Table of Contents
How many GTM containers do you need?
According to Google’s recommendation, the best practice is to only use strictly one GTM container per website (or application) and one account per company. Having multiple containers per website and multiple accounts per company may result in tracking issues that are not always easy to diagnose.
Can you have 2 Google Tag Manager?
Multiple users can manage the same Google Tag Manager account, and each user can be given different access permissions by the account administrators. 360 customers can add and control additional containers using zones.
How many GTM accounts can I have?
400
You can have up to 400 Google Tag Manager accounts in a single Google account.
How many implementations of GTM are typically required for most organizations?
Google Tag Manager Account Structure The rule of thumb is to create one GTM account per company/organization. If you are a business, then most likely, you need only one GTM account. If you are a business conglomerate, you may have several companies or units. In that case, you would need multiple GTM accounts.
There should be no issues with multiple GTM containers on the same page. Unless you have duplicate codes in the containers which are double firing pixels. You can add those containers after the opening body tag.
Can we use the same GTM container on multiple sites?
Every website can use a different Google Tag Manager container but send the data to the same GA property. This applies to any other tool that you have installed via GTM.
Do I need GA and GTM?
In a nutshell: GA is the analytics tool that provides reports about activity on your site. GTM is a tool that fires your tracking codes based on defined rules. In the end, you can either implement GA code on your site directly, or you can implement the GTM code on a site and use GTM to fire your GA code.
Where should Google Tag Manager code be placed?
The first code block is best placed immediately after the web page’s opening tag, or as high in the as possible. This helps to ensure that your Tag Manager configuration is available and ready when the rest of the page loads.