GA4 Data Delays: What They're Really Costing Your Ecommerce Business (And How to Fix It)
In this post we'll break down exactly what the GA4 data delays are, what they cost in practice, and how leading UK ecommerce brands are solving the problem.

We’re proud to share some exciting news: following a rigorous testing and approval process, Google has officially recognised Fabric Analytics as a certified partner for Google Tag Manager.
This achievement reaffirms our position as one of the UK’s leading analytics consultancies, specifically when it comes to advanced implementations of Google Tag Manager. Gaining certification required us to demonstrate both deep technical expertise with GTM and active membership in the specialist Google Analytics Certified Partner Programme. In short, it’s Google’s way of confirming their confidence in our skills with both Google Analytics and Google Tag Manager.
Mastery of GTM: we have proven skills in deploying, managing, and auditing tags at scale.
Reliable Data: our clients have assurance that data tracking is accurate, clean, and trustworthy.
Advanced knowledge: the certification process requires real examples of projects, beyond theory, we’ve proven we can solve real-world client challenges.
App tracking & mobile capability: we have demonstrated expertise in setting up GTM for mobile apps (iOS & Android), including using Firebase / app SDKs, managing containers for app‐tracking, and applying event triggers without needing to rebuild or re-submit the app to app stores. This capability ensures fast, flexible, robust tracking across both web and app environments.
We’re proud of our team for achieving this milestone — and even more excited about what it enables for our clients. If you’d like to see how our GTM expertise could translate into better data and sharper insights for your business, we’d love to talk.

In this post we'll break down exactly what the GA4 data delays are, what they cost in practice, and how leading UK ecommerce brands are solving the problem.

Google is making a significant change to how GA4 and Google Ads share data on 15 June 2026.

In the world of e-commerce, discount codes are a popular and effective way to attract new customers and reward loyal ones.