| No Referrer! How Did That Happen? |
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| Web Analytics | |
| Written by Lyris HQ Staff Writer | |
| Thursday, 20 March 2008 | |
The Referrer field of a log file stores the location from which a visitor came. In other words, it stores the previously requested URL that linked to your site. From this information, you can see what links led visitors to your site - and you can pull out the keyword (if present) that was used in a search engine query which resulted in a click-through.
There is an explanation for this. Here are some of the reasons and conditions under which this phenomenon, called 'No Referrer,' can occur.
The next time you're browsing through your list of referring sites in your Web analytics tool, and you see 'No Referrer', one of the reasons listed above will probably explain why this is occurring. In most cases, 'No Referrer' can actually be seen as a good thing. If someone likes your site enough to have the URL memorized, have it saved as a bookmark or even have it set as their browser's homepage, you're definitely doing something right! Comments (4)
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Not quite
written by Ryan, November 3, 2008
You're missing another big source of "no referrer" page loads: Flash & JavaScript links. If your site (or your referrers) use Flash, or uses any javascript document.location links, test your links and see for yourself, Internet Explorer doesn't handle all of those the same as a regular href link and in my experience those account for far more traffic on my site than browser homepages or bookmarks
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Add proxies
written by Mike, October 8, 2008
You might want to add 'Proxies' to the list. A lot of traffic we see as no-referrer comes from CDNs like Akamai.
50% is about average as far as I can find out. report abuse
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Sometimes good, sometimes not so good!
written by Andres Galdames, September 5, 2008
Hi Kathy,
One might have to contextualize that number. Let's say we look at your 40%. If you have any offline marketing going on (print ads, tv, radio, etc...) trying to drive traffic to the site then 40% might be a good thing, that is if previous to said offline pushes were significantly lower. Now if there aren't any offline initiatives and your site traffic is a little low in general, I might suspect that some of that no referrer traffic might be internal traffic (your own developers hitting the site, your IT team, or maybe even you!). I would look into excluding any internal traffic then take another look at that no referrer number. report abuse
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The Referrer field of a log file stores the location from which a visitor came. In other words, it stores the previously requested URL that linked to your site. From this information, you can see what links led visitors to your site - and you can pull out the keyword (if present) that was used in a search engine query which resulted in a click-through.



