How to Track Cohort Analysis for Accountants
You onboarded 8 new tax clients in March. Six filed their returns by April. Three scheduled quarterly reviews. Two referred you to colleagues. Without cohort analysis, you’d see tax season chaos. With it, you’d see a systematic growth engine.
Accountants who track cohorts understand their business. Everyone else just counts invoices.
Why Cohort Analysis Matters for Accountants
Client relationships in accounting span years. Cohort analysis reveals the patterns:
- Spot service expansion. Do tax clients eventually need bookkeeping? Cohorts show the natural progression.
- Measure referral rates. Some client types refer more. Know who they are.
- Improve onboarding. When a cohort drops off early, investigate why. Fix the process.
- Forecast revenue. If you know 65% of new clients add a second service within 18 months, plan capacity.
The best accountants don’t just react to client needs. They predict them.
How to Check in GA4
GA4 can track professional services. Here’s the approach:
- Set up custom events: “client_onboarded,” “service_started,” “invoice_paid.”
- Include service type: tax, bookkeeping, payroll, advisory.
- Open Cohort Exploration.
- Use “User acquisition date” or “first engagement” as basis.
- Choose “Revenue per user” or “Retention” as metric.
- Filter by service type and acquisition source.
Compare cohorts across quarters. Look for steady improvements in retention.
The Easier Way
GA4 requires technical setup most accountants don’t have time for.
ClawAnalytics connects to your practice management or CRM system. It automatically builds cohorts by service type and client source. You get:
- Retention rate by service type
- Average services per client over time
- Revenue per client by cohort
For example: “Do bookkeeping clients have higher retention than tax-only clients?” ClawAnalytics answers instantly. No manual exports needed.
This means you focus on client work, not analytics configuration.
Quick Wins
- Track onboarding source. How did the client find you? Track it from first contact.
- Create annual review touchpoints. Reach out every 12 months. Offer comprehensive reviews.
- Cross-sell strategically. If tax clients often need bookkeeping, offer bundled pricing.
- Monitor quarterly. Track 6-month and 12-month retention by service type. Look for trends.
Start cohort analysis this month. Next year, you’ll have a clear picture of firm growth.