UppedGame
We design and maintain analytics systems that remain reliable over time.
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Many websites track events.
Clicks.
Form submissions.
Video plays.
On paper, it looks complete.
But more tracking doesn’t mean better data.
Event tracking often starts with good intentions:
Track everything.
Capture as much data as possible.
But over time:
The issue isn’t volume.
It’s structure.
Good tracking isn’t about capturing more actions.
It’s about defining them clearly—and consistently.
Each event represents a specific, intentional action.
Not:
“button_click”
But:
The event describes what actually happened—not just what was triggered.
Similar actions follow the same structure.
Consistency makes data:
An event without context is incomplete.
Without context:
actions look the same—even when they aren’t
With context:
each event carries meaning
Tracking logic shouldn’t live in multiple places.
When it does:
Good tracking is defined once—and reused.
Once defined, events don’t change casually.
If they do:
Stability is what makes data usable over time.
Good tracking is as much about what you don’t do.
It avoids:
More events ≠ better tracking.
Tracking is often treated as:
something to “set up”
Instead of:
something to define and maintain
It becomes:
Event tracking sits at the start of your data flow.
If it’s inconsistent:
Everything downstream reflects the quality of your tracking.
Poor tracking:
captures activity
Good tracking:
defines behavior
If your tracking needs work, you’ll start to see:
These aren’t reporting issues.
They’re tracking issues.
Good event tracking doesn’t collect more data.
It creates consistent, structured definitions of what’s happening.
Without that, your data is fragmented.
With it, your data becomes reliable—and everything built on top improves.
Doug McCaffrey
Designs and maintains analytics systems that remain reliable over time.
Explore how this connects across your data estate: