Watching technology in search of significance.
12 Nov
So, here’s a tip that’s so simple, many of us have forgotten it - I figured most people had already taken this precaution…but I found that not to be the case.
It is SO Simple, yet it may save you a lot of grief and lost sales. Ready?
It’s literally a precaution, in case things don’t turn out how you expected them to. As I was researching a few blogs I clicked on an advertisement, not sure why - I was curious as to what they were selling I guess.
Here is the Ad I clicked on:
After clicking on this Ad that this company is paying for…guess what comes next?
A brilliant Sales page?
A phenomenally written blog post?
A corporate website with logos of their fancy clientelle?
NO! Here’s what I end up with
The requested URL /jvsrc=BtoBlonline_Banners was not found on this server.
You’ve got to be kidding me….
You worked SO hard to put together your Internet Marketing campaign, you’ve got Ads rolling, you’ve got landing pages created, and in case someone ends up at a place you didn’t expect - you are going to lose that visitor because the URL got jacked up or a page was moved.
The fix is easy…so easy. In your Apache settings or whatever Web Server you are using, you can setup a .htaccess redirect - if your web host supports it.
You can just put in a simple line like this into your .htaccess file:
ErrorDocument 404 /notfound.html
and create a notfound.html page for users to see instead of the 404 Not Found message. At least then you haven’t lost them and you’ve gotten a 2nd chance. Sometimes a 2nd chance is all you need to capture a lead.
Consider it…prepare for the unknown! I’d love to hear from others on simple ways to dodge Murphy and make the most of your Web site or blog.
Comments?
6 Responses for "404 Not Found - Why does this still exist?!"
Good article! It is really simple, and It is a great thing to have
Great tip for patching one of the many cracks through which visitors, and more importantly, potential revenue sources, can fall.
[...] Using 404 Not Found for Internet Marketing and SEO Efforts | Arif Gangji's Technical Significan… Its so simple, but most people don't even attempt this. [...]
Great post. Thanks you very much
You can read more: http://www.danhbaweb20.com/?p=316
The only comment I would add is that it is possible the 404 was coming from the banner serving company rather than the destination company. Having worked with 3rd party banner serving systems I’ve seen this happen - for instance if the banner server goes offline for whatever reason.
@Brian King
Very good point. I clicked the link and verified that it did end up going to the actual client’s site and then 404′d on the client’s server.
Now, the banner ad company could have redirected to the wrong url, the client could have put in the wrong url, etc.
In either case, the link did end up going to the client’s site - so the 404 fix would have helped them.
But you are absolutely correct, if the Ad link wasn’t served correctly, then there’s not much you can do about that - except find a new Ad provider
Thanks Brian, good insight.
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