A marketing agency was spending $8,000 per month on Google Ads for a client. The client asked a reasonable question: “How many leads did we actually get?” The agency could show clicks and traffic numbers, but they had never set up conversion tracking. They had no idea how many of those clicks turned into contact form submissions. Eight thousand dollars a month, flying blind.
Setting up goals takes about 15 minutes. Not having them can cost you months of wasted budget.
Why This Matters
Traffic without conversion data is meaningless. Knowing you got 10,000 visitors is nice. Knowing that 300 of them submitted a contact form is useful. Knowing that organic search visitors convert at 5% while social media converts at 0.8% is actionable.
It reveals your best channels. When you track conversions by source, you immediately see which marketing efforts produce results and which just produce pageviews. This is how you decide where to spend next month’s budget.
It catches problems early. If your conversion rate suddenly drops from 3% to 1%, something broke. Maybe a form stopped working. Maybe a checkout page errors out on mobile. Without goal tracking, you would not notice until revenue drops weeks later.
It aligns your team. When everyone can see that the goal is 500 signups per month and you are at 380, the whole team understands the gap. Goals turn abstract marketing work into concrete targets.
How to Do It
Step 1: Define what a conversion means for your business.
Before touching GA4, write down the actions that matter. Common examples:
- Lead generation: form submission, phone call click, chat initiation
- Ecommerce: purchase, add to cart, begin checkout
- SaaS: signup, trial start, feature activation
- Content: newsletter subscription, PDF download, video play
Pick 3 to 5 key actions. You can always add more later.
Step 2: Check if GA4 is already tracking the event.
GA4 automatically tracks some events like page_view, scroll, click, and file_download. Go to Admin, then Events, and review the list. If your conversion action already appears (like form submissions tracked via enhanced measurement), you just need to mark it as a conversion.
Step 3: Create custom events if needed.
For actions GA4 does not automatically track, create a custom event. Go to Admin, then Events, then Create Event. For example, to track a thank-you page after form submission:
- Event name:
form_submission - Matching conditions:
event_nameequalspage_viewANDpage_locationcontains/thank-you
Step 4: Mark events as conversions.
Go to Admin, then Conversions (or Key Events in newer GA4 versions), then click “New conversion event.” Type the exact event name you created. Toggle it on. GA4 will start counting every occurrence as a conversion.
Step 5: Verify it works.
Use GA4’s DebugView (Admin, then DebugView) with the Google Analytics Debugger Chrome extension enabled. Trigger the conversion action on your site and watch it appear in real time. Do not skip this step. Broken tracking is worse than no tracking because it gives you false confidence.
Step 6: Add conversion values (optional but recommended).
If a conversion has a dollar value, configure it. A form submission might be worth $50 based on your average close rate. In the event settings, add a value parameter. This lets GA4 calculate actual ROI for your marketing channels.
The Easier Way
Once conversions are flowing into GA4, analyzing them should not require clicking through five reports. ClawAnalytics lets you ask your conversion questions directly:
- “Which pages have the highest form submission rate?”
- “How did our conversion rate change after the site redesign?”
- “Compare signup rates between mobile and desktop this month”
The setup still happens in GA4. But the analysis becomes a conversation instead of a dashboard scavenger hunt.
Quick Wins
- Start with one conversion. Pick your most important action and track it properly before adding others. Quality over quantity.
- Name events clearly. Use descriptive names like
contact_form_submitinstead of generic ones likeevent1. Your future self will thank you. - Set up a conversion funnel. Track each step (page view, form start, form submit) so you can see where people drop off. The biggest wins are usually in fixing funnel leaks.
- Review monthly. Check that your conversion events are still firing correctly. Site updates and redesigns can break tracking without anyone noticing.