Google Changes Referral Strings

Yesterday, Google announced that they are changing the referral strings in the SERPs.

Direct from Google:

Starting this week, you may start seeing a new referring URL format for visitors coming from Google search result pages. Up to now, the usual referrer for clicks on search results for the term “flowers”, for example, would be something like this:

http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=flowers&btnG=Google+Search

Now you will start seeing some referrer strings that look like this:

http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&source=web&ct=res&cd=7&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.example.com%2Fmypage.htm&ei=0SjdSa-1N5O8M_qW8dQN&rct=j&q=flowers&usg=AFQjCNHJXSUh7Vw7oubPaO3tZOzz-F-u_w&sig2=X8uCFh6IoPtnwmvGMULQfw

The key difference between these two urls is that instead of “/search?” the URL contains a “/url?”. If you run your own analyses, be sure that you do not depend on the “/search?” portion of the URL to determine if a visit started with an organic search click. Google Analytics does not depend on the “/search?” string in the referrer, so users of Google Analytics will not notice a difference in their reports, but other analytics packages may need to adapt to this change in our referrer string to maintain accurate reports.

This shouldn’t cause issues for the average webmaster. This is just another change Google is making as they move more of their technology to AJAX.

One Response to “Google Changes Referral Strings”

  1. Andy Edmonds says:

    Ahh, but look closely… see that cd=7? That’s the URLs rank in the google results.

    You can use my SEO Position Plus script to capture this data to Google Analytics:
    http://alwaysbetesting.com/abtest/index.cfm/2009/4/22/Log-Your-Exact-Google-Rank-with-Google-Analytics

    We’re only seeing a fraction of traffic reporting this number so far, but hoping it gets turned up.

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