arojunaviax logo

arojunaviax

Home Learning Program About Us Contact Us

How We Use Tracking on arojunaviax

Last updated: March 2025 — We believe in transparency about the data we collect

Look, we get it. Nobody wakes up excited to read about tracking policies. But here's the thing — we actually care about being upfront with you.

When you use arojunaviax.com, we collect certain information to make your experience better. Some of that happens through what most people call "cookies" — though honestly, they're more like digital notepads that remember your preferences. We use these tools to understand how people interact with our budget consolidation platform so we can fix what's broken and improve what's working.

This page breaks down exactly what we track, why we do it, and how you can control it. No legal jargon marathons, just straightforward answers.

Current Status

Cookies Accepted

What Actually Are These Things?

Tracking technologies are small text files that websites store on your device. They're not programs — they can't run code or carry viruses. Think of them more like sticky notes that remind the site who you are when you come back.

We also use similar technologies like local storage and tracking pixels. They all serve the same basic purpose: helping us remember your preferences and understand how you're using the site.

What We Actually Track

We collect information about how you navigate arojunaviax.com, which features you use most, where you get stuck, and which pages you visit. We also track whether you're logged in, your language preferences, and any settings you've customized.

Some tracking helps us show you relevant content. Other bits help us fix bugs faster or understand which tools our Australian users find most helpful.

Why We Bother

Honestly? Because guessing what users need doesn't work. We've tried.

When we see that 70% of people abandon a form halfway through, that tells us something's wrong with that form. When login times spike on mobile, we know we need to optimize the mobile experience. This data shapes what we build next.

Breaking Down the Types

Essential Tracking (Can't Be Disabled)

These keep the site functioning. Without them, you literally can't log in, save your preferences, or move between pages securely. They're active from the moment you land on arojunaviax.com.

Examples: Session identifiers, security tokens, load balancing indicators. These expire when you close your browser or after a set security timeframe.

Functional Tracking

These remember your choices — like whether you prefer dark mode, which dashboard widgets you've arranged, or that you've already dismissed that survey popup three times.

We use these to save you from re-entering the same information every visit. They stick around longer than essential ones, sometimes up to a year, because that's how long your preferences remain relevant.

Analytics Tracking

This is where we learn what's actually working. We track page views, time on site, click patterns, and navigation paths. We see aggregate data — not "Sarah from Hobart spent 4 minutes comparing budget tools" but rather "Users spend an average of 4 minutes on comparison pages."

We use Google Analytics and our own internal tracking systems. These typically last 2 years unless you clear them sooner.

Marketing & Performance Tracking

These help us understand whether our outreach efforts actually bring value. Did that email campaign lead people to useful resources? Are folks who find us through search staying longer than those from social media?

Some of these come from third-party platforms when we're running campaigns. They can last up to 2 years, though most expire much sooner.

Taking Control

You're not stuck with our default settings. Every major browser gives you options to limit or block tracking entirely. Here's how to do it:

Chrome

Settings → Privacy and security → Cookies and other site data. From there you can block third-party tracking or clear everything at once.

Firefox

Options → Privacy & Security → Enhanced Tracking Protection. Firefox actually blocks a lot by default now, which is pretty decent of them.

Safari

Preferences → Privacy → Manage Website Data. Safari's gotten more aggressive about blocking trackers in recent years, especially cross-site ones.

Edge

Settings → Privacy, search, and services → Tracking prevention. You can choose between basic, balanced, or strict blocking levels.

How Long We Keep This Stuff

It varies. Essential tracking disappears when you close your browser. Functional preferences might stick around for 12 months so you don't have to reset everything constantly. Analytics data typically lives for 2 years before we purge it.

But here's the thing — you can clear it all manually whenever you want through your browser settings. Or use the button at the top of this page to reject non-essential tracking right now.

We review our tracking practices yearly to make sure we're not hoarding data we don't actually need. Last review was January 2025.

Questions? Concerns?

If something here doesn't make sense or you want more details about specific tracking methods, reach out. We're at 12/57 Warwick St, Hobart TAS 7000, Australia.

Email: help@arojunaviax.com
Phone: +61 406 472 208

arojunaviax logo

Building practical financial skills through focused budget consolidation courses. We help finance professionals strengthen their expertise with structured, accessible learning.

Contact Details

Address: 12/57 Warwick St
Hobart TAS 7000
Australia
Phone: +61 406 472 208
Email: help@arojunaviax.com

Important Links

Home Cookie Policy Privacy Policy

© 2025 arojunaviax. All rights reserved.

Cookie Policy Privacy Policy

We store small files on your device to remember your preferences and improve your experience. You can choose which types you'd like to allow. View our cookie policy for details.