Marketers are still getting their heads around the capabilities of GA4; even those who have migrated to the new platform are largely discovering new functionality by the week.
(Note: if you haven’t yet taken the plunge, we’ve got a GA4 migration guide for that.)
One of the goodies we recently discovered in a Google Support post is potentially big for B2B companies: a measurement option for form interactions. When you enable it, you’ll see two types of events:
form_start – the first time a user interacts with a form in a session
form_submit – shows you when a user officially submits a form
The second event is hardly breaking news, since you’ll presumably get that data in your CRM. The first, though, is great for marketers who don’t have another way of accessing the data of partial form submissions, which is handy for retargeting and for indicating, if many users start forms but few submit them, when forms need to be optimized for conversion.
You’ll need to enable the enhanced event measurement in Google Analytics to enable this feature. Under the ‘Property Column’, you’ll want to click ‘Data Streams’ then ‘Web’. Then, under ‘Enhanced Measurement’, you’ll want to slide the toggle on.
Additionally, if you use Google Tag on your website, make sure that each event has been enabled for automatic event detection. You’ll also need to include the right parameters (found here) to trigger your data collection.
While there are other solutions for gathering data of incomplete form submissions, including user bounce rates that can be accessed in Universal Analytics, GA4 is giving marketers an easy way to build an audience list (using that tracking data under Audience Manager in Google Ads) and retarget to those specific users. The intent for an incomplete form capture is obviously very high – the rough equivalent of an eCommerce user abandoning a cart. Retargeting those users with segmented messaging could give your campaigns a cost-effective way to boost your lead volume.
Once you’re gathering data for both form completions and form starts, it’s an easy calculation to get the percentage of users who complete or abandon the form. The higher the percentage of the latter, the bigger priority you should assign to form optimization (and in optimizing your LP to more clearly convey the benefits of whatever the form is offering).
There are a few recommendations I make when a form-submission rate is low:
This might not be the most earth-shaking measurement option in GA4, but it could make a big difference. With engagement costs high and marketers looking for any edge, a hot new retargeting audience and data that shows a high-leverage optimization opportunity come as welcome news.
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