What Is a Pixel and Why Do I Need One?
A pixel is a small snippet of code that tracks visitor behavior on your listing pages.
Pixels help you understand:
Where visitors are located
What devices they use
Which pages they view
When they add items to cart
When they complete a purchase
If you’re running ads, pixel data helps you optimize campaigns and target audiences most likely to convert.
Spring supports tracking pixels for:
Meta (Facebook)
Google
Pinterest
Twitter (X)
How Does a Pixel Work?
When someone visits your page, the pixel runs in the background.
Each time a visitor interacts with your store (view, add to cart, purchase, etc.), the pixel sends event data back to the advertising platform. This information is then used to measure performance and improve ad targeting.
Where Do I Add Pixels in My Spring Account?
To add a tracking pixel:
Go to Tools and Services
Select Tracking Pixels
Choose the platform you’d like to connect
Paste your pixel ID or tracking code
Where Do I Find My Pixel ID?
Your pixel ID is located inside the advertising or business manager for your platform (e.g., Meta Business Manager, Google Analytics, Pinterest Ads).
Instructions for locating your specific pixel ID are linked within each platform section in your Spring dashboard.
Can I Add Multiple Pixels?
You can connect one pixel per platform, per Spring account.
For example:
1 Meta pixel
1 Google Analytics pixel
1 Pinterest pixel
1 Twitter pixel
If you have multiple domains connected to your account, you must configure purchase events separately for each domain within your advertising platform.
You can verify up to 8 events total per Meta pixel.
Why Are My Pixel Analytics Different from Spring Analytics?
Pixel analytics are viewed within the advertising platform (Meta, Google, Pinterest, etc.).
Your numbers may differ from Spring analytics because:
Spring tracks both custom domains and creator-spring.com domains
Some users opt out of tracking via iOS privacy settings
Browser privacy settings or ad blockers prevent pixel firing
Google Pixel & Shopping
Can I Use Google Analytics Without Running Ads?
Yes. You can use Google Analytics to track:
Visitors
Clicks
Traffic sources
Store behavior
To connect Google Analytics:
Find your Tracking ID in Google Analytics
Enter it in the Google section under Tools and Services
What’s the Difference Between Google Shopping and Google Ads?
Google Shopping is part of Google Ads.
Shopping ads use a product feed that automatically displays your products in:
Google search results
The Google Shopping tab
Can Spring Creators Set Up Google Shopping?
Yes, to download your product feed:
Go to Listings in your Spring dashboard
Click Download Product Feed
You can upload this feed to Google Ads to create Shopping campaigns.
Meta (Facebook) Pixel
How Do I Connect a Meta Pixel?
To connect a Meta pixel:
You must own a custom domain
You must verify your domain with Meta (required after Apple’s iOS 14 update)
Add your Meta pixel under:
Tools and Services → Tracking Pixels
Why Isn’t My Meta Pixel Firing?
Common reasons:
You are using a creator-spring.com domain (pixels only work on custom domains)
The pixel ID was pasted into the wrong field
The domain is not verified in Meta Business Manager
Conversion events have not been properly configured
You can install the Meta Pixel Helper browser extension to test whether your pixel is firing correctly.
Pinterest Pixel
What Is the Pinterest Tag ID?
The Pinterest Tag (sometimes called the conversion pixel) tracks Pinterest ad performance.
The Tag ID is the unique identifier for your Pinterest pixel.
The pixel code is the HTML code used on websites (Spring only requires the Tag ID).
Domain Verification & Meta Tags
Why Doesn’t Spring Support Meta Tag Verification?
Meta Tag verification requires direct HTML editing, which is not supported at scale.
Instead, domain verification is completed via DNS settings.
If you purchased your domain through Spring, follow the domain verification steps provided.
If your domain is external, contact your domain provider for DNS updates.
Running Ads & Monitoring Results
When running ads (especially Meta campaigns), monitor key metrics such as:
Conversions
Cost per result
Click-through rate (CTR)
Reach
Relevancy score
Testing different audiences and creative variations can help improve performance over time.