
  4. Reward redemption

Each trigger is initiated once the unique tracker (referral tracker) has been tagged as the first A to B interaction.

What is a referral tracker?

Referral trackers (or referral code ) are little bits of code inserted into referral link (URLs) for tracking purposes. It acts as a unique identifier.

Referral Tracking Spreadsheet Promoters Airtable Referral Code generator

With the example above, the referral code is the unique referral tracker we will be using to identify what Referrals go to whom and when redemptions of rewards are initiated. Whether you use a referral link, code, or physical coupon, each referral tracker can be triggered.

Let’s see how it works in three different ways:

1. Manual referral process

If you are using a physical coupon for your brick and mortar store, you can provide business cards or printed materials to Promoters so that they can write their name on them to give it to their Referrals. Or you can even assign a code on the printed material and that code will be associated with the Promoter, and anyone who uses that code will be tied back to the Promoter.

These options would work well if you were handing out referral cards, for example. Here are some popular referral card ideas you can check out.

2. Online referral process

The simplest referral program model would be:

  1. Member of the referral program invites their friend using their unique referral tracker (link or code).
  2. Tracking matches the unique identifier to the correct person in a referral tracking system like Google analytics then gets links them to the referred person.
  3. Once the person who was invited makes a purchase using the link, the member (Promoter) of the program gets a reward.

3. Using a referral program software

With a referral program software, it gets a bit complex, but the software does all the work

  1. Javascript web pixel tracking is used to set user attributes (uses user browser cookies) on a confirm page
  2. Postback URL – call back to the referral program software with conversion’s information and URL parameters that is passed to you. Think of it as a medium
  3. API call – calls back to the referral program with the URL parameters that is passed to you to reference the member.

Referral program using our spreadsheet

We actually created a Do-it-yourself Referral Tracking Spreadsheet that you can use if you decided to test out and start your own referral program. Whether you want to do a trial of a referral program for your business, or simply understand the scope of how everything works. We thought it would be fun to make and show you how it’s done.

After doing it all manually you may realize how having a system in place makes it easier.

There are three different tabs on our referral program spreadsheet:

  • Promoters
  • Referrals
  • Promoter Reward Redemption

Promoters

The Promoter tab is where you will be able to find the customers who have joined your referral program. They will be assigned a unique referral code for tracking.

In order for people to register, you can provide the form for them to sign up, or you can have someone on your team register them. All you need to do is Click on Grid ViewRegister Promoter. This will open the form that will allow you to add each promoter.

Additionally, you can click on” Open form” along the top of the menu if you’d like to get a form URL to share. This URL could be emailed to potential promoters if want them self-register.

As you now have seen, Airtable will provide a form for you to register your Promoters or provide the link to share with your Promoters to register on their own.

Once you have filled out the form, a “referral code” will be generated automatically for your Promoters for tracking their referrals and rewards.

Obviously, it’s not a fancy referral program, but for those who are just looking to explore how to run a referral program, and don’t feel the need to use software at this time, you have the option to use this simple spreadsheet to dip your toes a bit.

Referrals

In the Referrals section, you can switch from Gridview to Referral Sale to open up the form to add a referral.

The form is similar to the Promoters form. In that, you can open it within the Airtable or with the “Open form” button to open to its own URL.

Once the Referral is linked to a Promoter, the Promoter can redeem their reward.

Something to consider: updating Referrals

When the Referral has to take action to earn a reward, you’ll have to update the status of the Referral. The typical statuses are PendingQualifiedApproved and Denied. Rewards can be tied to Qualified and Approved statuses, dependent on the program design.

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While the spreadsheet can help you keep track of Promoters to Referrals and Promoters to Rewards, you might want to be able to track Referral purchases too so that you can identify when and who purchased something so that credit is given to the Promoter.

Pretty cool right? It doesn’t cost you anything to use, but let’s take a deeper dive to how tracking your Referrals in a more advanced way can help you do more with your referral program.

Promoter reward redemption

When the Promoter wants to redeem their reward, go to Open Form under the Promoter Reward Redemptions tab. Find the Promoter via the form drop down and the amount the Promoter wants to redeem. Note this can be anything you want to associate with the redemption.

You can add notes to the redemption process form. In this example, we wrote that the Promoter came into the store and redeemed his reward, as seen in the image below.

The referral tracking system also includes the date and the time it was redeemed to help you keep track of when everything happened.

9 best ways to track your referrals

Aside from the Airtable we’ve created, there are other ways to track referrals. Here are 9 ways you can consider.

1. Spreadsheet

The success of your referral program relies on creating an effective database. Tracking the old fashion way using a spreadsheet might be an option if you decide to manually approve your referral payouts.

It might also be a good option if you want to first test out a referral program before diving in head first, as we mentioned earlier. Or if you’re a small business who might not need a complex program that is equipped with referral software.

If you don’t want to use our Do-it-yourself Referral Tracking Spreadsheet, you can use a Google Spreadsheet or Excel, you will need to create a unique referral ID for each of your Promoters.

But don’t stop there. You can still use a variation of technology to make the program easy to run. Whether you have your employees enter in the information to track referral sales or if your payout is when you collect leads from your influencers, customers, you can use a simple form builder and have it sync with Google Sheets.

For example, you can use Zapier integration to help make it easy to add, track, and collect data.

2. Google Analytics

Google Analytics has an attribution model built into it. You can use a variety of attribution models such as first touch or last touch depending on who you want to credit for your referral.

From the data, you will clearly see where a majority of your conversions are coming from. It’s an easy way to asses which partners are working for you and which are not. Also unlike some tracking software, Google Analytics is absolutely free.

3. Using UTM parameters

This technique lies somewhere in between the tracking software and Google Analytics when it comes to complexity. You will have to provide your guests with a unique URL through which they can refer their friends or colleagues. The data of unique URL for specific visits will be available in your Google analytics data so you do need to have that set up as well.

This method is free as well but involves a lot of additional work for the marketing team as opposed to using the Attribution Model already built into Google.

4. Coupon codes

Similar to UTM URLs you can also provide customers that sign up for your product or service with their own personal coupon codes. These coupon codes are then shared by your customers with their acquaintances to spread the word about your business. You can judge the strength of your referring partners based on the number of times their coupon code is mentioned in your data.

5. Use a redirect referral page

Generally speaking, using a referral redirect will give you plenty of control over what your new customer will see. This option allows you to drop your referral on the page of your choice after they click on the referral link provided by your customer.

In many cases, the referral will land directly on your homepage. But, you can drop them on a form or contact page as well. This option typically uses cookies to tie the referral to your customer, so even if you don’t have them fill out a form, you will be able to track certain information. This option works really well for eCommerce businesses.

6. Referring form fields

You might have noticed a few companies asking you to enter details in the field “how did you hear about us”. You can have a similar field on your sign-up form. If you’re incentivizing your referrals, people that refer your business to others will surely ask your potential customers to write their name in that field.

It’s not a sure-fire method of collecting the data but it’s a start. If you want to forgo using cookies, you can always get information on your referrals by asking them to fill in a form. This option is best for service businesses who may need to set an appointment or provide a quote or follow up in some other manner with a referral.

7. Confirm redirect URL

In some cases, you may not be able to add additional scripts to your referral capture pages. This option works by using a page that takes information in the URL of your external source into a confirmation page, then it forwards the user to the desired landing page. This might work best for those businesses who are using various form creation sites that use a redirect method upon form completion.

8. Old fashion way

If you’re a brick and mortar store, you could have printed materials and write their names on the back of the material like a referral card, coupon, etc. You can check out our referral card ideas. Or the cashier would ask the customer who referred them and they would then enter that information into their spreadsheet.

9. Referral tracking software

The easiest way to keep a track of your referral data is by using a referral tracking software. Most simple referral programs come with a simple setup wizard that allows you to get started within a few minutes. In most cases, you simply enter a few basic details and the software then generates, tracks referrals, and even issues rewards on your behalf.

What else can you track using a referral program software?

You can manually or automatically approve a referral once the tracking event occurs. While having it work synced with different criteria like cookies and attributions. Using a referral program software can help you expand and fine-tune your terms as in what defines a reward to creating a set conversion, to fraud detection.

What is the Conversion Tracking Script?

The Conversion Tracking script is added to a page that signifies that a conversion has happened. This could define a successful demo form submission, quote request form submission, e-commerce purchase, mailing list sign-up, or any other on-site action that you want to track. The script is triggered whenever the page is loaded by a visitor.

The Conversion Tracking script does three things:

  • Checks if the user is a referral, by checking for the existence of a cookie.
  • Creates a referral record and attributes it to the correct referring member, if the user is a referral.
  • Optionally adds parameters to the new referral record from your site. Examples include the referral’s name, email address, and purchase amount.

This script does the hard work of creating a referral upon a sale or other desired actions and adds information (parameters) about the new referral.

The Conversion Tracking script is usually placed in one of the following areas:

  • A thank you page after a successful form submission.
  • A confirmation page after a successful e-commerce purchase.
  • A welcome page after a successful user sign-up.

Automatically approve referral?

Approving your referrals and rewards can be time-consuming if you are using a spreadsheet for your referral program. Identifying when the sales happen, and if you have a waiting period before providing any rewards to your promoter (perhaps based on your return policy). And keeping track of when that sale was initiated, on top of reminding yourself to follow up with the sales after 30-90 days.

Referral software can help you automate the process. With most referral software you can even automatically approve or set it manually. Here’s an example:

You may have the option to select ‘yes’ or ‘no’ for automatic approval. If “Yes” referral will be approved once the conversion tracking event occurs (On your purchase or booking confirmation page). If it’s set to “No” you’ll have to manually approve the referral. This option is typically used if the sale is not complete right away or if the sales process is longer than usual.

Tracking Expire

Cookies are added to the referral software to help keep track of who should get the rightful credit. If a referral was offered the link from two different Promoters, who gets the credit? With a cookie, the first link the referral clicks on will store the Promoters ID and cannot be overridden. The tracking cookies (first and third party) will live for the number of days specified after the user clicks. If they click again, they have issued a new cookie and the time begins again.

Here are a few cookie examples and how they work:

Tracking with First Interaction Attribution

Last Smart Interaction (Recommended) – Credit for the referral goes to the last member whose link was clicked by the referral. For example, if a user first clicks Member A’s link and then clicks Member B’s link, Member B’s tracking cookie will replace Member A’s cookie.

First Interaction – Credit for the referral goes to the first member whose link was clicked by the referral. For example, if a user first clicks Member A’s link and then clicks Member B’s link, Member A’s cookie will not be replaced, except in the case that it has expired.

Last Interaction – Cookies are always replaced on a new referral link click, regardless of whether the referral clicks the same member’s link more than once. This reduces tracking accuracy and fraud detection but can be useful if multiple members and referrals are expected to share the same device, as each referral link click on the same device will be tracked as a different user.

With that said, you’ll want to discuss and ask questions with the referral software of your choosing, since different referral software companies might have a different take on how to handle cookies.

Common questions you should be asking your referral software provider would be:

  • How long does the tracking cookie stay in referral’s browser?
  • What happens when a referral uses a mobile browser using the referral link and then switches to a desktop browser, not using the link?
  • How long can I set my cookie duration? Can I set it to forever for my promoters?
  • How should I provide this data on my privacy policy and cookie policy so I am GDPR compliant?

We went through quite a bit on how to track your referrals, how you can track referrals manually using our referral tracking spreadsheet and how referral program software can help create advanced features for your needs. If you are still wanting to know why you need a referral software, feel free to try our spreadsheet to see how your business can grow, look at some of our referral marketing statistics to help you understand the importance of referral program.



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