We’ve now covered four UTM parameters in this series:
utm_source→ who sent the trafficutm_medium→ how it got to your siteutm_campaign→ why the traffic existsutm_term→ which keyword or audience drove the click
Now it’s time to finish with utm_content — the tag that helps you tell similar links apart.
The Basics
👉 utm_content is used to differentiate variations of the same campaign.
Think of it as a tie-breaker when you have multiple ads, links, or creatives pointing to the same destination.
Example:
- utm_source = facebook
- utm_medium = paid_social
- utm_campaign = summer_sale
- utm_content = red_banner_ad
Common Uses of utm_content
Marketers often use utm_content to track:
- Different ad creatives →
utm_content=video_advsutm_content=image_ad - CTA button variations →
utm_content=signup_buttonvsutm_content=learnmore_button - Link placements in email →
utm_content=header_linkvsutm_content=footer_link - A/B test variations →
utm_content=version_avsutm_content=version_b
Basically, anytime you want to compare two versions of the same thing, utm_content is your best friend.
Why It’s Important
Without utm_content, you’d know which campaign drove traffic but not which specific creative or link worked best.
By using it correctly, you can:
- Test whether a button or a text link drives more clicks in an email
- Compare ad performance between a video vs an image
- See which blog CTA banner actually converts better
That means better data-driven decisions for your design and messaging.
Best Practices for Using utm_content
- Be descriptive
Use names that make sense later (utm_content=blue_cta_buttoninstead ofutm_content=btn1). - Stay consistent
If you useheader_linkonce, don’t switch totop_linkin another campaign. - Don’t overuse it
Only useutm_contentwhen you really need to compare variations. Otherwise, it just adds clutter.
Example Campaign URLs
Here’s how utm_content looks in practice:
- Email Campaign (multiple links)
https://yourwebsite.com/blog?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=weekly_digest&utm_content=header_link - Facebook Ads (different creatives)
https://yourwebsite.com/offer?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=paid_social&utm_campaign=summer_sale&utm_content=video_ad - Google Ads (A/B test)
https://yourwebsite.com/signup?utm_source=google&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=trial_promo&utm_content=text_ad
Final Thoughts
If utm_campaign tells you why people came, then utm_content tells you which exact piece of your campaign made it happen. It’s the finishing touch that helps you optimize creatives, placements, and variations.
✅ Pro Tip: Want to keep all five UTM parameters neat, consistent, and error-free? Use UTM Manager to create, organize, and share UTMs with your team — so you can focus on testing and optimizing, not chasing messy URLs.
