UTM Grabber

3.3K posts

UTM Grabber banner
UTM Grabber

UTM Grabber

@UTMGrabber

Track every UTM automatically. See what’s working, double down on it, and grow revenue with confidence. 👉 Free 30-min demo

Austin,TX Katılım Ağustos 2020
68 Takip Edilen336 Takipçiler
UTM Grabber
UTM Grabber@UTMGrabber·
@ronnnize Absolutely. The more money you’re putting into ads, the more expensive bad attribution becomes. Speed matters, but if tracking is broken underneath, you can end up optimizing based on the wrong signals.
English
0
0
1
22
Ron N
Ron N@ronnnize·
@UTMGrabber especially important when you are spending on ads
English
1
0
1
3
UTM Grabber
UTM Grabber@UTMGrabber·
Fast hosting is great. But fast pages with broken attribution still create bad decisions. This post explains how WordPress hosts, CDNs, and cache plugins can quietly interfere with UTM tracking. Worth reading if you care about where your leads actually come from.
Haktan Suren, PhD@HaktanSuren

haktansuren.com/why-some-wordp…

English
2
2
2
85
UTM Grabber
UTM Grabber@UTMGrabber·
@DaveRamsey Completely agree. And it’s true far beyond money. “No” is a complete sentence because boundaries do not need an explanation. The moment you explain or overexplain (even worse!), people often start arguing with your reason instead of respecting your answer.
English
0
0
0
43
Dave Ramsey
Dave Ramsey@DaveRamsey·
"No" is a complete sentence. ... and it's okay to use this sentence regularly while you're getting out of debt and walking the 7 Baby Steps. Trust me, it's good for you.
English
52
58
785
35K
UTM Grabber
UTM Grabber@UTMGrabber·
@CodingIncloud_ I agree, and I think values play a huge role here. Pivoting itself is not always the hard part. The hard part is deciding whether it’s time to stay or time to go. Once your values are clear, the courage to move often follows.
English
0
0
0
129
Bibliophile 🎀
Bibliophile 🎀@CodingIncloud_·
One of the greatest skills in life is knowing when to pivot and having the courage to do it. Don’t stay stuck, let your curiosity guide you, explore what excites you, and keep reaching for better.
English
21
1.2K
5.1K
62.2K
UTM Grabber
UTM Grabber@UTMGrabber·
@_Chemist1 So true. The key is to stay curious and observant. Listen to what people say, watch what they do, and pay attention to what keeps repeating. Patterns are everywhere once you slow down enough to notice them.
English
0
0
0
201
Samrah
Samrah@_Chemist1·
If you can spot PATTERNS in people you’re already playing a different game.
English
173
2K
13.1K
293.3K
UTM Grabber
UTM Grabber@UTMGrabber·
@yunta_tsai I agree. Recognition is nice to have, but it shouldn’t be the core reason for creating something meaningful. The deeper reward is building something that lasts, helps, or leaves a real mark beyond the applause of the moment.
English
0
0
0
2
Yun-Ta Tsai
Yun-Ta Tsai@yunta_tsai·
There was no award when Newton discovered three laws of forces, nor when da Vinci painted the Mona Lisa. There was no Grammy for Beethoven or Chopin, nor a Nobel Prize in Literature for Homer. Masterpieces do not seek transient trophies but aim to be timeless.
English
669
3.2K
20.8K
927.6K
UTM Grabber
UTM Grabber@UTMGrabber·
People often assume that if UTMs disappear from the URL, tracking must be broken. I wouldn’t jump to that conclusion. If the values were captured properly on landing and stored correctly, they do not need to stay visible in the address bar the whole time.
English
0
0
0
4
UTM Grabber
UTM Grabber@UTMGrabber·
@AlexHormozi I’d put it a little differently. The situation itself doesn’t create resentment. It creates the occasion for us to attach a story to what happened, and that story is often where the resentment grows, especially when an expectation turns into a demand.
English
0
0
0
1
Alex Hormozi
Alex Hormozi@AlexHormozi·
Resentment is what happens when someone stops rewarding you for something you keep doing for them but stopping now costs more than continuing.
English
156
70
1.2K
40.9K
UTM Grabber
UTM Grabber@UTMGrabber·
@bschne So true. Procrastination often costs more energy than the task itself, because what really wears you down is carrying it unfinished in your mind.
English
0
0
0
96
Benjamin
Benjamin@bschne·
upon Doing The Thing, you will invariably find two things to be true: 1. Doing The Thing was pretty easy, actually 2. not having Done The Thing was bothering you more than you thought it was
English
47
3.3K
21.8K
255.9K
UTM Grabber
UTM Grabber@UTMGrabber·
@tferriss So true. If we could see what people are quietly carrying, we’d probably be a little more patient, a little more compassionate, and a lot less quick to judge.
English
0
0
1
11
Tim Ferriss
Tim Ferriss@tferriss·
Everyone is fighting a battle you know nothing about. Everyone struggles. Take solace in that.
English
71
95
969
46.3K
UTM Grabber
UTM Grabber@UTMGrabber·
@BStulberg I think both matter. The person you become in the process is huge, but reaching the goal can absolutely change part of your life too. The bigger truth is that no single goal changes everything forever. It becomes one more step in your evolution.
English
0
0
0
154
Brad Stulberg
Brad Stulberg@BStulberg·
There is no greater illusion than thinking the accomplishment of some goal will change your life. What will change your life is the person you become in the process of going for it.
English
56
698
3.7K
82.7K
UTM Grabber
UTM Grabber@UTMGrabber·
@sluvity_____ I’d replace “worry” with “take care of.” Character matters most because it’s who you are, but reputation matters too. Better to tend to both than be consumed by either. Trust, relationships, and opportunity are often shaped by how people see you.
English
0
0
5
719
soosoorandom
soosoorandom@sluvity_____·
Worry about your character, not your reputation. Your character is who you are. Your reputation is who people think you are.
English
29
1.8K
7.1K
96.8K
UTM Grabber
UTM Grabber@UTMGrabber·
@danmartell Yes to action first. I’d just separate “messy” from “good enough.” The process doesn’t need to be perfect, and it never will be anyway. There will always be something to improve, but the start still needs enough clarity to move in the right direction.
English
0
0
0
14
Dan Martell
Dan Martell@danmartell·
Take action first. Build the perfect process second. Too many people wait until the process is perfect before they start executing. Start messy. Iterate toward clean.
English
99
29
329
5.5K
UTM Grabber
UTM Grabber@UTMGrabber·
I agree with the first part. I just don’t think goodness has to shrink to fewer people. To me, the answer is staying kind while becoming wiser about boundaries, expectations, and where I invest my energy. And if I can’t be kind outwardly in a moment, I can still choose kinder thoughts, because that kindness lives in me first.
English
0
0
1
957
23
23@Real_27ydm·
I'll never stop being a good person, I'll just change who I'm good to.
English
68
8.7K
22.9K
443.4K
UTM Grabber
UTM Grabber@UTMGrabber·
@ConcerndBassist @OrevaZSN Yes, that’s exactly the kind of pressure I mean. I just wouldn’t pin it on one generation alone. A lot of people learned to look at every talent through the lens of income, which is why keeping some things as pure hobbies matters so much.
English
1
0
1
17
Sweet Man, Thanks
Sweet Man, Thanks@ConcerndBassist·
@UTMGrabber @OrevaZSN My Boomer parents CONSTANTLY asked me why I didn't sell my music engineering and production skills as a service instead of just enjoying my hobby. I think the hyper-capitalists are the Boomer generation. EVERYTHING is transactional with them including charging rent to relatives.
English
1
0
1
17
𐌁𐌉Ᏽ 𐌕𐌉𐌌𐌉
Capitalism has truly killed the art of having a hobby and doing an activity for the sole purpose of enjoying it. Now everything has to be a side hustle, or you feel like it's a waste of time.
English
123
1.3K
5.9K
92.4K
UTM Grabber
UTM Grabber@UTMGrabber·
@BillWiIdin I don’t see it that way. A few minutes of flexibility between tasks do not make someone less committed or less valuable. What matters is the quality of the work delivered and the results that come from it.
English
0
0
0
292
Bill
Bill@BillWiIdin·
If you work from home, you shouldn't get a full salary since you're basically Babysitting your own life on company time. If you have time to start a load of laundry between meetings, you’re technically a part-time employee.
English
2.2K
57
846
510.7K
UTM Grabber
UTM Grabber@UTMGrabber·
@alexiaetorres Sometimes not reacting is the smartest move, yes. But as a general rule for life and relationships, I think warmth, clarity, and good boundaries go a lot further than trying to starve people out.
English
0
0
0
99
Alexia Torres
Alexia Torres@alexiaetorres·
Never give people the reaction they’re looking for.. starve them.
English
75
4.4K
19.4K
255.1K
UTM Grabber
UTM Grabber@UTMGrabber·
@JohnCena There’s value in planning, yes. But spending too much energy on possible difficulties can stop people before they even begin. A better mindset is knowing some things may go wrong and trusting yourself to handle them.
English
0
0
0
9
John Cena
John Cena@JohnCena·
Work hard to be aware of the difficulties in any potential achievement and couple that with the confidence to know that with effort, persistence and patience some sort of yield will always be the case.
English
842
1.9K
8.7K
188.9K
UTM Grabber
UTM Grabber@UTMGrabber·
@itsSh0la Growth matters, yes, but I’d be careful with making it sound like a constant pressure. Improving yourself works a lot better when it becomes a way of life you can enjoy, not a rule that leaves you feeling like you’re never enough.
English
0
0
2
447
Shola 👑
Shola 👑@itsSh0la·
Always make sure you’re leveling up. Make sure you’re constantly improving yourself. You shouldn’t be seen in the same position for too long.
English
194
1.9K
9.6K
87.9K