Conversion Tracking
Traffic means nothing if it doesn't convert. A thousand visitors and zero signups is worse than a hundred visitors and ten signups. Conversion tracking gives you visibility into what happens after users arrive — do they complete the actions that matter to your business?
This guide covers the full scope of conversion tracking: defining what to measure, building funnels, diagnosing drop-offs, and connecting conversions to the rest of your monitoring stack.
Contents
- What conversion tracking actually measures
- Types of conversions
- Setting up goals
- Building funnels
- Diagnosing drop-offs
- Attribution and traffic sources
- Common mistakes
- Frequently asked questions
What conversion tracking actually measures
A conversion is any action you want users to complete. The definition varies by business:
| Business type | Primary conversion | Secondary conversions |
|---|---|---|
| E-commerce | Purchase | Add to cart, account creation |
| SaaS | Signup / trial start | Pricing page visit, demo request |
| Lead gen | Form submission | PDF download, phone call |
| Content | Newsletter signup | Article completion, share |
| Affiliate | Outbound click | Product page views |
Conversion tracking captures when these actions happen and connects them to what you know about each user — where they came from, what pages they visited, and whether they encountered any problems along the way.
The goal is not just counting conversions. It's understanding the path to conversion and identifying where that path breaks.
Types of conversions
Form submissions
The most common conversion type. Contact forms, signup forms, checkout forms — any form that submits data. Most tracking tools can detect form submissions automatically by monitoring form submit events.
Button clicks
Specific button clicks can represent conversions: "Add to Cart," "Start Free Trial," "Download PDF." Unlike form submissions, button clicks require explicit tracking setup because not every button click is meaningful.
Page visits
Sometimes reaching a page is the conversion. A confirmation page after checkout. A thank-you page after signup. A pricing page visit as a micro-conversion indicating purchase intent.
Outbound clicks
For affiliate sites, the conversion is leaving your site — clicking through to an external product or service. These require tracking clicks on external links.
Custom events
Any action you define: video plays, scroll depth, time on page thresholds, specific interactions. Custom events let you track whatever matters to your business.
Setting up goals
A goal defines what counts as a conversion and how to measure it.
Goal structure
Every goal needs:
- Name — What you're measuring ("Newsletter signup," "Purchase")
- Type — How it's triggered (form submit, page visit, click, custom)
- Conditions — What makes it count (specific URL, specific element, specific event)
- Value — Optional dollar amount for revenue tracking
Goal examples
| Goal | Type | Condition |
|---|---|---|
| Contact form | Form submit | Form on /contact page |
| Purchase | Page visit | URL contains /order-confirmation |
| Trial signup | Form submit | Form with id="signup-form" |
| Affiliate click | Outbound click | Links to partner domains |
| Add to cart | Click | Button with class ".add-to-cart" |
Micro vs. macro conversions
Macro conversions are your primary business goals — purchases, signups, qualified leads.
Micro conversions are smaller steps that indicate progress — pricing page views, add to cart, email opens.
Track both. Micro conversions help you understand the journey. If pricing page visits are high but signups are low, the problem is probably the pricing, not the traffic.
Building funnels
A funnel maps the steps users take from entry to conversion. It reveals exactly where users drop off.
Funnel example: E-commerce checkout
| Step | Sessions | Drop-off |
|---|---|---|
| Product page | 10,000 | — |
| Add to cart | 2,400 | 76% |
| Cart page | 2,100 | 12% |
| Checkout start | 1,500 | 29% |
| Payment entered | 1,200 | 20% |
| Order confirmed | 980 | 18% |
This funnel shows the biggest drop happens at "add to cart" — 76% of product page visitors leave without adding anything. That's where optimization should focus.
Funnel design rules
Keep steps sequential. Each step should require completing the previous step. "Viewed product → Added to cart → Started checkout" works. "Viewed product → Visited blog → Added to cart" doesn't — the blog visit isn't part of the purchase journey.
Don't over-segment. Too many steps make the funnel noisy. Group related actions. "Filled shipping info → Filled billing info → Clicked submit" can just be "Completed checkout form."
Compare time periods. A funnel is most useful when compared to itself. Did drop-off at checkout increase after last week's deploy? That tells you something.
Diagnosing drop-offs
When funnel steps show high drop-off, the question is: why?
Technical problems
Errors that prevent users from completing actions. A JavaScript exception on the checkout page. A form that won't submit. A button that doesn't respond.
Connect conversion tracking to error data. If sessions with errors have lower conversion rates than sessions without, the errors are costing you money.
UX problems
Confusing interfaces, unclear copy, too many steps, unexpected costs, slow loading. These problems don't throw errors — they create friction.
Rage clicks and other behavioral signals can indicate UX problems. Users clicking repeatedly on something that isn't working suggests confusion or frustration.
Traffic quality
Not all traffic converts equally. Paid ads might bring high-intent visitors. Social media might bring curious browsers. Organic search might bring people looking for information, not products.
Segment conversion rates by traffic source. If one source has dramatically lower conversion rates, the problem might be targeting, not your site.
Pricing and positioning
Sometimes users reach the conversion point and decide not to proceed. They saw the price. They compared to competitors. They weren't convinced.
This isn't something conversion tracking can fix directly, but it can tell you where the decision is being made.
Attribution and traffic sources
Attribution answers: "Where did converting users come from?"
Basic attribution models
| Model | Credit goes to |
|---|---|
| First touch | The first source that brought the user |
| Last touch | The last source before conversion |
| Linear | All sources split equally |
| Time decay | Recent sources get more credit |
Most simple setups use last-touch attribution. It's imperfect but actionable — you can see which channels drive conversions directly.
What to track
- Source — google, facebook, email, direct
- Medium — organic, cpc, referral, email
- Campaign — Specific campaign identifiers for paid traffic
- Landing page — Where users entered
- Device — Mobile vs. desktop conversion rates often differ dramatically
Common mistakes
Only tracking final conversions. Without micro-conversions, you can't see the funnel. You only know "we got 50 signups" not "5,000 people started the process and 50 finished."
Not segmenting by source. Overall conversion rate hides differences between channels. One channel might convert at 10%, another at 0.5%. Aggregate data shows 2%.
Ignoring mobile. Mobile traffic often converts at lower rates. If mobile is half your traffic and converts at one-third the rate, that's not a mobile "problem" — it's a mobile optimization opportunity.
Counting conversions without context. 100 conversions is good. 100 conversions from 100,000 visits is bad. Always pair conversion counts with rates.
Not connecting to errors. If 20% of your checkout sessions have JavaScript errors and none of those sessions convert, those errors are directly costing you revenue.
Frequently asked questions
What conversion rate should I aim for?
It depends on your industry, traffic source, and product. E-commerce sites typically see 1-4% overall. High-intent traffic (brand search, email campaigns) converts much higher. Focus on improving your own rate over time rather than chasing benchmarks.
Should I track every possible conversion?
No. Track conversions that map to business outcomes. Too many goals create noise. Start with 2-3 macro conversions and a few relevant micro conversions. Add more only when you have questions the current data can't answer.
How do I track conversions across devices?
This requires user identification — accounts, email addresses, or login sessions. If users sign in, you can connect their sessions. If they don't, cross-device tracking is limited to probabilistic methods or first-party cookies.
What's the difference between conversion rate and conversion value?
Rate is percentage of sessions that convert. Value is the dollar amount of those conversions. A 1% conversion rate with $500 average order value is very different from 10% with $5 average value.
Do I need a separate analytics tool for conversions?
Not necessarily. Many monitoring tools include conversion tracking. Google Analytics tracks conversions. askbowtie tracks conversions alongside error monitoring and performance. The key is ensuring your conversion data connects to the other data you care about.
Sub-pillars
Funnels and Drop-off Analysis
Build conversion funnels that reveal exactly where users abandon. Diagnose drop-offs and fix the steps that cost you the most.
Next steps
If you're new to conversion tracking:
- Define 2-3 primary conversion goals for your site
- Set up basic funnel tracking from landing to conversion
- Connect conversion data to your traffic sources
If you're already tracking conversions:
- Connect conversion data to error monitoring for impact analysis
- Review drop-offs with behavioral signals
- Ensure performance isn't affecting conversion rates