How to Track Desktop Traffic for Interior Designers
Interior design is deeply personal and visually driven. Clients want to see every detail, every texture, every color combination. They save images to folders, create Pinterest boards, and bookmark your portfolio for later. They’re doing this on desktop computers with large screens where they can really see the work. If you’re not tracking desktop traffic, you’re missing the way your best clients research your services.
Why Desktop Traffic Matters for Interior Designers
Design is both an art and a business decision. Desktop traffic reveals how clients navigate both aspects:
Portfolio immersion happens on desktop. High-resolution room photos, material samples, and before-and-after transformations need screen real estate. Clients want to examine your work in detail before trusting you with their space.
Inspiration and mood boards require desktop. Many clients create informal mood boards across multiple browser tabs while researching. This behavior is almost exclusively desktop.
Budget discussions start on desktop. Understanding pricing tiers, service packages, and investment ranges happens on computers where clients can compare information comfortably.
Referral research happens on desktop. When someone receives a recommendation from a friend, they typically research that designer on their computer, not their phone.
Commercial clients use desktop exclusively. Office redesigns, restaurant interiors, and retail space designs involve multiple stakeholders who collaborate on desktop research.
Mobile traffic often comes from casual browsers. Someone who discovered you on Instagram and quickly clicked through might browse for 30 seconds on mobile. Desktop visitors are different. They have projects and budgets.
How to Check in GA4
Access your GA4 dashboard and navigate to Reports. Click “Users,” then select “User devices” to see your device breakdown. Most interior design firms see 55-65% desktop traffic, though it varies by project type.
Create a portfolio report by building a new exploration. Add “Page path and screen class” as a dimension. Add “Sessions” and “Average engagement time” as metrics. Filter to include your portfolio, projects, or gallery pages.
Compare residential versus commercial by device. Create a comparison in GA4. Filter one side to include only Desktop sessions. Add “Conversions” or “Contact form submissions” as a metric. This reveals which project types convert best from desktop.
Track inquiry generation by device by setting up conversion events for key actions. Filter each to Desktop only. Now you understand exactly how desktop traffic contributes to your bottom line.
The Easier Way
Most interior designers became designers because they love creating beautiful spaces. They didn’t sign up to learn complex analytics. ClawAnalytics respects that by making desktop traffic simple.
Connect your design firm website and immediately see insights. Ask questions like “Which room types get the most desktop traffic?” or “Show me desktop inquiry rates by project size.” Instant answers appear.
For example, you might discover that your kitchen renovation portfolio gets 75% desktop traffic with a 20% inquiry rate, while your living room makeovers get 50% desktop with only 8% inquiry rate. This tells you where to focus your marketing and portfolio expansion.
ClawAnalytics also surfaces the questions desktop visitors ask before reaching out. Understanding this helps you prepare more relevant initial consultations and convert more prospects into clients.
Quick Wins
Take these three steps this week. First, identify your top five portfolio projects by desktop traffic. These are your strongest showcases. Ensure they have detailed descriptions, material lists, and clear before-and-after transformations. Second, check which service pages get the most desktop research. Ensure your pricing, process, and contact information are clear. Third, create desktop-specific content like a detailed design guide-by-room inspiration or room PDF. Desktop visitors are more likely to download and engage with comprehensive resources.