A patient receives a text notification that their prescription is ready. They immediately pull out their phone to request a refill, but your website is confusing on mobile. They give up and call instead. Device breakdown would have shown you this friction point, and you could have fixed it.
Why Device Breakdown Matters for Pharmacies
Understanding device usage helps pharmacies serve patients better:
Mobile is huge for on-the-go refills. Patients want to refill prescriptions quickly, often between meetings or while running errands. If your mobile experience is clunky, you’re creating frustration.
Desktop users often manage family accounts. Patients using computers typically handle multiple prescriptions, review insurance details, and compare medication costs. They may be more methodical in their approach.
Tablet usage for medication management. Some patients, especially older adults, prefer tablets for managing health information. This segment may have unique needs around accessibility.
How to Check in GA4
Finding device breakdown in Google Analytics 4 is simple:
- Log into GA4 and go to Reports
- Click on Tech in the left navigation
- Select Device to see the full breakdown
- Find your prescription refill or prescription transfer conversion event
- Compare conversion rates across mobile, desktop, and tablet
Look at conversion rates, not just visitor counts. A device with fewer visits might have much better conversion performance.
The Easier Way
Connecting device data to actual prescription refills in GA4 requires building custom reports and configuring conversions. It takes time you probably do not have.
ClawAnalytics handles this automatically by showing device breakdown right next to your refill conversion data. You get immediate answers to questions like: “Are mobile patients successfully refilling?” or “Which device should I optimize for first?”
For pharmacies, ClawAnalytics reveals whether your mobile refill experience is driving patients to call instead of using your digital tools. The insight is ready instantly, without any manual setup.
Quick Wins
Simplify mobile refill navigation. Create a big, obvious “Refill Prescription” button that works with one tap. Remove unnecessary steps from the refill process.
Add prescription transfer to mobile. If patients cannot transfer prescriptions easily on mobile, you are creating barriers. Make the transfer process just as simple as refilling.
Optimize for quick interactions. Mobile patients often have limited time. Keep forms short, load times fast, and provide clear confirmation messages.
Test your pharmacy app. If you have a mobile app, track how its usage compares to your website. Some patients prefer apps, others prefer browser-based services.
Start tracking device breakdown today. Those insights directly impact how easily patients manage their prescriptions.