Email marketing and GA4 analytics are a match made for enhancing campaign performance.
Why? Let us explain.
The world has 4.26 billion email users with 27% of consumers stating that regular newsletters are likely to make them purchase from a brand.
The importance of data analytics cannot be overstated with an impressive 47% of marketing decision-makers convinced email marketing could benefit massively from data-driven decision-making.
You need data analytics to make data-driven decision making and Google Analytics is an industry leader in the analytics technology, dominating nearly 27% global share.
GA4 is a website and mobile app performance tracking tool that facilitates (e-commerce) advertising success. Combining email marketing with Google Analytics 4’s web analytics to drive engagement, conversion (key events), and revenue makes complete sense.
We will explain using GA4 for email marketing and enhancing campaign performance.
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Email Marketing and Google Analytics 4
Email marketing is a digital marketing strategy that involves sending targeted, personalized emails to promote products, and services, or engaging with subscribers.
It can involve various types of emails:
- Welcome Emails
- Newsletters
- Lead Nurturing Emails
- Promotional Emails
- Survey Emails
It is a direct communication channel between businesses and their audience, allowing for tailored messaging based on recipient preferences and behaviors.
With Google Analytics 4 (GA4) email marketing efforts can be optimized through robust tracking and analysis of key metrics.
Though they may vary from business to business, the most popular email marketing metrics of 2023 were conversion (or key events) rate, open rate, and click-through rate.
GA4 enables marketers to gain deeper insights into email campaign performance, identify areas for improvement, and make data-driven decisions to enhance overall campaign effectiveness.
Email marketing campaign optimization with GA4 can be achieved in three stages:
- Setting up Email Marketing Tracking in Google Analytics 4
- Analyzing Email Marketing Campaign Performance in GA4
- Leveraging GA4 Insights to Optimize Email Marketing Campaigns
We will discuss each of these one by one.
1. Setting Up Email Tracking in GA4
The first stage in enhancing your email campaign in GA4 is to set up email tracking.
Let us go over the steps below.
Set Up Campaign URL
A campaign URL is a version of your website that can track users arriving on your website.
When you create a new email marketing campaign, you also create an exclusive campaign URL that you send out in the email for the readers to click and perform a desired action.
These URLs have the Urchin Tracking Module or UTM parameters, a code snippet, at the end of the URL that tracks information like source, medium, campaign, term, and content.
When a user clicks the link you shared in the email, UTM parameters populate in GA4, showing details in the Traffic Acquisition and other reports.
You can do so when setting up the campaign URL.
- Go to Google’s Campaign URL Builder.
- Fill out the campaign’s UTM parameters in the provided form.
- Once the required fields are filled, it will generate a Campaign URL for you. Copy this link.
- Now, paste the URL to your marketing email.
- Tada. You are done.
Send a Test Email and See the Parameters in the Debug View
You have successfully implemented the UTM parameters for the email campaign. It is time to test and see if it populates the parameters in your Google Analytics 4 property.
Follow the steps below to perform the task.
- Go to your Email Marketing Platform and send a test email.
- Once the email lands in your inbox, click the link provided in the email and browse your website. This should send data to your GA4 property.
- Now, go to GA4 > Admin > Data Display > Debug view.
- Go to the Extensions icon next to the web URL you are in and check in the drop-down if the Google Analytics Debugger extension is turned on. Refresh the website (opened from the campaign URL).
- Return to the GA4 DebugView, here you will find the actions taken on your website in real-time. Click the most recent page view.
- In the page_view event, you will find the UTM parameters tracked by GA4; including the campaign, medium, and source (and any other parameters you set up). Click the “campaign” parameter, and you will find the name you set up in the URL builder for the campaign.
If you do find these parameters in the debug view, it means everything was set up correctly. Next, wait 24-48 hours for the email campaign data to populate into Google Analytics 4 reports.
2. Analyzing Email Campaign Performance in Google Analytics 4
Once the users start responding to your email marketing campaign by clicking the campaign URL and visiting your website, GA4 will begin collecting the data.
But it would take a day or two; before you see the data in the reports section. When it does happen, you can use the following methods to review your email marketing campaign performance.
Traffic Acquisition Report
The Traffic Acquisition Report gives detailed information about the visitors and their interactions with your website or mobile application.
To track your email marketing campaign, take the following steps.
- Go to GA4 > Reports > Traffic acquisition. Since email is among the top ten traffic sources, it is listed at the bottom.
- You could also type “Email” in the search bar to find statistics about users from this channel.
- Then, click the plus sign next to the drop-down menu and add a secondary dimension by clicking “Traffic source” and choosing “Session campaign” from the options.
- Alternatively, you could simply choose “Session source/medium” from the drop-down menu in the report.
Exploration Report for Email Marketing Campaign Performance
We need to build an Exploration report to conduct an in-depth analysis of your email campaign performance and identify the relevant information to optimize your campaign.
- Go to GA4 > Explorations > Blank.
- In the Blank Explorations report go to Variables and click to add a Segment.
- Click Segments and then select User Segment from the opening tab.
- In the top left, you will find Untitled Segment, enter Email Marketing there as the name.
- In the Add Conditions section go to Traffic source and select First user medium.
- Then, click Add filter, in Conditions choose contains, check the box “At any point in time” and in the blank box enter “email” Click Apply and then Save and apply at the top right.
- Next, go to Variables > Dimensions, in the opening tab search and import the dimensions “First user campaign”, “Landing Page + query string”, “Event Name”, “Item name” “Device category”, “Browser”, and “Country”.
- Now, go to Variables > Metrics and import the following metrics.
- Views
- Total users
- Sessions
- Engaged sessions
- Engagement rate
- Event Count
- Key Events
- Total revenue
- User key event rate
- Session key event rate
- Items viewed
- Items added to cart
- Items purchased
- Item revenue
- Then, double-click the First user campaign to add it to the Rows section in the settings column.
- Next, double-click the first eight metrics added in the previous step to the canvas.
- Go to Settings > Cell Types and select Heat map.
- Finally, rename the report at the top by typing Email Marketing Campaign in the place of Free Form 1.
Congratulations, you have a detailed report to assess your marketing campaign performance.
3. Leveraging GA4 Insights to Optimize Email Marketing Campaigns
The whole point of setting up email marketing tracking is to leverage GA4’s powerful analytics capabilities to assess performance and make data-driven decisions.
So, let us review data-driven methods to optimize email campaigns to drive engagement, and key events and generate revenue.
1. Understanding User Behavior Across Platforms
GA4 provides a holistic view of user interactions across various platforms and devices.
Tracking user behavior from email clicks to website visits and key events offers valuable insights into the customer journey.
Understanding how users interact with emails and subsequently engage with the website or app can help identify friction points and optimize the conversion funnel.
2. Segmenting Email Audiences for Personalization
With GA4, marketers can segment email audiences based on behavior, demographics, and interests.
Segmentation then paves the way to create personalized emails and offers for marketing campaigns to improve engagement and key event rates.
Relevance plays a crucial role in the performance of a marketing campaign, with 78% of respondents, between the age group 18 – 26, of a survey citing lack of relevance as the leading of brands’ failure to engage their consumers.
Marketers can utilize these audience segments to offer personalized email content and tailored offers that resonate with specific audience groups.
3. Email Campaign Attribution
GA4’s advanced attribution modeling allows marketers to attribute conversions to email campaigns.
Implementing a robust email campaign tracking system in Google Analytics 4 and flexible attribution model selection allows businesses to use the model suited to their needs.
Tracking and monitoring the role of individual email campaigns in the customer journey enables businesses to allocate resources effectively and optimize campaign performance.
4. Testing and Iterating Email Campaigns
While GA4 does not offer A/B testing, it can integrate with other A/B testing tools to supply the web analytics needed to perform the testing.
Marketers can experiment with email campaign features like subject lines, CTAs, and content layout for A/B testing. Trying different versions and analyzing the impact on key metrics, helps marketers to identify winning strategies and iterate for continuous improvement.
5. Integrating Email Insights With other Marketing Channels
GA4’s cross-platform tracking capabilities allow marketers to integrate email insights with other marketing channels seamlessly.
It enables businesses to analyze the impact of email campaigns on website traffic, app installs, and in-app purchases, and get a comprehensive understanding of their overall marketing performance.
This holistic approach enables marketers to allocate resources strategically and optimize the entire marketing mix for maximum ROI.
Conclusion
This blog discusses, “Email Marketing and GA4 Analytics” and how the latter could help enhance campaign performance.
It is achieved in three stages. First, businesses can set up email tracking in Google Analytics 4 by implementing UTM parameters in the email campaign URL.
In the second stage, they could monitor and track the performance of their email marketing campaigns via standard and default reports in GA4. The blog gives examples of Traffic Acquisition and a custom Exploration report to do so.
Finally, the insights provided by Google Analytics 4 can help businesses understand their audience behavior, create segments, and offer personalized marketing content.
Furthermore, attribution models can assist them with resource reallocation, and they could test their campaigns by integrating their GA4 data with A/B testing tools to optimize campaigns and reiterate for better ROI.
Do you like what you read? Learn more about Digital Analytics on our blog here.