How to check your AdWords traffic isn’t being reported as organic

by Patrick Altoft on / 2 responses

We’ve been working on a few projects recently where it transpired that a significant amount of AdWords traffic was being miscounted as Google Organic which meant skewed figures and incorrect conclusions.

The way Google Analytics tracks AdWords clicks is via the gclid parameter which is added to your landing page URL when you enable auto-tagging in AdWords.

If you don’t enable auto-tagging (and haven’t set up manual tagging) then your visitors will be miscounted as organic rather than paid and the number of AdWords “visits” being reported by Analytics will be a lot less than the number of “clicks”.

One of the major problems with the gclid parameter is that it’s stripped out of URLs quite often when 301 redirects are applied, so if you change your URL structure without altering your landing page URLs in AdWords then your traffic will be miscounted, unless you have built special 301 redirects which preserve the gclid parameter.

The way to track this is simple. Just load up Google Analytics and click on Traffic Sources > Adwords > Keywords and then the “Clicks” tab.

This should give you a report something like the one below. If tracking is correct you will see the “clicks” figure is slightly higher than the “visits” figure. A 5% tolerance is average here, anything higher than this and you might want to investigate further. The figure for visits will always be lower as a percentage of people click the ad and either leave before your Analytics has time to track them or have JavaScript disabled. The “clicks” figure is pulled from AdWords directly so is always quite accurate.

As you can see in the screenshot above, around 16,000 AdWords clicks are missing from the “visits” number which means they are misclassified as Google Organic.

Patrick Altoft is Director of Search at Branded3, a Leeds SEO & Digital Agency specialising in SEO, Web Design, Development & Social Media.

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Comments

Read the 2 comments below, or add your own!

February 8, 2011 at 12:00am

This is an interesting discovery. Most of time I don’t dig further than the face value of the ‘paid’ traffic.

Thanks Patrick

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Liz
February 8, 2012 at 3:14pm

Thanks for this tip – it has been enlightening for me and shows just how important it is to keep your Adwords up to date!

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