How to Track Cost Per Acquisition for Fitness
Every new member costs money to acquire. Whether you’re running Facebook ads, partnering with local businesses, or offering referral bonuses, tracking cost per acquisition tells you what’s working. Skip it, and you’re basically guessing with your marketing budget.
Why Cost Per Acquisition Matters for Fitness
Membership churn is real. Fitness studios lose 30-50% of members annually. If you’re paying $200 to acquire a member who cancels in 3 months, you’re losing money. CPA helps you find cheaper sources that keep members longer.
Word-of-mouth is powerful but hard to measure. When a member brings a friend, that’s essentially free acquisition. But how do you know which members are referring others? Tracking CPA across channels reveals these patterns.
Promotions backfire if not tracked. A “first month free” might bring in bargain hunters who never convert to paying members. Knowing your CPA prevents this trap.
Competition is fierce. Every gym advertises specials. Understanding your true acquisition cost helps you compete on value, not just price.
How to Check in GA4
Set up conversion tracking for “Purchase Membership” or “Free Trial Sign-up” in GA4. Link your Google Ads and Facebook Ads accounts to see cost data directly in your dashboard. Create UTM-tagged links for each promotion, like yourwebsite.com/intro-offer?utm_source=facebook&utm_campaign=spring2024.
In GA4, go to Acquisition and look at your conversion events. Calculate CPA by taking your ad spend for a channel and dividing by the number of memberships or trial sign-ups from that source.
The Easier Way
ClawAnalytics pulls together data from your gym management software, marketing platforms, and booking system. You get one clear view of how much each channel costs and what those members are worth.
For example, you might discover that your Instagram ads cost $80 per member while local billboard advertising costs $150. Or you might find that members who sign up after a referral stay twice as long. ClawAnalytics answers questions like: “Which promotion brings members who actually show up?” and “Am I spending too much on paid ads compared to referrals?”
Quick Wins
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Create unique promo codes for every channel. Facebook gets one code, Google gets another, and referrals get a third. Track who uses which.
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Track member retention by source. A member who stays 12 months is worth more than one who quits after 2 months. Weight your CPA by lifetime value.
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Test one variable at a time. If you change your offer, keep everything else the same so you can measure the impact.
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Build a referral program. Members referring friends is often the cheapest acquisition channel. Make it easy and rewarding.