Revenue Operating System · Measurement Foundation
Unified Tracking Architecture
One GTM & UTM standard across every DRIPBaR location — regardless of which marketing vendor runs the ads.
Corporate owns the measurement layer. Vendors own the media layer.
Marketing partners run campaigns however they like. Tracking lives in corporate-owned Google Analytics and Tag Manager — so attribution is consistent across the network, portable between vendors, and owned by us.
Which ROS pillar this addresses
This is the measurement foundation for the front of the funnel. It anchors Pillar 02 — Lead Capture & Qualification, which depends on capturing and attributing every inbound lead source, and directly powers Pillar 01 — Conversion. Clean, standardized data then flows downstream to feed the recovery and lifecycle pillars.
OACF
Online appointment conversion flow
Directly poweredLCQE
Lead capture & qualification engine
PrimaryAARS
Abandoned appointment recovery
DownstreamCLMA
Client lifecycle marketing
DownstreamArchitectural flow — interest to attributed booking
The KPI this delivers
Cost per Booked Appointment (CPBA)
Paid marketing spend divided by the booked appointments attributed to that spend — measured per location and per channel. For the first time, we can tie marketing dollars to booked revenue instead of clicks. It tells us exactly what we pay to fill a chair, and where that cost is lowest.
Attributed booking rate
Share of booked appointments with a known, tracked source. Measures how complete our attribution coverage is across the network.
Channel conversion rate
Sessions that turn into a booked appointment, broken out by source — so we can compare paid search, organic, GBP, and Meta head to head.
Paid vs organic demand mix
The split of booked demand between paid search and organic. Pairs directly with the Search Console organic data we already track.
How vendors connect — two paths, zero direct access
PATH A — JSON IMPORT
The vendor exports their tag container as a file. We import it into that location's corporate container. Their tracking carries over intact.
PATH B — SUBMIT IDS
The vendor sends a conversion ID and label. We drop them into the pre-built corporate blueprint. No file exchange needed.
—Third-party vendors are never given direct access to the corporate container. A tag manager can inject scripts that take over a website, so access stays with corporate while vendors hand off only what they need tracked.
Owned at the account level
Ownership is the line that makes it a standard
The container architecture solves consistency. Account-level ownership solves dependency — if a vendor relationship ever changes, the measurement layer stays with the network instead of walking out the door.
From concept to live — four phases
This week
FOUNDATION
Confirm corporate as Owner on GA4, Tag Manager, and Search Console before anything goes live.
Output: Governance secured
Week 1–2
STANDARD & APPROVAL
Decision memo to leadership. The GTM, UTM, and event-naming spec is ratified as the corporate standard.
Output: Standard approved
Week 2–3
BUILD & NOTIFY
Containers and properties built network-wide. Legacy sites migrated. Vendors notified of the standard.
Output: Infrastructure ready
Week 3–4+
GATED DEPLOYMENT
Tracking goes live per location only after the vendor handoff is confirmed. Hard cutover, 30-day window.
Output: Zero tracking breakage
Why this sits at the front of the funnel
This is the measurement spine beneath the lead-capture and conversion pillars of the Revenue Operating System. It lets us establish a true paid-search attribution KPI — knowing which campaigns, locations, and channels actually produce booked appointments, not just clicks.
It also completes a picture we already started. The website recovery and ranking work tracks organic search through Google Search Console. This initiative extends that same rigor to paid search — so for the first time we measure earned and bought demand on one consistent standard, network-wide.