Many businesses measure SEO success by looking at rankings, traffic, or the total number of leads generated. While these metrics can be useful indicators, they don’t tell the full story.
If your SEO campaigns generate 100 leads but only two customers, can you really boast about the 100 leads? So how can you track SEO lead quality?
Track SEO performance by separating high-intent and low-intent conversions, comparing GA4 data with CRM outcomes, and reporting on which organic conversions are qualified leads and customers. This can be used to report on the actual value rather than a single conversion number.
Read on to learn how to identify high-quality SEO leads, avoid common reporting mistakes, and build a lead quality tracking framework that connects SEO activity to real business outcomes.

What Does Lead Quality Mean in SEO?
While lead quantity defines how many total leads you received, lead quality refers to how likely a lead is to become a paying customer.
In an SEO context, this means evaluating users who arrive through organic search and convert, so that you can determine whether they are genuinely interested and aligned with your products or services.
A high volume of organic leads looks impressive, but if those enquiries are irrelevant or unqualified, the campaign still won’t be providing true value.
You can think of lead quality as the service-site equivalent of an e-commerce website’s average order value (AOV).
Low-Quality vs High-Quality Leads
Not all leads are created equal. Often, our tracking will capture a contact from a customer, but the data has no way of distinguishing between a genuine caller and a spam caller.
Quality-focused SEO reporting looks beyond the initial click, and asks:
- Does this lead match our target audience?
- Is there genuine intent?
- Does the enquiry fit our ideal customer profile?
- Does the lead ultimately generate revenue?
Examples of Low-Quality SEO Leads
Low-quality leads often include:
- Students conducting research
- Job seekers completing contact forms
- Other companies trying to make a sale
- Visitors looking for free solutions
- Enquiries that don’t match your service
Examples of High-Quality SEO Leads
High-quality SEO leads typically demonstrate:
- Clear purchase intent
- Alignment with your target market
- Suitable budgets
- Relevant business requirements
- A good likelihood of progressing past the initial contact

Common Lead Reporting Mistakes
While each action is technically a conversion, they do not all carry the same business value. Counting all conversions equally is only part of the problem. Other common mistakes include:
- Mixing low-intent and high-intent actions in the same report – for example, one singular number for conversions, while contact form conversions from blogs could have a considerably lower business impact than calls from service pages.
- Failing to separate leads by landing page or keyword theme.
- Ignoring what happens after the form submission.
- Reporting on conversions without sales or CRM feedback.
- Treating every organic lead as a qualified opportunity.
When these mistakes happen, SEO can appear more successful than it really is, or valuable traffic can be overlooked because it generates fewer but better leads.
If you’re stuck knowing what you should be tracking, read our guide: What to Track and How To Explain It
Using Conversion Types to Assess Lead Quality
One of the simplest ways to improve lead quality is by separating conversions based on intent.
Different conversion actions often indicate different levels of buying readiness.
Low-Intent Conversions
These actions may indicate early-stage interest:
- Newsletter subscriptions
- Ebook downloads
- Resource downloads
- Webinar registrations
These conversions can be valuable, but don’t necessarily indicate immediate purchase intent.
High-Intent Conversions
These actions often indicate stronger commercial intent:
- Contact form submissions
- Quote requests
- Consultation bookings
- Product demonstrations
- Phone calls
- Emails
Tracking these opportunities separately provides a much clearer understanding of how SEO contributes to revenue opportunities.
If you wanted to take it a step further, you could calculate the average number of contacts that are leads compared to spam, and use this to provide an estimated number of true leads.
The quality of leads has also changed a lot since LLMs became much more common in SEO. For information on how to include AI in your tracking, read our guide: How to Measure SEO Success in the Age of LLMs
Using Follow-Up Outcomes to Measure Lead Quality
The majority of the time, you won’t know the quality of a lead until after the initial conversation. This is why tracking follow-up outcomes is so important.
Questions worth tracking include:
- Did the lead respond to follow-up communication?
- Was a meeting booked?
- Did the opportunity progress to a proposal?
- Did the lead become a customer?
These outcomes help distinguish genuine prospects from low-value conversions. In many cases, you might find that a large portion of leads never progress beyond the initial enquiry stage.
Understanding this allows for more accurate reporting and better optimisation decisions.

How CRM Feedback Improves SEO Reporting
Your CRM is often the missing link between SEO activity and revenue performance. While GA4 can show how visitors arrive and convert, a CRM can reveal what happens afterwards.
Sales teams often have valuable insight into:
- Lead quality
- Sales readiness
- Budget suitability
- Customer fit
- Revenue generated
By connecting your CRM with SEO reporting, you can identify which keywords, landing pages, and content generate the best leads – which can move your SEO reporting beyond basic conversion counts and provide actual business impact.
How GA4 Supports Better Lead Quality Insights
Although GA4 cannot directly tell you whether a lead becomes a customer, it provides valuable context around how high-quality leads interact with your site:
- Landing Pages: Identify which pages generate the highest-value enquiries.
- Traffic Sources: Compare organic traffic quality against other marketing channels.
- User Journeys: Understand which content and pages contribute to conversions.
- Conversion Events: Measure different conversion actions separately rather than grouping them together.
When combined with CRM data or manual tracking, GA4 becomes a powerful tool for understanding how valuable leads actually are.
For more information on SEO reporting, read our guide: SEO Reporting & Attribution
A Simple Lead Quality Tracking Framework
You can use the following framework for an easy-to-use, practical way to track SEO performance through lead quality:
Step 1: Track SEO Conversions
Measure all relevant organic conversions within GA4.
Step 2: Categorise Conversion Types
Separate low-intent and high-intent actions.
Step 3: Capture CRM Outcomes
Record whether leads progress through the sales process.
Step 4: Score Lead Quality
Assign lead quality ratings based on factors such as:
- Relevance
- Intent
- Budget
- Sales progression
Step 5: Report on Quality, Not Just Quantity
Instead of saying “SEO generated 100 leads”, report “SEO generated 100 leads, 40 qualified leads, and 12 new customers”.
Track SEO Performance More Effectively
The number of leads generated through SEO only tells part of the story. To accurately track SEO performance, you need to understand the quality of those leads and their contribution to business outcomes.
By combining GA4 data, conversion tracking, CRM feedback, and sales outcomes, you can move beyond surface-level reporting and gain a much clearer understanding of SEO’s true value.
If you need support with SEO strategy, GA4 setup, or reporting – Wildcat Digital can help. Get in touch with our team today.