What Is a Good Event Tracking for Bloggers?
You just published your 50th blog post. You check your analytics and see 10,000 page views this month. But here’s the frustrating part: you have no idea which posts actually matter. Are readers signing up for your newsletter? Clicking your affiliate links? Sharing your content? Page views alone don’t tell the story.
Why Event Tracking Matters for Bloggers
You discover which content performs beyond views. A post with 500 views that gets 50 newsletter signups beats one with 5,000 views and zero conversions. Event tracking reveals the posts that grow your business.
You optimize for reader engagement. Track scroll depth to see if readers finish your posts. If they drop off at 50%, your content might be too long or lose focus mid-way.
You monetize effectively. Affiliate links and newsletter signups are revenue events. Track which posts generate the most of these actions. Double down on what works.
You build an email list faster. When you know which events lead to newsletter signups, you can create more of that content. Your email list becomes your most valuable asset.
How to Check in GA4
In GA4, go to Reports > Engagement > Events. As a blogger, track these key events:
- scroll - Shows how far readers scroll (configure at 25%, 50%, 75%, 100%)
- sign_up - Newsletter or membership conversions
- click - Affiliate link clicks (use outbound click tracking)
- social_share - When readers share your content
The Engagement > Pages and screens report shows which posts keep readers on your site longest. Look for pages with high average engagement time.
Create an audience of readers who signed up for your newsletter. Then see which content they read most. This tells you what to write more of.
The Easier Way
Most bloggers find GA4 overwhelming. ClawAnalytics makes it simple to get insights without building complex reports.
Ask: “Which blog posts generated the most newsletter signups this month?” ClawAnalytics shows you exactly which content converts readers into subscribers.
Or: “What’s my average scroll depth for top posts?” It reveals whether readers are actually consuming your content or just bouncing.
You can also ask: “Which affiliate links get the most clicks?” This helps you optimize your content strategy around products that actually sell.
Quick Wins
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Enable scroll tracking in GA4 or GTM. See exactly where readers stop reading.
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Track newsletter signups as a conversion. Set up a custom event for your signup form submissions.
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Add affiliate link click tracking. Use GTM to fire events when readers click your recommended tools or products.
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Create a newsletter audience. Track which blog posts lead to signups. Write more content in those niches.
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Monitor traffic sources in GA4. See which social platforms or search terms bring readers who actually engage with your content.