When Google sunset Universal Analytics and rolled out GA4, it promised smarter data, privacy-compliant tracking, and a clearer view of the customer journey. For many Shopify brands, this sounded like the perfect analytics solution.
But here’s the reality: GA4 still can’t show you the full customer journey—especially in a multi-channel ecommerce environment.
If you're a DTC brand owner or an agency managing Shopify stores, you’ve likely run into frustrating blind spots:
Revenue misattribution
Missing steps in the funnel
A confusing UI
No clear answer to the question: Which channels and touchpoints actually drive conversions?
In this article, we’ll break down:
Why GA4 falls short for ecommerce attribution
How it handles (and mishandles) multi-touch journeys
What Shopify brands actually need to see
Tools—like Attribuly—that can bridge the gap
Let’s be fair—GA4 isn’t useless. In fact, it does several things quite well:
Event-based tracking: Captures granular behavior like scrolls, clicks, and video views
Cross-device logic: Uses machine learning to connect sessions (when possible)
Flexible reports: The Explorations tool gives more control over how you slice your data
But these strengths don’t add up to real attribution insights.
Most GA4 reports still lean on last-click attribution, which ignores upper-funnel influence from:
Influencer campaigns
Organic social or brand ads
Email opens that didn’t lead to immediate clicks
This gives Shopify brands a narrow and misleading view of what's working.
Even though GA4 is event-based, it still thinks in sessions—a problem for ecommerce where:
Customers come back days later
The journey spans multiple devices and channels
Conversions are rarely linear
GA4’s attribution tools are:
Hidden and confusing
Lack transparency
Require technical know-how just to use
And even then, they don’t give you a clear view of assisted conversions or how top, middle, and bottom-funnel efforts work together.
GA4 doesn’t make it easy to track lifetime value by source or campaign. That’s a big deal for stores with:
Repeat customers
Subscription models
High AOV (average order value)
If you're running or managing a DTC store in 2024, you need tools that:
Track every click, view, and touchpoint
Merge data from Meta, Google, Klaviyo, influencers, etc.
Tie actions to actual Shopify revenue
Show first-time vs returning buyer paths
Report on real ROAS and LTV by channel
Attribuly is built for exactly this.
Unlike GA4, which was adapted from web analytics, Attribuly is made for ecommerce attribution—from day one.
Feature | Google Analytics 4 | Attribuly Analytics |
Multi-Touch Attribution | ⚠️ Limited | ✅ Native & Transparent |
Shopify Revenue Integration |
❌ | ✅ Native & Real-Time |
Channel-Level LTV | ❌ | ✅ |
Influencer/Email Attribution | ❌ | ✅ |
Unified Cross-Channel Reporting | Basic | ✅ |
Real-time Journey Visualization | ❌ | ✅ |
You don’t need to choose one or the other. Smart brands use:
GA4 for micro-conversions and user behavior
Attribuly for attribution modeling, revenue tracking, and ROAS reporting
Together, they tell the full story:
What users do + What drives revenue
GA4 isn’t built for Shopify attribution—especially not for DTC brands using Meta, Google, email, and influencers together.
Attribuly fills that gap with:
Multi-touch tracking
Shopify-native revenue attribution
Full-funnel customer journey insights
🎯 Want to see where your ad dollars are actually going?
Try Attribuly free and stop guessing.