- Jan 31, 2018
- 69
- 56
- First Name
- Dane
We've had dealers tell us that they contacted their previous partners, who refused to turn over admin or significantly delayed doing so. And they're (the old vendor) even less amicable with us.
It's easily fixable. They can easily turn over rights or add permissions for other account users.@Dane Saville when you say, "Even honest agencies try to correct this issue", can they not turn over admin rights?
Agreed, that's the rub! Super easy to do, helps the dealer, and doesn't burn a bridge for the agency. #nobrainerIt's easily fixable. They can easily turn over rights or add permissions for other account users.
https://support.google.com/analytics/answer/1009702?hl=en
Agreed, that's the rub! Super easy to do, helps the dealer, and doesn't burn a bridge for the agency. #nobrainer
Agreed, very frustrating. The provider is Dealer.com, does anyone have a good DDC contact I can get help on this? The dealer has 5 years of GA data they are telling the dealership belongs to DDC.Dealer should always have admin rights to the account and give only edit access to whichever company or vendor is helping them optimize it.
Dealers frequently lose access to their historical Google Analytics data when website providers and agencies refuse to transfer admin rights, treating the account as vendor property rather than client assets. While some vendors deliberately withhold access to maintain control, the root cause is often dealer negligence—vendors set up GA accounts on dealers' behalf without establishing proper ownership, creating dependency and data hostage situations. The consensus is that dealers must proactively create and own their own GA accounts from the start, as blocking access is both unethical and potentially illegal, though the practice persists across industries.