How to Track Site Search Usage for Architects
A potential client visits your architecture website, searches for “kitchen renovations,” and sees nothing relevant. They leave. You never knew they were interested. Site search tracking would have shown you exactly what they wanted.
For architects, your portfolio is your product. When visitors search for specific project types, those searches are buying signals. Ignoring them means losing prospects.
Why Site Search Usage Matters for Architects
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Portfolio Optimization. Visitors search for what they need. If “commercial projects” gets many searches but no results, you need a dedicated commercial portfolio section.
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Client Intent Revealed. Search terms show exactly what project types interest visitors. Someone searching “sustainable design” has different needs than someone searching “home additions.”
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Content Gaps Exposed. When visitors search for services you offer but cannot find, you lose leads. Site search usage reveals these missed opportunities.
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Competitive Insight. If visitors search for “3D renderings” and you do not highlight that service, add it to your services page.
How to Check Site Search Usage in GA4
Enable site search tracking first. In GA4, go to Admin > Data Streams > your site. Under Enhanced Measurement, ensure Site Search is toggled on. If you use a custom search engine, add your query parameter manually.
Then access the data:
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Engagement Section. Open Reports > Engagement and find Site Search reports under Events.
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Custom Exploration. Create a Free Form report with Search Term as a dimension and Sessions as a metric.
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Conversion Tracking. Mark key searches as conversions if they represent high-intent actions.
Focus on searches with high volume and zero results. Those are urgent content gaps.
The Easier Way
ClawAnalytics simplifies site search for architects. Instead of complex GA4 setups, you get instant insights:
- Top search terms across your portfolio
- Which project categories generate the most interest
- Pages where visitors give up searching
For instance, if visitors search for “bathroom remodels” and you only showcase kitchens, you know to expand your residential portfolio. If they search for “office space design,” consider adding a commercial gallery.
ClawAnalytics also shows search trends over time. This helps you plan content around seasonality or market demand.
Quick Wins
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Tag Your Projects. Add clear categories to every portfolio entry: residential, commercial, interior, landscape.
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Create Category Pages. If searches cluster around “landscape architecture,” build a dedicated page showcasing those projects.
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Add a Services Page. If visitors search for services you offer but cannot find, create a clear services breakdown.
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Monitor Weekly. Architecture leads often come from repeat visits. Check search data weekly to spot trends early.
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Test Navigation Changes. After reorganizing your portfolio, compare search volume for popular terms. Does it drop? That signals improvement.
Start tracking site search today. Every search is a potential client telling you what they want.