Tracking & Data Foundation
Wire up the pipes that measure every visit, click, and conversion on your site.
This is the foundation layer. Without tracking, every other channel — SEO, ads, email — is flying blind: you'll have no idea which posts bring visitors, which buttons get clicked, or which campaigns actually pay back. The five items in this category take about two focused hours total and only need to be done once.
Install Google Tag Manager (Priority)
This is the single biggest setup win on the whole Launchpad. Google Tag Manager (often shortened to GTM) is a free tool from Google that lets you add analytics, ad pixels, and tracking scripts to your site without ever touching code again. Instead of asking a developer every time you want to install a new pixel, you install Tag Manager once — and from then on, you add new tracking inside Tag Manager's interface.
To set it up, sign in with your Google account, create a container for your website, and paste the two small snippets of code Tag Manager gives you onto every page of your site. Most website builders (WordPress, Webflow, Shopify, Wix) have a plugin or a single field where you paste these. You're done when you can log back into Tag Manager and see your site reporting as "active". Every other tracking item below depends on this one.
Connect Google Analytics 4 (Priority)
Google Analytics is how you'll see how many people visit your site, where they come from, what they read, and whether they take action. Google Analytics 4 — often called GA4 — is the current version. It's free and used by millions of sites.
You'll create a GA4 "property" for your website, then wire it into Tag Manager (instead of pasting GA4's code directly onto your site, you add a tag inside Tag Manager that points at it). Tag Manager will then track page visits, scrolls, outbound clicks, and form submissions automatically — the baseline data every growth conversation starts from. You're done when you can open GA4's Reports → Realtime view, visit your own site in another tab, and see yourself show up within 30 seconds.
Install Advertising Pixels
If you plan to run paid ads on Facebook, LinkedIn, Google Ads, or any other platform — even months from now — install their tracking pixels today. A pixel is a tiny piece of code each ad platform gives you that lets them recognize visitors to your site. The more data the pixel has collected by the time you launch your first campaign, the better the platform's ad targeting will be.
The big three: the Meta Pixel (covers Facebook and Instagram), the LinkedIn Insight Tag, and Google Ads conversion tracking. Add each one as a new tag inside Google Tag Manager — no code changes to your site. You're done when each platform's dashboard confirms it's receiving traffic from your domain.
Deploy Cookie Consent
If anyone in the EU, UK, or California visits your site, the law says you need to ask before tracking them. A cookie consent banner is the pop-up bar that asks "Accept all / Reject all" when someone arrives — and it makes sure analytics and ad pixels respect their choice. Skipping this can mean fines or losing access to ad platforms.
Pick one tool and install it: Cookiebot, Iubenda, or Osano are the most common. Then configure Google Consent Mode v2 inside Tag Manager so GA4 and your ad pixels automatically pause tracking for visitors who reject cookies. You're done when you can visit your own site in an incognito window and see the banner pop up before any analytics load.
Configure Conversion Events
A "conversion event" is just GA4's way of marking which actions on your site actually matter to your business — a contact form submitted, a demo requested, a purchase completed. By default GA4 tracks everything as plain page views, which isn't useful. You need to tell it which events are wins.
Inside GA4, go to Admin → Events, find the actions that signal real success (like form_submit or purchase), and toggle them as conversions. Then import those same conversions into Google Ads so its bidding algorithm knows what to optimize for. This step is what unlocks "smart bidding" and gives every traffic channel a real success metric. You're done when GA4's Reports → Engagement → Conversions shows your key actions firing — and Google Ads sees them in Tools → Conversions.
Next: Search Engine Handshake — get Google and Bing to actually find and index your site.