I Tracked Every SEO Metric.Revenue Was Silent.
For months I was obsessed with rankings, organic traffic, click-through rates. The dashboards looked fantastic.
Then I realized I wasn't tracking a single metric that connected those numbers to actual business outcomes. I had visibility into the machine but no clue if the machine was making money.
The gap was simple: I was measuring activity, not impact. Rankings don't pay bills.
Leads do. Customers do.
Revenue does. So I rebuilt my tracking around three questions: Which organic keywords actually drive conversions?
What's the cost per acquisition from SEO versus other channels? How much revenue comes back from someone who first found me through search?
com/analytics/answer/9267568) made this possible, but only if you set it up backward from the outcome, not forward from the clicks.
What changed was my entire relationship with the data. Now when I see traffic spike, my first instinct isn't to celebrate the number.
It's to ask whether that traffic moved the needle on our business goals. That's the only metric that matters.
Worth trying: Set up one conversion goal in GA4 that tracks an actual business outcome (a sale, a qualified lead form, a phone call). Then spend one week watching where that conversion came from. You'll learn more about your SEO's real value in seven days than in seven months of ranking reports.
