Working on a report suite for a fairly low traffic website for a client. For this question - lets say the website is www.helloworld.com.
So when i go to my referring domains tho - I'm seeing a decent chunk of traffic being referred FROM www.helloworld.com TO www.helloworld.com
I broke it down by link and id say 75% of the traffic is just someone clicking back to the homepage but I would assume this still shouldnt be counted as a new "visit"?
How can I filter this out so it doesn't continue showing up in our reports?
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you won't see that domain data in the report.
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you won't see that domain data in the report.
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In a case like this, does the www. need to be included or can the exclusion just be helloworld.com?
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@tomwr It's what exactly you are getting in the referring domain. But you usually get referring domain as google.com or duckduckgo.com. So, helloworld.com is enough.
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There are 2 places to define internal traffic... just excluding it from your freeform reports as suggested above is still going to cause issues with your Referrers and Marketing Channel Reports...
The first place you want to look is in your Report Suite settings
Edit Settings > Internal URL Filters
The filters here are contains... so just add a filter for "helloworld.com" (you don't need the www. this will cover every variant of helloworld.com - http://helloworld.com, https://helloworld.com, http://www.helloworld.com, https://www.helloworld.com, https://subdomain.helloworld.com, etc)
If you have an entry for "." remove that... (but it doesn't sound like you do, since that should treat everything as internal)
Add all domains that are tracked in your suite
Next, there is also a place in Adobe Launch to make sure that internal links don't trigger "exit" links.
In your Adobe Analytics extension, you need to go to the Link Tracking section, and add your domain(s) here (again, you don't need "www." - just helloworld.com is fine)
This is the proper way to ensure that your internal domains do not count as referrers and do not trigger unnecessary exit link tracking on every internal reference.
To refer traffic from one domain to another without making it count as a new visit, you can use a technique called "cross-domain tracking." This technique is commonly used by website owners who have multiple domains or subdomains and want to track user activity across all of them.
To implement cross-domain tracking, you need to use the same Google Analytics tracking code on both domains. You also need to set up cross-domain tracking by adding some additional code to your tracking code. Login hub This code tells Google Analytics to treat clicks between the two domains as part of the same session.
Here are the steps to implement cross-domain tracking:
Replace UA-XXXXX-Y with your own Google Analytics tracking ID, and replace example.com with the domain name of the second domain.
Replace UA-XXXXX-Y with your own Google Analytics tracking ID, and replace firstdomain.com with the domain name of the first domain.
Once you've added this code, Google Analytics will be able to track user activity across both domains, and clicks between the two domains will be treated as part of the same session. This means that users will not be counted as new visitors when they move from one domain to the other.
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