For the longest time, I used to judge my email campaigns by two things: open rates and click-throughs.
If the subject line popped and people clicked, I figured the email was a success. But here’s the thing… those numbers don’t pay the bills.
I’ll never forget the first time I got smacked with reality. I ran a campaign for a digital product launch — beautiful design, killer CTA, super high open rate. I even celebrated when the clicks came in. But then… crickets. No sales. Zero conversions. I was shocked.
That was my wake-up call: if you’re not tracking actual conversions, you’re basically flying blind. Vanity metrics feel good, but they won’t tell you what’s actually working.
If you’re ready to stop guessing and start making decisions based on real revenue, here’s your no-BS guide to tracking conversions from email campaigns.
First: Define What a “Conversion” Means for You
Not every conversion is a sale. Sometimes it’s a lead. Sometimes it’s a course signup, a free trial, a webinar registration, or even a reply.
Before you even send an email, ask yourself: What’s the goal? That goal becomes your conversion metric. Once you’ve got that locked in, you can build everything else around it.
UTM Parameters: Your Secret Weapon
This one’s not sexy, but it’s powerful. UTM tags are little snippets you add to the end of your links. They help platforms like Google Analytics track where traffic is coming from — including from specific email campaigns.
I use them religiously. Every time I link to a product, a blog post, or a sign-up page, I tag it with the campaign name, email type, and date. That way, when someone clicks and later buys, I can trace it all the way back to the email that started it.
Here’s what a basic UTM string looks like:?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=launch_may2025
Trust me: do this once, and you’ll never send a “naked” link again.
Set Up Goals in Google Analytics (Or GA4)
This part used to confuse the heck out of me — but it’s worth figuring out.
In Google Analytics (GA4 now), you can set up custom goals or conversion events. These might be:
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Purchase confirmations
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Form submissions
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Button clicks
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Time spent on page
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Scroll depth
Once goals are set, every click from your email campaign that leads to a completed goal is tracked. It’s magical. You’ll see how your emails actually drive action, not just eyeballs.
Connect Your Email Platform to Your Store or CRM
A lot of email tools have built-in conversion tracking. If you’re using:
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Klaviyo with Shopify or WooCommerce — it’s seamless.
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Mailchimp offers basic eCommerce reports if it’s connected to your store.
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ConvertKit tracks product sales via Stripe.
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HubSpot has full-funnel reporting if you’re using their CRM.
Use these integrations! When they’re set up right, you’ll see exactly which email made which sale, even across multi-step funnels.
Use Post-Purchase Surveys (Yes, Really)
Sometimes the best way to track a conversion is just… ask.
I started adding a one-question survey on my thank-you pages:
“How did you hear about this product?”
One of the options? “Email.”
You’d be surprised how many people pick it, especially if they clicked your email days ago and bought later. This gives you an extra data point that software might miss.
Track Assisted Conversions (Not Just Last-Click)
This one blew my mind. Not every email will convert instantly. Some nudge, some remind, and some bring people back later. In tools like Google Analytics or HubSpot, you can see assisted conversions — meaning emails that helped in the journey, even if they didn’t close the deal.
I had one email with terrible direct conversion numbers. But when I looked at assisted conversions? It showed up in every customer journey for that launch. Game changer.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Let me save you some facepalms:
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Forgetting UTM tags — you’ll have no idea where the traffic came from.
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Tracking clicks instead of actions — it’s not enough to know who clicked. You need to know who converted.
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Using the wrong attribution model — last-click isn’t always the truth.
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Not syncing tools — if your CRM, email platform, and analytics aren’t connected, you’ll be patching things together manually.
Final Thought
Look, email is still one of the highest ROI channels out there. But it’s only powerful when you track the right things.
Forget the dopamine hits from open rates. Start focusing on conversions — the real, tangible results. Set up your links right, connect your tools, and track what matters.
It might take a weekend to get it all dialed in, but after that? You’ll make smarter decisions, waste less time, and run campaigns that actually move the needle.
And the best part? No more guessing.








