We have #1 and #2 spots we would like to keep, but because of the way things were jumbled we have to migrate to a new domain.
We do not want the new domain to be penalized for duplicate content, we want it to naturally take the spot on Google.
How do we tell Google our page has moved?
301 redirects are the recommended way to do this according to Google themselves. I tend to perform 301's using a .htaccess file (a few different methods here) but it can also be done using PHP like this:
header('Location: '.$newlocation, true, 301)
What seengee user has answered is perfect.
Have a look to Google Webmaster Tools too; there's a specific option for Address change.
Change of address
If you're planning to move your site to a new domain, use the Change of Address tool to tell Google about your new URL. This will help us update our index faster and smooth the transition for your users.
For best results, follow these steps:
Set up the new site
Review our guidelines for moving your site to a new domain. Set up your content on your new domain, then make sure all internal links point to the new domain.
Redirect all traffic from the old site
Use a 301 redirect to permanently redirect the pages on your old site to your new site. This tells users and search engines that your site has permanently moved. Ask webmasters to update their links to point to your new domain and make sure incoming links to your old site are redirected correctly using the 301 redirects.
Add your new site to Webmaster Tools
Make sure you have added and verified your new domain.
Tell us the URL of your new domain
Try this: https://www.google.com/webmasters/tools add both domains there and then, go Change of address.
Http 301 Request is used for Permanent Redirect the old website's content,URL and Links to New Website URL. Google Never Penalize the New Website for Duplicate content.
what about "Keyword" you use in meta for performing in SERP result. After redirection how you manage them.
position before Redirection , after redirection have same OR not.
AS SEO purpose don't make Redirection withour proper plan. First make proper optimization of "B" page before "A" redirect ( 301, 302 ) "B" page.
Dont make 302 Redirect , its spammy after 3 months, why within 20 Days SERP catche show "B" page instead of "A" page.
in the end : Before Redirection - Optimize the Destination URl - for Benefit SEOand business
Have a Nice Day ... Thanks
Google itself detect your web page if you implemented the 301, 302 or 404 redirection. But if you want to tell google that you have moved your page then:
Go to google webmaster tool
In Crawl section there is an option of Fetch as Google.
Just enter your url and check the fetch status, you will find that google will index your new url.
in google webmaster tools click on change of site address.
firstly you need to put content on new website where you want to redirect the website.
redirect usingold website by using HTTP 301 code and after verify in google webmaster tools.
Do 301 redirects. This will tell the search engines that the pages have moved and where they are now. This also associates the old URL with the new URL for Google which means all of your old incoming links will now be redirects to your new pages. Also use Google Webmaster Tools to submit XML sitemap.
In both Google and Bing Webmaster tools, you can notify a change of address. I will warn you, however, that when changing domains, you're not going to keep your current rankings.
Submit a change of address notice in Webmaster tools
Do 1:1 page redirecting (redirect all other pages that can't be mapped to a similar page to your homepage)
Submit an up-to-date sitemap
This should help:
https://support.google.com/webmasters/answer/83106?hl=en
http://moz.com/blog/achieving-an-seo-friendly-domain-migration-the-infographic
Related
I'm looking to 301 redirect my old site to my new one. The thing is that i have hundreds of pages so i was wondering if its possible to use some sort of wild card for the domain part? I'm going to use the exact site structure and urls for the new site.
here's example of how the URL's are going to look
http://www.example-old.com/articles >> http://www.example-new.com/articles
http://www.example-old.com/blogs >> http://www.example-new.com/blogs
http://www.example-old.com/blogs/1.php >> http://www.example-new.com/blogs/1.php
What i'm hoping to do is when someone clicks on any link from the old site they will be redirected to the same page on the new site. i.e.just the domain part will change and the rest of the url will remain will be the same.
Any help is appreciated!
Thanks
I just find that One of my client website (Home page) redirect to "x" folder.
Like www.example.com ► 301 redirect to ► www.example.com/x/
Also into Google search result i am finding that most of the keywords come with Home page URL.
Should this redirection make any difference to keyword ranking?
Thanks
301 redirection signals to search engines that the resource has moved permanently and signals to attribute the existing SEO values to the new URL. After certain point in time, search engines will index the new URL and drop the old URL as you have signaled that the resource has moved permanently (theoretically).
With this redirection, search engines will start looking at new URL and evaluate against ranking algorithm. Search engine crawlers will stop going through the old URL and keywords/content of old pages does not make sense anymore.
if I have a subdomain named abc.aaa.com
and now i have move to aaa.com/abc
more my server admin has help me to make a redirect on abc.aaa.com to aaa.com/abc
so no matter access which page/section/file in abc.aaa.com it will force to the HOME PAGE
of aaa.com/abc
therefore i cant use robots.txt to disallow the subdomain
and even i cant submit to both yahoo and google webmaster
any idea?
Redirecting the subdomain is the correct course of action. You don't want to use robots.txt. If you did, googlebot couldn't crawl it anymore and see that it now resides in a new home.
Your redirect sounds problematic though. You should not be redirecting everything to the home page. You should be redirecting each document to the new location of that document. When you redirect to the home page, Google considers the redirect to be about the same as a 404. They call it a "soft 404". Redirecting to homepage will lose any search engine rankings those pages have and lose any credit you have for inbound links coming into that sub-domain.
Having implemented the redirect without robots.txt, both Google and Yahoo will pick up on the move. It should happen within a couple weeks. There is no need for you to take further action.
I am renewing my web page and changing the site structure. It was in Asp and now it will be in Asp.Net
So page URLs will be modified. And some pages will be removed, some will be added. But mostly, the content and page names are same, only URLs will change.
The site has SEO work in it and we want to loose it minimum.Site is registered in Analytics and Webmaster Tools.
Google searches will end up blank pages and I don't want to loose my rank.
So I'm looking for a way to inform Google about new page URLs. Domain is same, only URLs. For example: the home page was /default.asp and now /home.aspx
Is there a way to tell Google that a particular URL address or page name has changed?
If all that is changing are the page URLs, Google Analytics cannot "know" that a page is the same, just with diferent URL.
But, you could apply a customized pageview using the _trackPageView() method, giving it the original url as parameter.
If you choose to do this, you will have to exclude the line that uses the method in the original GA code and apply it elsewhere, or pass the parameter to it directly with the orignial URL. All this is done in each page.
You can also read more about the method here.
For IIS (Asp.Net) you want to look into the following to find out how to do 301 redirects:
Response.RedirectPermanent(...) for redirecting from a page
or
"IIS 7 Routing Module and web.config" to set up bulk redirecting
I'd also suggest you consider supporting Search Engine Friendly (SEF) URLs while your making the move. The Routing Module can help you there as well.
You need to implement some form of 301 (301 is key) redirects. This way when google or any other search hits the old page, the index is refreshed with the new page. Asp.net allows you to do these redirects even at the IIS level, and where I'd suggest that they live. You'll also want to submit an up to date site map on webmaster tools.
Edit: Here's a good link on the redirects, http://www.iis.net/ConfigReference/system.webServer/httpRedirect
I have a customer that been on the web for some time. They have bought a domain name that describe it product, and a second one more up to date. Now that company has evolved to something more general and has bought a 3rd domain - something like:
vegetables.com (2005)
ecolo-vegetables.com (2006)
good-health-eating.com (2009)
Here are my questions:
What is the bet way to get all those domains under the new name?
The new name is unknown to search engine and other linker, I don't want to lose the ranking, so what is the best way to keep that ranking?
Can I point URLs to the "best" ranked domain?
What append to the backlinker? they link to which domain?
The new domain has a "-" in the name... which is really good to SEO but a little unnatural to type, should I get the no dash version too?
n.b. It make sense to redirect all the domain under the same, but will you choose the oldest (with modrewrite) or the newest but with no life under it's belt (so it doesn't exist anywhere in search engine)
another p.s. Some will tell me to redirect with .htaccess, but should I change the dns to point to the last .com. which solution is better
Are all three sites "Different" or do they point to the same website/content?
Use 301 Redirects to redirect your old domain names to the new domain names. If all domains are pointing to the same website, make sure you also use the Canonical Tag on all your pages.
If you 301 Redirect from the old domain names / urls, your rankings will be transfered to your new domain/pages. (the only exception to this may be any extra points you get from embedded keywords in your old domain names).
You should point old urls to your "new" urls/domain. Rankings and link juice should/will be transfered to the new urls/domain.
Ideally all your backlinks should update their links to the new domain, but it doesn't really matter. If the old domains are 301 redirecting to the new domain anyway, point to the old domain is just like pointing to the new domain.
Definitely get the no-dash version of the domain as well and just have it 301 redirect to the actual domain you want to target.
I'll give this a go.
1. You could possibly have redirects or just allow the DNS of the domain to point to the new (desired) website.
2. It's not hard to understand SEO (Search Engine Optimization) nowadays - ensuring you have the correct meta tags and other SE info will give you a big helping hand. There isn't any way of transferring SE ranks.
3. That's possible. You could have ABCDEF.COM at number 3 on google, but then set ABCDEF.COM to redirect to GHIJKL.COM.
4. If you set up redirects, and the new site has the same content as the old one, there is the possiblity of setting up your DNS and your redirect to redirect to the new version of the previous page on the new website.
( I don't think I worded that very well, hope you catch my drift )
5. Out of pure experience I'd say yes, get both. That way you can market to your customer audience as ABCDEF.com, but show to SEs as AB-CD-EF.COM.
Here is the best answer i got from this link
302 and 301 Redirects
When a request for a page or URL is
made by a browser, agent or spider,
the web server where the page is
hosted checks a file called
'.htaccess'. This file contains
instructions on how to handle specific
requests and also plays a key role in
security. The '.htaccess' file can be
modified so that it instructs
browsers, agents or spiders that the
page has either temporarily moved (302
redirect) or permanently moved (301
redirect). It is usually possible to
implement this redirect without
messing with the '.htaccess' file
directly, using your web host's
control panel instead.
From a search engine perspective, 301
redirects are the only acceptable way
to redirect URLs. In the case of
moved pages, search engines will index
only the new URL, but will transfer
link popularity from the old URL to
the new one so that search engine
rankings are not affected. The same
behavior occurs when additional
domains are set to point to the main
domain through a 301 redirect.
And the last word : from this link that just confirm what i know know !
First off, ensure you're using "301 redirects" rather than "302 redirects" or the link juice (PageRank) won't transfer to the destination URL. You can verify that 301s (not 302s) are in place by using a "server header checker" like this one. Only a 301 tells engines the previous URL has moved permanently and thus forwards the page's link equity to the new location.