DNS Records
DNS records tell the internet where your website, email and verification services live. Correct records keep browsers and inboxes going to the right place.
Resources
Websites, domains, hosting, email and security all rely on small technical settings working properly. This page explains the key pieces in plain language, so you know what matters and when it is worth getting help.
DNS records tell the internet where your website, email and verification services live. Correct records keep browsers and inboxes going to the right place.
Nameservers control where DNS is managed. Moving them without a plan can interrupt websites or email, so changes should be staged carefully.
SSL certificates encrypt traffic and show browsers your site is legitimate. Renewals and redirects need to be monitored so customers do not see security warnings.
SPF, DKIM and DMARC help mail servers trust messages from your domain. Correct setup reduces spoofing risk and improves email deliverability.
A CDN caches assets closer to visitors, improves load times and adds a protection layer against traffic spikes.
A migration should preserve pages, redirects, email records, analytics and search visibility while moving hosting or rebuilding the website.
Domain renewals protect ownership of your website and email address. Missed renewals can cause websites, emails and ads to stop working.
Backups provide a recovery point if something breaks, is deleted or needs to be restored after an update or migration.
Monitoring helps detect outages quickly so hosting, DNS or website issues can be investigated before they cost more enquiries.
Analytics and conversion tracking show how visitors find your website, what they do next and which marketing channels create enquiries.
Redirects help preserve search visibility when pages move, websites are rebuilt or domains change.
Mailbox access, password controls and security records help protect business communication from avoidable delivery and security issues.