Mystic Mike’s predictions: What does 2026 hold for paid media?
By Mike Sharp, Operations Director at Launch That time of year is here. The time when I confidently predict the…
By Darcy Cooke, Senior Measurement Analyst
Stop treating GA4 like a basic reporting tool. If you want to improve your account, you must fix these common pitfalls:
As we move further into the year, the initial hype surrounding Google Analytics 4 (GA4) has transitioned into a steady industry standard. We have moved past the era of frantic migrations and basic setups. Today, GA4 is a sophisticated, AI-driven insights engine designed for growth.
However, a significant gap remains between the platform’s technical power and the average marketer’s confidence.
As the founder of Analytics Mania points out:
‘[GA4 has] many capabilities that you can take advantage of to understand user behaviour better and find data-driven insights. The better equipped you are with analytics, the more leverage you will have to drive growth and innovation. This can start with how effective you are with GA4’ (Julius Fedorovicius).
Despite the platform’s maturity, a familiar frustration lingers: many marketers still don’t fully trust the data staring back at them.
This blog isn’t another technical walkthrough or a step-by-step setup guide. Instead, we explore how to wield GA4 – identifying what has evolved in the landscape and where you should focus your energy to extract genuine, bottom-line value.
Data collection has become more complex and interconnected than ever before. GA4 no longer operates in a vacuum; it typically sits at the heart of a broader Measurement Ecosystem. This includes Server-Side Tracking, Consent Mode and CMP (Consent Management Platform) integrations, Ad Platforms, CRM systems, and supplementary analytics solutions.
With the question of ‘Is GA4 better or worse than UA?’ behind us, the growing complexity of modern data setups has given rise to a new set of common questions:
As questions around GA4’s reliability persists, it’s important to understand what to realistically expect from the platform moving forward into this year.
GA4 has leaned into first-party data and modelling. With Consent Mode, if a user denies consent, GA4 uses ‘behavioural modelling’ to fill the gaps. Built with privacy regulations like GDPR at its core, GA4 supports granular consent handling, anonymisation, and data retention controls.
GA4 is no longer just a reporting tool, it’s an analysis engine. Behaviour predictions and machine learning are now mainstream GA4 features. Predictive features – such as purchase probability and revenue forecasts – have become more accurate and are delivered directly in the GA4 interface, reducing reliance on manual analysis.
What’s more, the ‘Analytics Advisor’, allows you to ask natural language questions like “What are my top events by users” and receive an immediate text-based summary. This marks a shift from manual exploration to conversational insight.
Launched in early January 2026, this is the most significant update in years. GA4 now allows you to manage and forecast spend across both Google and non-Google channels (like Meta, TikTok, and LinkedIn) directly within the interface.
Built to help marketers justify their total media spend, Google explains that:
“With these tools, you’ll be able to answer critical questions like, ‘Is my spend on track?’, ‘How many future conversions are forecasted based on my planned spend?’ and ‘How should I allocate my budgets to maximize revenue and ROI?’”

We can all agree: GA4 has not stood still since its rocky introduction. While the core event-based tracking model remains, how teams use the platforms has evolved from simple observation to strategic execution.
Early GA4 users relied heavily on default reports, often trying to force them to look like Universal Analytics. Successful teams understand that:
We are huge advocates for customisable reporting in GA4, but we know creating reports from scratch can be a challenge, and trying to find the KPIs can be overwhelming. But, buried underneath the noise are the important insights you want to know.
The key things to keep in mind when reporting in GA4 are to:
Pro-Tip: Use the Library tool to organise your reports. You can build and publish custom reports so they appear in the main Reports menu, helping standardise metrics and dimensions across teams.
GA4 is no longer expected to do everything on its own. Instead, it acts as a measurement hub, feeding high-quality data into:
As well as this, certain analytics platforms can feed data into GA4, helping to
GA4 excels at event collection and user modelling, but deeper analysis and long-term storage are often better handled elsewhere. For teams today, the goal is no longer to force GA4 to do everything, but to use it as a central measurement layer that connects your tools together.
Annotations in GA4 was a highly requested feature from the UA days. The ability to add context via annotations to data points in reports is incredibly useful. This helps:
Google has enhanced GA4 with AI-driven features that automatically detect significant data trends, anomalies (unexpected spikes or dips), and provide insights in plain language, helping to surface critical information that might otherwise be missed. As we mentioned earlier in the blog, GA4’s ‘Analytics Advisor’ is an AI-powered conversational assistant built into the platform. This tool doesn’t just look backward; it identifies opportunities. It can suggest ways to re-engage users who dropped off or highlight high-potential audience segments you might have missed.
This is a significant milestone, and can be useful for:
To ensure your account is performing at its peak, these four pillars are essential:
Client-side tracking is now the “backup.” Server-side tracking gives you total control over what data you share and bypasses 90% of ad blockers.
You can mark an event as a key event in GA4 very easily, but that doesn’t mean you should mark everything. Effective GA4 setups focus on outcomes, not activity. To ensure your reporting stays meaningful, make sure you:
A smaller, well-governed set of key events makes attribution clearer, audiences more accurate, and reporting far easier to interpret, especially as GA4 data is increasingly shared across ads platforms and BI tools.
Exporting GA4 data to BigQuery is now standard for teams of all sizes. As GA4 increasingly focuses on measurement and integrations, BigQuery has emerged as the place where deeper analysis and long-term data lives.
Marketers are using BigQuery to:
The result is greater confidence in reporting, more flexibility in analysis, and a setup that scales as measurement needs mature.
With cookies now disappearing, GA4’s AI can fill the gaps. To make this work, you need high-quality conversion data. So, it is important to pass purchase and churn events with enough volume of data (at least 1,000 users triggering the event in the last 7 days). Some examples of predictive metrics include:
Based on past behaviour and aggregated event data, GA4 segments users into actionable audiences.
Despite increased experience, several mistakes remain common:
GA4 in 2026 now needs to be viewed as the central measurement hub – an AI-powered insight engine and bridge between CRM and BI systems. But as we know, the platform is only as efficient as the teams who are using it.
The key for marketers today is clarity, intentionality, and integration:
GA4 in 2026 isn’t just about collecting data – it’s about turning insights into action. The teams that master it will shape the future of growth.
We run comprehensive measurement audits to ensure every data point translates into a growth opportunity. Get in touch with our team today to see how we can help you turn your analytics into an engine for innovation.
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