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Hamaas447

: How to maintain SEO when taking over a domain name? I am working with a client to redo their website. The website is simple and just displays information. My question is with regards to the

@Hamaas447

Posted in: #Dns #Google #SearchEngines #Seo

I am working with a client to redo their website. The website is simple and just displays information. My question is with regards to the SEO.

I have only just started learning about SEO and on my first attempt (a website for a client who is not so fussy about SEO) I found I was mostly unsuccessful. I have missioned for weeks and still struggle to get the website to appear on google (site:website does return results so I believe it is indexed).

Back to my latest client - his website was built and managed by another company. Google searches return his website at the top. I have been hesitant to take over his domain name for fear that suddenly his website would no longer appear at the top or on the first page...

Ultimately, my question is: If I take over his domain name, will I lose all the SEO he currently has? Or will it remain seeing as Google already has the domain name indexed?

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@Megan663

Martijn has a very good answer but I want to emphasize the most important point:

Don't throw the existing website away

If the existing website it working you need to have a plan for each and every page of it. You can still make big changes but for each page of the current website you need to decide if you:


Leave it as is
Add to it
Modify it heavily (any removed or replaced content may cause any rankings for keywords in that content to change)
Replace it with something else (you must implement 301 permanent redirects for each and every page you replace or for which you change the URL to maintain SEO.)
Delete it (which will cause that page to stop ranking for any keywords)


The most important elements for SEO (in order from most important are):


The page URL (which can be changed with permanent redirects)
The title of the page
Which other pages are linked to (they have to be crawlable links, beware of AJAX and JavaScript powered pages.)
The usability of the page
The text content on the page
The meta description of the page


If you are careful with those items, you will get 90% of the SEO right. For the most part you are free to change other aspects of the website without effecting SEO:


The color scheme (or other look and feel)
The images (as long as you are not relying on lots of image search traffic)
The HTML markup
The technology that powers it
The hosting

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@Chiappetta492

First check how they currently do. Titles, description, content etc. You want to keep that the same. Do not improve (unless obvious things)
Check which urls are used. Do not change url structure! Or use the proper 301 redirects to make sure current page value is transferred to the new page.
You're starting on a new website, think this through. This is the point where thinking ahead is going to help you a lot. Design a good basis. Use proper techniques, no shortcuts for as long as possible.


Try not to update it technically, keep that on the same level it is now (again, unless you know how to improve). I say this because you can check the changes in visitors based in the layout. If you change everything and every goes bad, which part did that? You don't know, you changed everything.

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