[FONT='PrimaSans BT,Verdana,sans-serif']So today I get this email from the webmeister at a major institution that recently redesigned the Press Release section of their website...
" ...the links on your website referring to articles on our website are broken. Please update any existing links from <old PR section subdomain> to <new PR section folder on main domain>."
So not only did he not tell me which of my webpages now have broken - or at least incorrect - outbound links to their old PR section, but he also expects me to go looking for where those articles now appear (different urls) on his site to update my links with.
I suggested he consider doing 301 redirects from the old urls to the new versions - so inbound links resolve correctly - but apparently he doesn't know what I'm talking about, because he replied to that (a bit rudely) with the statement that they have 3000 of their new pages indexed on Google already... which has nothing to do with what I was talking about.
[/FONT][FONT='PrimaSans BT,Verdana,sans-serif']There must be 1000s of websites in the same postition as me - all their links to the old site's articles now redirect to the new main page instead.
Fortunately I was already intending to do a hyperlocal news website for an area that encompasses that institution... therefore, I think I'll dig up all the authority sites I can find that link to press releases on their old site - but now resolve to the main page - paste those original press releases onto my own website, then contact the webmeisters to point out their links are no longer correct, and provide them with a link to my site hosting the original article they wanted.
So originally I was going to clue him in to how 301 redirects would benefit their site, but now I see an opportunity to get some easy, great inbound links of my own.
Might be worth checking out any websites that announces a redesign, just to see how their old inbound links resolve. If they don't work like they use to - then contact those inbound sites' webmasters and give them a correct page on your website for them to link to instead.
...just had to rant, and no one I know offline would have a clue what I was talking about if I told them any of this. lol
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" ...the links on your website referring to articles on our website are broken. Please update any existing links from <old PR section subdomain> to <new PR section folder on main domain>."
So not only did he not tell me which of my webpages now have broken - or at least incorrect - outbound links to their old PR section, but he also expects me to go looking for where those articles now appear (different urls) on his site to update my links with.
I suggested he consider doing 301 redirects from the old urls to the new versions - so inbound links resolve correctly - but apparently he doesn't know what I'm talking about, because he replied to that (a bit rudely) with the statement that they have 3000 of their new pages indexed on Google already... which has nothing to do with what I was talking about.
[/FONT][FONT='PrimaSans BT,Verdana,sans-serif']There must be 1000s of websites in the same postition as me - all their links to the old site's articles now redirect to the new main page instead.
Fortunately I was already intending to do a hyperlocal news website for an area that encompasses that institution... therefore, I think I'll dig up all the authority sites I can find that link to press releases on their old site - but now resolve to the main page - paste those original press releases onto my own website, then contact the webmeisters to point out their links are no longer correct, and provide them with a link to my site hosting the original article they wanted.
So originally I was going to clue him in to how 301 redirects would benefit their site, but now I see an opportunity to get some easy, great inbound links of my own.

Might be worth checking out any websites that announces a redesign, just to see how their old inbound links resolve. If they don't work like they use to - then contact those inbound sites' webmasters and give them a correct page on your website for them to link to instead.
...just had to rant, and no one I know offline would have a clue what I was talking about if I told them any of this. lol
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