Hello Members,
This is my first post in this community; so please excuse me if this is the wrong place for the question.
I found only one post related this topic, but the answer is not very clear to me.
We are running a social media campaign for our website and they are using "Bit.ly" as the URL in the campaign. Now if someone click on this; the source will be considered as "social" or "typed/bookmarked"? If the answer is "typed/bookmarked" - then what can be done from our end to show that "social" as source?
Regards
Utsav
Solved! Go to Solution.
It depends on which social platform and what device platform the visitor is from. If they click on the bit.ly link from Facebook/X on a desktop, it will likely push that referral information through, but if they are on the app, it will likely come through as dark social or "Typed/bookmarked."
The best way to guarantee that you are tracking the referrals from bit.ly accurately is to add campaign parameters and map them in Adobe Analytics.
Documentation:
It depends on which social platform and what device platform the visitor is from. If they click on the bit.ly link from Facebook/X on a desktop, it will likely push that referral information through, but if they are on the app, it will likely come through as dark social or "Typed/bookmarked."
The best way to guarantee that you are tracking the referrals from bit.ly accurately is to add campaign parameters and map them in Adobe Analytics.
Documentation:
@kayawalton is spot on.. the referrer is forwarded through the bit.ly service... it doesn't record as a separate referring domain.
Adding proper campaigns to your links is a great way to ensure that you can classify the incoming traffic where referrers may not be set (some mobile apps, the rel="noreferrer" directive on web, etc).
Thanks for both of you, actually I suggested them about campaign ID. But as there are some limitations in using campaign ID as per organization policy (to be honest, not sure what's the problem actually
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Is the problem with the campaign ID because they think it is unique to the user? (We had someone who had the same hesitation.) You can also use other campaign-tracking approaches (our org uses UTM parameters) and then use classification rules to parse those out. This section has specific instructions on how you can do that: https://experienceleague.adobe.com/docs/analytics/implementation/use-cases/campaign-tracking.html?la...
Another problem I can also see would be that URLs with Campaigns could be picked up by other unintended sources, meaning you may have a slight inflation on your tracking in those scenarios... but that should be a small amount and there really aren't a lot of other options.
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