I would still do a custom footer with the url to the report with parameters. Including the footer will help trouble-shooting any questions about the data and it won't show in the spreadsheet, only if they preview or print. It's always good to have a reference of where the data is coming from and how to recreate it. If not for the end-user, for the developer.
=Globals!ReportServerUrl + "/ReportServer?"
+ Replace(Globals!ReportFolder, " ", "+") + "%2f"
+ Replace(Globals!ReportName, " ", "+") + "&rs:Command=Render"
+ "&single_value_parameter=" + Parameters!single_value_parameter.Value
+ "&multi_value_parameter=" + Join(Parameters!multi_value_parameter.Value, "&multi_value_parameter=")
+ IIf(IsNothing(Parameters!week_date_start.Value), "&week_date_start:isnull=True", "&week_date_start=" & Format(Parameters!week_date_start.Value, Variables!FormatDate.Value))
+ IIf(IsNothing(Parameters!week_date_end.Value), "&week_date_end:isnull=True", "&week_date_end=" & Format(Parameters!week_date_end.Value, Variables!FormatDate.Value))
Also, I usually add this as a report variable and then you can have a standard textbox for the footer that doesn't have to change.
=Variables!UrlReportWithParameters.Value
On the report server, you could also change the configuration for the export of to place the SSRS header in the Excel header instead of the grid.
<Extension Name="EXCEL" Type="Microsoft.ReportingServices.Rendering.ExcelRenderer.ExcelRenderer,Microsoft.ReportingServices.ExcelRendering" Visible="false">
<Configuration>
<DeviceInfo>
<SimplePageHeaders>TRUE</SimplePageHeaders>
</DeviceInfo>
</Configuration>
</Extension>
You could also set the visibility of the controls in the header and footer to the following expression.
=IIF(Globals!RenderFormat.Name = "EXCEL" OR Globals!RenderFormat.Name = "EXCELOPENXML", TRUE, FALSE)