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Why Would You Want To Exclude Your IP From Your Google Analytics Statistics? - By: Amy Armitage People get excited about their websites, whether they're a Mom posting family pics or a huge corporation like IBM. Whether they are used for fun, part of one's education, or an important business component, websites are something in which people take tremendous pride. So when a new site is launched or new pages are added, the creators want all their family and friends or all their customers and employees to log on and take a look. This code is needed in addition to the tracking code that should be included on the bottom of every page on your site. The next step involves visiting the site from any computer that you want excluded, so that the cookie is set. You can easily explain the procedure to your family and friends (and do it for your non-tech ones) when you send them the "cookie recipe." The final step is to create the filter that will scan for your custom cookie and exclude the data from the cookie-holding computer. Just follow these simple steps or, if you don't find them simple, get some help from a tech-head in the office or in the neighborhood. There are lots of them around these days, thankfully. -Enter your GA account and choose Analytics Settings. -Click on Filter Manager. -Choose Add Filter, which makes the Create New Filter page appear. -Key in a Filter Name for this new filter (perhaps use "Dynamic IP filter"). -In the Filter Type drop-down list, choose Exclude. -In the filter field, select User Defined -For the filter pattern, select No Report -For Make Case Sensitive, enter No. -In the Apply Filter to Website Profiles section, choose the Available Website Profiles to which the filter should be applied. -Click on Add to transfer selected profiles to the Selected Website Profiles list. -Last, click on Finish to create the filter and begin applying it to the incoming data The last detail of all is to set up all your browsers. If you use different browsers on a regular basis, you'll need to visit your newly-created "set cookie page" from each one you use. Every browser wants to store its cookies in a particular location. People get excited about their websites, whether they're a Mom posting family pics or a huge corporation like IBM. Amy Armitage is the head of Business Development for Lunarpages. Lunarpages provides quality web hosting from their US-based hosting facility. They offer a wide-range of services from linux virtual private servers and managed solutions to shared and reseller hosting plans. |