![]() Happy Tableau'ing from The Office of Analysis. Our Data Viz guy, Allan, has used Tableau's native connector to Google Analytics to attach, pull down the Events and create a cool bubble chart to show what sort of things are getting "Event hits" on our site. In this way we're able to get a very granular view of how people are actually interacting with the Viz's. ![]() Then using the Event Label, when someone manipulates the dropdowns on the page to interact with the Viz and presses the submit button, we grab all the values of the dropdowns and send them to Google as an Event Label (pipe delimited). Cyfe is all-in-one dashboard software for analyzing data from online services like Google Analytics, Salesforce, AdSense, MailChimp, Amazon, Facebook, etc. So we get a separate Event Action for our Enrollment Viz and our Course Viz. Then we used the Event Action to differentiate between the pages that host the Viz's. Since we had already been using events to track links to PDF's etc., we decided to make a new Event Category for the Tableau Viz's. Interacts with one of our Viz's, it fires off one of Google's Javascript events.Įvents allow 3 levels of detail "Event Category", "Event Action" and "Event Label". I decided to use Google Analytics Events, and track when someone hits one of the dropdowns on our site to manipulate a Viz. ![]() We immediately noticed that we'd be losing the URL parameters that we had been using to track (into a local database) how people interact with our Viz's. Instead of simply embedding workbooks from Tableau Public, we're now using the Data API to load and interact with embedded Vizualizations on our webpages. The Office of AAA at USU has recently moved our Tableau Data Vizualizations to a Tableau Server environment. Instead of simply embedding workbooks from Tableau Public, were now using the Data API to load and interact with embedded visualizations on our webpages. ![]()
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