URL Structure Repair & Redirect Management
404 errors after a WordPress migration mean your SEO is bleeding. We stop it.
Every broken link to your site is a lost visitor and a wasted backlink. Every 404 your Google crawl report shows is a ranking opportunity disappearing. After a migration, redesign, or domain change, broken URLs must be systematically identified and redirected, not left to accumulate.
404 Audit and Redirect Implementation
**Phase 1, Audit:**
Post-Mortem Report
Case Study: The Agency Whose Blog Traffic Dropped 60% After a Redesign
Common questions
Questions answered.
How many 404 errors constitute a significant SEO problem?
Any 404 on a previously-ranked or externally-linked URL is a problem. Even a single 404 on a page with strong backlinks represents meaningful lost ranking authority. Scale matters for the urgency of the fix, not for whether the fix is needed.
My site was just migrated a week ago. Is it too late?
It's not too late, but sooner is always better. Every week without redirects allows Google to recalibrate its index without your URLs, making recovery progressively more difficult.
Do I need redirects for pages that got very little traffic?
For pages with external backlinks, yes, regardless of traffic volume. Backlinks carry domain authority that is lost when the linked URL 404s. For internal pages with no external links and no historical rankings, the priority is lower.
Will 301 redirects fully transfer my page rankings to the new URL?
Research consistently shows 301 redirects transfer the vast majority (90–99%) of ranking authority to the destination URL. Implementing them promptly after a migration prevents the authority decay caused by unresolved 404 errors.
Submit an Incident Report.
Whether it's an active emergency or a request for managed operations, submit your URL and symptom. Reviewed by human specialists, acknowledged within 4 hours.