UTM parameters on inbound links are only useful if they are captured at the point of conversion. Without explicit capture, the attribution data is lost the moment a visitor submits a form. Gravity Forms solves this by allowing hidden fields to auto-populate from URL query parameters — passing source data through to Salesforce and enabling accurate sales attribution.
This is especially critical on commission-based or performance contracts, where proving which campaign drove a closed deal is a contractual requirement.
A common attribution gap:
?utm_source=linkedin&utm_medium=paid&utm_campaign=abm-q2)As Mark noted during an ABM strategy session for [1]:
"A UTM parameter is useless unless you capture it. If you put a UTM parameter on a link coming off of an ad, but then there's a form on that page and the form doesn't capture it — you just lost it."
Gravity Forms supports hidden field types that can be pre-populated from URL parameters using the {query_string} merge tag or individual parameter population.
Add a hidden field to your Gravity Form for each UTM parameter you want to capture:
- utm_source
- utm_medium
- utm_campaign
- utm_term (optional)
- utm_content (optional)
Configure parameter population on each hidden field:
- In the field settings, set the Parameter Name to match the UTM key (e.g., utm_source)
- Gravity Forms will auto-populate the field value from the URL on page load
Map fields to Salesforce via the Gravity Forms Salesforce add-on or a middleware integration (e.g., Zapier, native connector):
- Map each hidden UTM field to the corresponding Lead or Contact field in Salesforce
- Ensure the Salesforce fields exist and are visible to reporting
Tag all outbound links with UTM parameters consistently — ads, emails, direct mail QR codes, LinkedIn posts, etc.
Every form submission carries the originating campaign data into Salesforce. Sales can filter closed deals by utm_campaign to calculate revenue attributable to each ABM campaign or channel.
On performance-based engagements (e.g., a percentage-of-sales contract), attribution is not just a reporting nicety — it is the mechanism by which the agency gets paid. Without UTM capture:
UTM discipline — tagging every link and capturing every parameter — should be treated as a non-negotiable technical requirement from campaign launch.