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Web Analytics & Conversion Measurement

Web analytics connects search performance to user behavior and business outcomes. While Search Console shows what happens on the SERP, analytics tools (primarily GA4) show what happens after the click — engagement, conversions, and revenue.

Learning Focus

After this lesson you can analyze organic traffic, measure conversions and revenue attribution, assess lead quality, and evaluate SEO's assisted conversion role across the full customer journey.

This lesson covers the seven analytics dimensions (leaves 2.2.1–2.2.7): organic traffic analysis, landing page analysis, engagement analysis, conversion tracking, revenue attribution, lead quality measurement, and assisted conversion analysis.

Why This Matters

Core Concept
  • Without analytics, SEO is optimized for rankings and traffic without knowing whether those metrics produce business value.
  • GA4's event-based model requires different setup than the session-based model of Universal Analytics. Many organizations have incomplete or incorrect GA4 configurations.
  • Conversion and attribution analysis reveals which organic traffic is valuable and which is not.

Organic Traffic Analysis

Organic traffic analysis measures the volume, source, and trends of search-driven visits.

Key GA4 reports for organic traffic:

  • Acquisition > Traffic Acquisition: Shows sessions by session_default_channel_grouping. Filter to Organic Search.
  • Acquisition > User Acquisition: Shows first-touch channel for new users.
  • Acquisition > Search Console Organic Report: Integrated GSC data within GA4 (requires linking).

Metrics to track:

MetricGA4 Event/ParameterWhat It Measures
Organic sessionssession_start with channel = Organic SearchTotal search-driven visits
Organic usersfirst_visit / user_engagement with channel = Organic SearchUnique visitors from search
New organic usersfirst_visit with channel = Organic SearchFirst-time visitors from search
Organic pageviewspage_view with channel = Organic SearchTotal page views from organic sessions
Sessions by landing pagepage_location as landing pageWhich pages receive organic traffic
Organic traffic trendDate comparisonGrowth or decline over time

Analysis workflow:

  1. Open GA4 > Reports > Acquisition > Traffic Acquisition.
  2. Filter to session primary channel group = Organic Search.
  3. Set date range (current period vs previous period or year-over-year).
  4. Review total session trend. Is organic growing, flat, or declining?
  5. Scroll to the table and review which pages/landing pages drive the most organic sessions.
  6. Add secondary dimensions: country, device category, city for segmentation.

Landing Page Analysis

Landing page analysis identifies which pages users enter from search and how those pages perform.

Key metrics by landing page:

MetricWhat It Tells You
Organic sessionsVolume of search traffic to this page
New usersHow many first-time visitors arrive on this page
Bounce / engaged sessionsIs the content meeting user expectations?
Average engagement timeAre users spending time with the content?
Conversions per landing pageWhich pages drive business results
Conversion rate by landing pageEfficiency of each page at converting

Analysis workflow:

  1. GA4 > Engagement > Pages and screens.
  2. Filter to organic traffic (add session_source_medium contains google / organic as a condition).
  3. Sort by sessions descending.
  4. Review the top 20 organic landing pages. Identify:
    • Pages with high traffic but low engagement: content may not match search intent.
    • Pages with high traffic but low conversion: conversion path may have friction.
    • Pages with high engagement but low traffic: opportunity to improve ranking.

Landing page quality scoring:

Score ComponentMetricGoodNeeds Work
TrafficOrganic sessions> 1,000/month< 100/month
EngagementAverage engagement time> 60 seconds< 30 seconds
BounceEngagement rate> 60%< 40%
ConversionConversion rate by page> 1%< 0.1%

Engagement Analysis

Engagement analysis measures how users interact with your page after arriving from search.

Engagement metrics in GA4:

MetricDefinitionGood SignalBad Signal
Engagement rate% of sessions that lasted >10s, had a conversion event, or had 2+ page views> 60%< 40%
Average engagement timeAverage time of engaged sessions> 60s< 30s
Sessions per userHow often users return> 1.5< 1.1
Pages per sessionDepth of session> 2.0< 1.5
Scroll depth% of users scrolling to bottom of long-form content> 50%< 25%

How engagement analysis informs SEO decisions:

Engagement SignalSEO Implication
High engagement, low conversionsContent is satisfying but conversion path is unclear or friction-filled. Add or improve CTAs.
Low engagement, high bounceContent does not match search intent or is not scannable. Review query-to-content alignment.
Low time on page, high conversionsUsers find what they need quickly (good for transactional pages). Not a problem.
High pages per sessionContent effectively cross-links to related topics. Good for informational content.

Conversion Tracking

Conversion tracking measures the actions that matter to the business: purchases, form submissions, signups, phone calls, or other key events.

Configuring SEO conversion tracking in GA4:

  1. Define conversion events in GA4 (purchase, lead form submission, signup, etc.).
  2. Ensure the events fire correctly on organic traffic (test with Google Tag Assistant or GTM Preview).
  3. Create conversion tracking in GSC: in GSC, you can also track URL-level performance for pages that have GA4 goals configured.

Organic conversion metrics:

MetricConfigurationWhat It Measures
Organic conversionsConversion event + organic channel filterTotal conversions from organic search
Organic conversion rateOrganic conversions / organic sessionsEfficiency of organic traffic at converting
Organic cart-to-checkout rateCart events + checkout events (organic)Friction in organic purchase path
Organic form completion rateForm submit events (organic)Lead form conversion from organic
Organic trial signup rateSignup events (organic)Trial conversion from organic

Conversion reporting workflow:

  1. GA4 > Reports > Acquisition > Traffic Acquisition.
  2. Filter to Organic Search.
  3. Add conversion events as metrics.
  4. Compare organic conversion rate to other channels.
  5. Segment by landing page to find top-converting pages.

Revenue Attribution

Revenue attribution connects organic traffic to monetary value. GA4 provides several attribution models.

Attribution models in GA4:

ModelDescriptionBest ForSEO Relevance
Last clickFull credit to the last touchpoint before conversionDirect response channelsUndervalues SEO (SEO is often first touch or assist)
First clickFull credit to the first touchpointBrand awareness channelsOvervalues SEO (SEO often introduces, but other channels close)
LinearEqual credit to all touchpointsBalanced viewReasonable starting point
Time decayMore credit to touchpoints closer to conversionLonger sales cyclesMay undervalue SEO
Position-based40% to first touch, 40% to last touch, 20% to middleBalanced viewGood for SEO (first-touch credit for introductions)
Data-drivenAlgorithmic credit distribution based on conversion patternsSufficient conversion volume requiredMost accurate if enough data

Revenue attribution setup:

  1. In GA4, navigate to Advertising > Attribution > Model comparison.
  2. Compare organic channel revenue across models.
  3. Use position-based or data-driven model for reporting organic revenue to stakeholders.
  4. Document the model used and attribution limitations.

Revenue reporting example:

"Using position-based attribution, organic search contributed $340,000 in revenue last quarter. Last-click attribution shows $210,000. Data-driven attribution shows $295,000. We report a range of $295,000-$340,000, acknowledging that true value is between the models."

Lead Quality Measurement

Lead quality measurement goes beyond counting lead form submissions to tracking whether organic leads convert to opportunities, customers, and revenue.

Lead quality metrics:

MetricSourceWhat It Measures
Organic lead volumeGA4 form submission eventsRaw number of leads from organic
Lead-to-MQL rateCRM (e.g., Salesforce, HubSpot)% of organic leads that qualify as marketing-qualified
MQL-to-opportunity rateCRM% of organic MQLs that become sales opportunities
Opportunity-to-close rateCRM% of organic opportunities that close
Average deal size (organic)CRMRevenue per organic closed deal
Time to close (organic)CRMDays from organic lead to closed deal

Lead quality analysis workflow:

  1. Ensure UTM parameters are correctly applied to organic traffic links (Google auto-tags organic, but verify).
  2. Integrate GA4 with your CRM (via Google Ads data manager, or direct CRM integration).
  3. Create a report comparing lead-to-close metrics by channel.
  4. If organic leads have lower close rates than other channels, investigate lead quality issues: is the content attracting the right audience?

Assisted Conversion Analysis

Assisted conversion analysis measures the role organic search plays in conversion paths that include multiple channels.

Key assisted conversion metrics:

MetricDefinition
Assisted conversionsConversions where organic appeared in the path but was not the last touch
Last-click conversionsConversions where organic was the final touchpoint
Assisted conversion valueRevenue value of assisted organic conversions
Assisted-to-last-click ratioAssisted conversions / last-click conversions > 1 means organic plays a strong assist role

Analysis workflow in GA4:

  1. Navigation > Advertising > Attribution > Conversion paths.
  2. Filter to paths that include Organic Search at any touchpoint.
  3. Review the role organic plays:
    • Is organic primarily a first-touch channel (introducing the brand)?
    • Is organic primarily a last-touch channel (users search for the brand before converting)?
    • Is organic an assist channel (users discover through search, return through other channels)?

Example insight:

"Organic search appears in 62% of all conversion paths but is the last touch in only 18%. This confirms organic's primary role is brand introduction and top-of-funnel discovery. Reporting only last-click attribution would significantly understate organic's value."

Workflow

  1. Configure GA4: Ensure organic channel tracking, conversion events, and e-commerce/revenue tracking are set up correctly.
  2. Set up attribution: Choose and configure the attribution model for reporting.
  3. Weekly monitoring: Review organic traffic trend, landing page performance, top conversion pages.
  4. Monthly analysis: Deep dive into engagement, conversion rate by landing page, assisted conversion paths.
  5. Quarterly analysis: Lead quality comparison by channel, attribution model comparison, revenue reporting.

Common Mistakes

  • Using last-click attribution as the sole SEO revenue metric: This undervalues organic. Use position-based or data-driven attribution.
warning

Not configuring conversion tracking before starting SEO work: Without baseline conversion data, you cannot measure SEO impact.

  • Reporting conversion rate without segmenting by page type: A product page with 3% conversion rate and a blog page with 0.5% conversion rate are both normal. Compare within page type segments.
  • Ignoring lead quality data: Raw lead counts without close-rate data can overstate SEO value if organic leads are lower quality.
  • Not linking GSC and GA4: The integration provides query-level conversion data that is otherwise unavailable.

Checklist

  • GA4 is correctly tracking organic channel traffic.
  • Conversion events are configured and tested for organic traffic.
  • E-commerce or revenue tracking is correctly configured (if applicable).
  • GSC is linked to GA4.
  • Attribution model is selected and documented.
  • Landing page analysis identifies top 20 organic pages by traffic, engagement, and conversion.
  • Lead quality metrics are tracked (if applicable): MQL rate, close rate, deal size.
  • Assisted conversion analysis is documented to show organic's full channel contribution.
  • GA4 data is integrated into the SEO reporting dashboard.

What's Next

References