How to Track Channel Grouping for Architects
You just finished a stunning commercial project and uploaded it to your portfolio. But did visitors find it through Houzz, Instagram, Google search, or a direct link? Channel grouping tells you exactly where your traffic comes from and, more importantly, which sources turn into project contracts.
Why Channel Grouping Matters for Architects
It shows which platforms showcase your work best. As an architect, you probably share projects across multiple sites. Channel grouping reveals which ones actually bring in qualified leads.
It proves marketing ROI to clients. When you can show that 60% of your residential projects came from Instagram, it becomes easier to justify continuing that investment.
It identifies your best referral sources. Whether it is interior designers, real estate agents, or past clients, knowing who sends you work helps you nurture those relationships.
It shortens the sales cycle. When you know which channels lead to signed contracts, you can focus your follow-up efforts on high-probability leads.
How to Check in GA4
In GA4, open the Traffic Acquisition report from the Reports tab. You will see default channels including Organic Search, Paid Search, Social, Email, and Referral.
To drill deeper:
- Click on any channel to see individual sources
- Use the comparison feature to contrast conversion rates across channels
- Set up custom definitions to group platforms specific to architecture (Houzz, ArchDaily, Behance)
Create a custom channel group for your practice by going to Configure > Channel definitions and setting rules based on your specific sources and campaigns.
The Easier Way
ClawAnalytics connects to your GA4 and gives you answers without the learning curve. You can ask questions like:
- “Which design platform referred our most valuable projects this year?”
- “Are we getting more commercial inquiries from direct traffic or referrals?”
- “What percentage of our website visitors from LinkedIn request consultations?”
This helps you make smarter decisions about where to invest your portfolio time and marketing budget. ClawAnalytics translates the data into insights you can act on immediately.
Quick Wins
Track the ‘Request Consultation’ goal. Set this up in GA4 so you can see which channels actually generate project inquiries, not just portfolio views.
Separate residential from commercial traffic. Create different conversion events for each, then compare which channels perform better for each project type.
Monitor monthly trends. Architecture projects take time. Review your channel data monthly to spot shifts before they impact your pipeline.
Ask your clients how they found you. Cross-reference this with your channel data to validate what the numbers are telling you.