Redirect high traffic site to new .com url

Redirect high traffic site to new .com url - If a page has internal and external outgoing links to redirecting URLs, it’s returning 3xx (301, 302, etc.) HTTP status codes standing for redirection. This issue means that the page does not exist on a permanent or temporary basis. It appears on most of the popular web browsers, usually caused by a misconfigured website. However, there are some steps you can take to ensure the issue isn’t on your side. You can find more details about redirecting URLs by reading the Google Search Central overview. In this article, we’ll go over how you can fix the Redirect high traffic site to new .com url error on your web browser. Problem :


We're revamping our very high traffic .com.au site (average 80k page views a day) with functionality that we want to offer internationally. We've purchased a .co and .net url and just weighing up if it's worth using one of them or not. We already get international traffic to the .com.au site.


Wondering what the potential risks if we redirect, and advantages/disadvantages if we stay and try to run off .com.au internationally.


Solution :

My understanding -


A .au site will attract primarily an Australuan audiance. You will get more Google juice from international locations with a .net. (Im fairly sure that would be the consensus here as well)


IMHO - and I dont have strong evidence, only advice from an SEO expert - The .net will be a lot more credible (so more SEO juice) then a .co domain.


We hope that this article has helped you resolve the redirects, 301-redirect, high-traffic error in your web browsers. Enjoy browsing the internet uninterrupted!

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