Your architecture portfolio is online. People visit. Some are discovering your work for the first time. Others have seen your projects before and are coming back to revisit your approach. Knowing who is who helps you understand how your marketing and client relationships really work.
Why New Vs Returning Users Matters for Architects
Your website is both a marketing tool and a client service platform. New visitors evaluate whether your design style matches their vision. Returning visitors are deeper in their decision process.
If most visitors are new, your SEO and advertising are working to attract attention. But you need those new visitors to convert. If nobody returns, your portfolio might be impressive but not compelling enough to start a conversation.
High returning visitor rates suggest strong relationships. Past clients return for renovations or referrals. Prospects who liked your work return to contact you when their project is ready to start.
What Different Visitors Want
New prospects browse your portfolio, read about your process, and check your credentials. They are in early research mode, comparing you against other architects.
Returning prospects have viewed multiple projects and are seriously considering hiring you. They might return to review specific case studies or check your availability.
Past clients want project updates, referral information, or renovation services. They return to see new work or reconnect for future projects.
Industry peers might return to look for collaboration opportunities, vendor information, or to refer their own clients.
How to Check in GA4
In Google Analytics 4, go to Users and select User lifecycle. This displays your new vs returning user breakdown and trends over time.
Create a segment for users who spent more than 3 minutes on case study pages. These are highly engaged visitors likely ready to contact you.
Track returning users who visited your contact page. This reveals how many serious prospects return before reaching out.
The Easier Way
ClawAnalytics makes this simple. Ask questions like “Are new or returning visitors more likely to contact us” or “Which projects do prospects return to view most often.”
You can also ask “Do commercial clients or residential clients take longer to return and convert” to understand your sales timeline better.
For architects, the key insight is nurturing returning visitors through your sales process. Someone who visits 3+ times before contacting is much more likely to hire you than a first-time visitor.
Quick Wins to Improve Your Visitor Metrics
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Add project update newsletters. When you complete a new building, email past contacts. They will return to view the work and think about their own projects.
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Create a project journey series. Document your design process from concept to completion. Prospects return multiple times to follow a project’s evolution.
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Make contact easy. Add a “Save to Favorites” feature so prospects can bookmark projects they love and return to them when ready to discuss their own work.
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Build a referral thank-you page. When clients refer friends, send them to a page with a gift or discount. This brings them back to your site and reinforces the relationship.