Forum Moderators: DixonJones
Then when you look at your logs, skip the referrer information and count how many visits you got to the URL with /?track=google_adwords in it. That will tell you the real number. Lots of people block referrers too, and that prevents programs like WebTrends from accurately reporting where they came from. If you use a tracking URL you can't miss.
We learned a lot from adding that parameter to Google terms. You'll be surprised where that content-match (adsense sites) traffic comes from.
I would set up the google tracking parameter the same way overture does, which is "googlePPC=search+term" where "googleppc" can be any parameter name you want that tells you it's a google ppc source, and "search+term" is the actual term you are buying for that particular ad. You can then compare the term you paid for (in the URL parameter) to the term that was actually used on the other search engine (in the referrer field). Again, you'll be pretty surprised at what you find.
WebTrends has a whole lot of documentation available as downloads but (i just checked) apparently not unless you download the trial copy of the program. Oh well. I assume you have a question about reporting on PPC vs organic? There are a couple of ways to accomplish it, and neither is terribly hard. But you have to have a <2 year old version that has the custom report feature.
If so, I'm guessing you have some interesting server-side redirects happening that are the cause of this situation.
If you see instead a "-" in the referrer field of that log file line, then WebTrends (or any package) will display that visit labeled as "direct traffic" or "no referrer," and never as "yoursite.com." If it's doing that, something really bizarre is happening that I don't understand at all.