How to Track Scroll Depth for Catering
Catering websites have a problem. You need to show wedding options, corporate event menus, birthday packages, and detailed pricing. That is a lot of scrolling. Scroll depth tells you if customers see it all or bounce halfway through.
Why Scroll Depth Matters for Catering
Catering clients are planning important events. They need to see everything you offer to trust you can handle their celebration. Scroll depth shows you whether your website delivers that confidence.
First, you see which event types interest people. Deep scrolling on your wedding section tells you engaged couples are researching. Second, you know if pricing is visible. If customers do not scroll to your price ranges, they might not think you fit their budget. Third, you spot content gaps. A sharp scroll drop might mean your photos are slow to load or your text is too dense. Fourth, you optimize for inquiries. Clients ready to book should easily find your quote request form without scrolling back up.
How to Check in GA4
GA4 provides scroll tracking if you set it up properly.
Create scroll triggers in GA4. Go to Configure, then Events, and add scroll tracking that fires at standard intervals. Apply these triggers specifically to your catering service pages. Build an exploration report. Use the Explore feature to create a free-form report showing scroll depth by page. Focus on your wedding, corporate, and social event pages. Filter by traffic source to see if wedding planners scroll differently than corporate event planners.
The problem? GA4 data is technical. You see percentages, but you do not know why people stop scrolling or what content would keep them engaged.
The Easier Way
Catering business owners are busy planning events, not analyzing reports. ClawAnalytics makes scroll depth simple.
ClawAnalytics tracks exactly how far visitors scroll on every page of your catering website. You see clear data showing which event types get the most attention and where potential clients drop off. You can answer questions like: “Do wedding clients scroll through our full menu options?” or “Where do corporate event planners stop reading?”
This helps you organize your website for maximum inquiries. Place your most popular event types where scroll depth shows the most engagement. Make sure your quote request form appears where customers are still interested.
Quick Wins
Here are three things you can do today to improve scroll depth on your catering site.
Lead with your best event type. If scroll depth shows wedding clients engage most, make that section prominent. Put your most impressive food photos and event photos at the top.
Break up long menus. Catering menus are long. Use section headers and sample photos to break up text so customers can scan and find what they need. Keep them scrolling with visual variety.
Make inquiry forms easy to find. If scroll depth shows customers do not reach your quote request form, add a sticky button that follows them as they scroll. Make it simple for interested clients to start an inquiry without searching.