Write the word "References," in title caps, and center it at the top of a new page. Begin the first line of each citation flush left. Use your word processor's automatic indentation settings to indent the second and subsequent lines by a half inch.
Name the website's author last name first, followed by the author's first initial: "Zeratsky, K." If the electronic reference is an organization's web presence, write the organization's name in place of an author's name. Example: "Mayo Clinic."
Type the Internet reference's year of publication in parentheses. The year appears under an article's title or byline, or at the bottom of the webpage. Type a period just after the closed parenthesis. Example: Zeratsky, K. (2011).
Write the website reference title in initial caps, meaning capitalize the title's first word, any proper nouns and the word immediately after the colon, if available. Write the rest of the title in lowercase. Add a period at the end of the title. Example: Zeratsky, K. (2011). Fat grams: How to track your dietary fat.
Provide other pertinent information about the reference such as the publisher if citing an online book, or the name of a scholarly journal if citing an academic article. If you are citing a short piece within a larger work, a section in a series, or an article in a newspaper, magazine or journal, write the name of the larger work in italics. Name the organization that publishes the website if you did not name it as an reference author. Example: Zeratsky, K. (2011). Fat grams: How to track your dietary fat. Mayo Clinic.
Add a retrieval statement, which serves three purposes: it indicates that you found the reference on the Internet and tells the reader where the find the source. Write the word "Retrieved" followed by the date you found the source, but only if the reference content might change, as is the case with wikis or frequently updated statistics. If a date is not needed, write "from" after the word "Retrieved" and paste the reference URL into the citation.