So far in this series, we’ve covered:
utm_source→ who sent the trafficutm_medium→ how it got to your site
Now it’s time for the third piece: utm_campaign — the tag that tells you why the traffic exists in the first place.
The Basics
👉 utm_campaign is used to identify the specific marketing campaign or promotion that drove the click.
Think of it like a label on a folder:
- utm_source = Facebook
- utm_medium = Paid Social
- utm_campaign = Black Friday Sale
Without it, you know where people came from and how they got there, but not the bigger purpose behind it.
Common Examples of utm_campaign
Marketers typically use utm_campaign to track things like:
- Seasonal promotions →
utm_campaign=black_friday - Product launches →
utm_campaign=new_product_launch - Events →
utm_campaign=webinar_march2025 - Newsletters →
utm_campaign=weekly_digest - Special offers →
utm_campaign=free_trial_offer
It’s all about giving context to why that traffic came in.
Why It’s Important
Without utm_campaign, all your traffic from the same source + medium gets lumped together.
For example:
- Facebook Ads (Source = facebook, Medium = paid_social)
- Black Friday Sale
- Summer Giveaway
- Webinar Signup
If you don’t add utm_campaign, you won’t be able to tell these apart in your reports.
By tagging campaigns properly, you can:
- Compare performance between different promotions
- Track ROI of specific campaigns
- Spot which offers or content themes resonate most with your audience
Best Practices for Using utm_campaign
- Be descriptive but concise
utm_campaign=black_friday_2025is better thanutm_campaign=bf25promo1adseta. - Use underscores, not spaces
Avoid broken URLs — useutm_campaign=summer_saleinstead ofutm_campaign=summer sale. - Stay consistent across channels
If you’re running the same campaign on Google, Facebook, and email, use the same campaign name for all.
Example Campaign URLs
Here’s how utm_campaign looks in action:
- Email Promo
https://yourwebsite.com/shop?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=summer_sale - Facebook Ad
https://yourwebsite.com/offer?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=paid_social&utm_campaign=black_friday - Google Ad
https://yourwebsite.com/signup?utm_source=google&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=free_trial_offer - Partner Referral
https://yourwebsite.com/webinar?utm_source=partnerxyz&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=joint_webinar_series
Final Thoughts
If utm_source and utm_medium give you the who and how, then utm_campaign gives you the why. It’s the key to understanding which campaigns are driving results — and which ones aren’t worth repeating.
