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This has two important effects

Posted: Mon Jan 06, 2025 4:04 am
by jsarmin
For example, if you move from "old-domain. com/about-us/ " to "new-domain. com/about/ ".

The next step is to actually set up the redirects.

Step 4: Set up 301 redirects
Once your new domain is live with all your content, you need to set up 301 redirects .

301 redirects are permanent redirects that tell search engines and browsers that your original URLs have been permanently replaced with new ones.


It automatically redirects all visitors from the old URL to the new one.
Links pointing to the old URL will also redirect to the new URL.
Without setting up 301 redirects, any user or search engine that visits a URL with your old domain name will encounter a 404 page or a "Not Found" error. Or they will see your old website if the content is still online.

Allowing pages to return a 404 error can indirectly affect SEO vietnam telegram data performance. You could lose backlinks pointing to those old pages, which could hurt your website’s ranking. And it can frustrate your website visitors if they can’t find the page on your site.

There are several ways to set up these redirects.

If you have a WordPress site, you can use plugins like Yoast , RankMath or Redirection .

Just make sure that the plugin you are using allows you to redirect using an absolute URL, and not just a relative URL.

A relative URL only includes the part after the domain. For this example, the relative URL would be /books/.

Example of an absolute URL and a relative URL
If the plugin only supports relative URL redirects, you won't be able to redirect URLs from your old domain to the new one. The tool would only allow you to set up redirects to new pages on the same domain.