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Hyperlinks, Redirects and 404 Pages

The following standards should be followed when working with links on webpages on MSU-affiliated websites.

Hyperlinks Open in Same Window

  • Do not configure links to automatically open in a new window or tab. Doing so can confuse and frustrate visitors to MSU websites.
  • Using a new browser window resets the back button in that window. The back button is the second most used navigation function (after following hyperlinks).

Provide Descriptive Link Titles

  • Include common keywords or phrases in links that describe the content on linked pages.
  • Use link text like “learn how to apply to MSU,” “sign up to receive MSU news updates” and “visit the Office of the President website.”
  • Do not use link text like “more information,” “click here” and “learn more.”

Broken Link Maintenance

  • Check regularly for broken links that confuse and frustrate visitors.
  • Use free automated link-checking tools to identify broken links such as: 
  • Manually check links quarterly to locate broken links automated tools can’t identify.

Redirect Links

Redirect links are used to direct website visitors to a new, appropriate webpage when the page they attempted to visit is no longer available. Redirects will help a website’s search engine optimization.  

  • Have a redirect plan created as part of any website project. 
  • When pages have been replaced or deleted, users may still look for them via bookmarks or links on other pages.
  • Redirect to the final page whenever possible.
  • Avoid redirect loops.

404 Pages

A 404 page is an error page that appears when someone visits a webpage that no longer exists. Generic 404 pages are not helpful to a visitor because they have no clear next step. 

  • Use custom 404 pages in conjunction with redirect links to provide users a helpful landing page when the webpage they’re looking for is missing.