Web server logs are files created by a web server that record clicks from your web site’s visitors, including those from your Yahoo! Search Marketing ads. Athough formats can differ, web server logs record the web site on which your ad was clicked, and the pages users visited within your site. When combined with tracking URLs and conversion data, you can analyze your web server logs to see how well individual traffic sources are converting for you.
Many web servers have different methods for how web server logs are set up. Please check with your provider to find out how to access your web server logs. If you use your web server logs to identify Sponsored Search traffic, you might see something like the example below, with the bold text showing the URL of the site where your ad was clicked:
216.145.57.229 - - [05/Mar/2002:12:07:04 -0800] "GET /examples/ HTTP/1.1" 200 1274 "http://example.com/" "Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 5.5; Windows NT 5.0)" "example.com"
Since web server logs record the web site on which your ad was clicked, you can use them to identify your referring traffic, including Yahoo Publisher Network sites where Content Match ads are displayed. When web users click on a Content Match ad, they are taken to the advertiser’s site. The advertiser’s web server log will record the site’s URL as a longer snippet of text, something similar to the example below:
http://ypn-js.overture.com/d/search/p/ypn/jsads/?Partner=1731275039&type>=41&adwd=728&adht=90&ctxtUrl= http%3A//example.com/&bc=FFFFFF&cc=F>FF>FFF&lc=0000FF&tc=000000&uc=999999&du=1&cb=1186011639668.
In this example, the Yahoo! Publisher Network URL — ypn-js.overture.com — indicates merely that your ad was clicked on at one of our Yahoo! Publisher Network sites, while example.com reflects the actual site where your ad was clicked. Keep in mind that the web server log reads some punctuation in the URL as special characters – for example, a colon translates as “%3A” – so the addresses may not look right at first.
Tracking URLs, combined with web server logs are an excellent method for tracking your results:
A tracking URL is a bit of extra text at the end of the normal URL that indicates where the visitor came from. For example:
| Regular URL | http://www.electronics-planet.com/television |
| Tracking URL | http://www.electronics-planet.com/television?OVRAW=buy%20plasma %20television&OVKEY=plasma%20television&OVMTC=advanced |
More facts about tracking URLs:
Benefits
Implementing tracking URLs and understanding your source of traffic will allow you to:
How It Works
To enable tracking URLs:
Tracking URLs may not work for the following reasons: