I would recommend a 301 redirect.
For the best SEO value you want to leave off the /index.html - espcially if that is your homepage.
Don't forget to redirect non-www to www.
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I would recommend a 301 redirect.
For the best SEO value you want to leave off the /index.html - espcially if that is your homepage.
Don't forget to redirect non-www to www.
Scroll down and you will see the rest of the source.
I use Twitter often for real time 'searching.' Mostly local or breaking news alerts.
From my perspective Google put heavy weight on direct match domains to ensure brands ranked correctly on their exact search. Overtime people realized this and of course abused it.
Right now you have a VERY good chance of ranking on page 1 if you have the exact match .com, .net, .org, or whatever country code you want to rank for.
Obviously removing the weight could potentially hurt Google and the rankings. Imagine all those small local businesses(with no SEO) that people search for everyday that could potentially de-rank. That would not help the user experiance what so ever.
I am very interested to see how they handle any update on this subject.
The only "penalty" is the fact you could potentially spread your link juice across those multiple pages. Example:
You have 104 links to the same product, but they are equally pointed a 4 unique URLs. Now you technically have 26 links on whatever page Google 'selects' as your authority page.
Your competition has 100 links to the same product which only has 1 page.
With that type of setup your competition is always going to have that authority page ranked abouve you.
Google will select the most authortive aka whichever has the most links.
If you have a ton of inbound links I would recommend doing lots of research before inserting that tag. Find out which pages have the authority and don't throw it away.
This was a plague of eCommerce for years. Luckly most of the newest moden platfroms have caught up.
I think Xenu is your best option here. The size of the site nearly cuts out the chance a web tool could handle it.
Just recently on a site review I had to run Xenu on a site with 160,000 pages. It only took 4 hours running at 30 threads to complete. Any modern PC should handle it fine.
Pretty simple really. Just create 301 redirects from the old url i.e. http://www.domain.com/hub/content1 to http://www.domain.com/content1.
That should transfer the rankings, link authority, etc. as best as it can.