This policy governs the approval and usage of subdomains on the imperial.ac.uk domain. It was first published on 30 November 2020.
On this page:
- Overview
- Policy scope
- Policy
- Formats for acceptable subdomain names
- Naming formats
- Subdomain management
- Requesting a subdomain
- Withdrawals
Overview
The Imperial domain and its subdomains are used to publish content and services branded by Imperial College London through digital channels. In order to ensure that Imperial’s digital brand identity is protected, the Digital team in Communications and Public Affairs, in collaboration with ICT and the Faculty Web Officers have created this policy around the appropriate usage of imperial.ac.uk subdomains.
A subdomain, in the context of Imperial, is the name that appears before ‘.imperial.ac.uk’ (which is the domain). For example, the web address for the main Imperial website is www.imperial.ac.uk. In this case ‘www’ is the subdomain. Other examples include blackboard.imperial.ac.uk, for Imperial’s Blackboard service and events.imperial.ac.uk, used for Imperial events content management system.
Policy scope
This policy covers only requests for subdomains of the main .imperial.ac.uk domain via the Website domain and hosting requests process. Current examples include asset-library.imperial.ac.uk and alumni.imperial.ac.uk.
This policy covers requests made after the published date shown at the top of this page.
This policy does not cover subdomains for ic.ac.uk, which is a legacy domain. IC (and ICL) should not be to used to refer to, or write about Imperial. There is more information about this in Imperial’s brand and style guidelines. This means that use of the ic.ac.uk domain is no longer authorised according to this policy. We are aware that there are live websites that are using this domain, but this policy doesn't cover these.
This policy applies to web sites/services relating to the normal business of Imperial produced and owned by staff or organisational units within Imperial.
The policy also outlines the governance of managing the allocation of subdomains for Imperial and helps ensure a clear process for requesting a subdomain.
Benefits of a consistent approach
Having a consistent approach to subdomains, benefits Imperial in the following ways:
- Supports Imperial’s brand identity
- Supports digital best practice and standards
- Creates cohesion among Imperial websites
- Mitigates against poor search engine optimisation (SEO) caused by:
- subdomain conflict
- poor or inconsistent naming
- having multiple subdomains focussed on the same content or search terms.
- Creates a set of standards in preparation for any future direction in cloud hosting for online teaching or other Imperial services.
Policy
1. The imperial.ac.uk domain is reserved for Imperial-wide services or other services/applications where it is of strategic importance that Imperial aligns its brand with. Any requests that do not meet this criterion would be better suited to a new domain registration or usage of another existing domain. For example, a department-owned domain. This would be determined as part of the Website domain and hosting requests process.2. When requesting a subdomain you will not be able use the main website page templates, used on the Imperial website but may use Imperial brand assets.
3. To request use of a subdomain, your unit must be one of the following:
- an Imperial-wide initiative or service
- an Imperial faculty or other organisational unit including the Business School and academic departments
- an Imperial-level research entity such as the multidisciplinary networks, centres and institutes or research groups
5. Subdomains must indicate the scope of the site or application i.e. must not imply it is a Imperial-wide activity when it is only limited to the work of a single unit, project or activity.
6. Subdomains should not use product or external brand names and should instead reflect the relevant Imperial-service. Software vendors or identities can change over time so subdomains should not reflect these changes.
7. Subdomains must not be formed using acronyms, initialisms, abbreviations or ambiguous sets of characters. These are largely meaningless to users and can also have a detrimental effect on SEO. There are exceptions where these may be considered:
- where they are widely understood by the intended audience(s) or higher education sector
- is part of your identity i.e. used in communications or marketing activities. For example, dyson.imperial.ac.uk or icis.imperial.ac.uk
- there is no reasonable and meaningful alternative
- where using a full organisational name would be considered too long For example, aero-learn.imperial.ac.uk instead of aeronautics-learning.imperial.ac.uk.
9. Subdomains are not to be used as a vanity URL or redirect to subpages within other sites. Vanity URLs should be subdirectories of www.imperial.ac.uk/. For example, www.imperial.ac.uk/entrepreneurship/.
10. All requests for subdomains are made by following the Website domain and hosting requests process.
Formats for acceptable subdomain names
Examples of agreed subdomains
Below is a selection of existing agreed subdomains for key areas of Imperial’s digital content.
- email.imperial.ac.uk
- enterprise.imperial.ac.uk
- events.imperial.ac.uk
- halls.imperial.ac.uk
- learn.imperial.ac.uk
- library-search.imperial.ac.uk
- materials-virtual-space.imperial.ac.uk
- office.imperial.ac.uk
- plexus.imperial.ac.uk
- wiki.imperial.ac.uk
Exceptions
Where a subdomain deviates from the agreed naming formats (see the next section), the final decision will be deferred to the Director of Digital for sign off.
Naming formats
Below is a list of mandatory requirements and considerations when requesting a subdomain name. These will also be used when reviewing requests.
Names must:- clear, unambiguous, easy to read, easy to type and easy to share
- indicate the scope of the site or application i.e. must not imply an Imperial-wide activity when it is only limited to the work of a single unit, project or activity.
- not use uppercase letters
- contain only standard ASCII alphanumeric characters A to Z; numerals 0 to 9 and/or hyphens
- not contain underscores or spaces
- be a minimum of 2 characters (not including .imperial.ac.uk part)
- contain fewer than 50 characters (including.imperial.ac.uk part)
- not begin or end with a hyphen (-)
- not use existing internet protocols, such as www, ftp, dns etc.
- not contain “imperial” or “imperial-college”
- not use acronyms, initialisms or abbreviations, except in the circumstances detailed in point 7. in the Policy section above.
- be hyphenated when containing separate words for example asset-library.imperial.ac.uk or report-and-support.imperial.ac.uk unless it part of a brand or the official title of the subject
- contain the primary keyword for the page
- describe the subject/purpose of the site or application yet be as short as possible.
- not contain numbers in the URL, they can be confusing for your users and can quickly date a site. There are exceptional circumstances where this is acceptable. For example, it is for a very specific timeframe, or is part of your brand or official title. For example, c19-react.imperial.ac.uk or 360-visit.imperial.ac.uk/.
- not infringe existing trademarks, trade names or use third-party business names as it can provide unnecessary publicity or may be illegal. Where a trade name, trademark or business name is to be used, you should consult the Library Services first.
- not be too generic or vague in a way that it could cover more possible subjects or activities carried out by other parts of Imperial. For example, a single department requesting student-courses.imperial.ac.uk would not be authorised unless the website was covering Imperial-wide course provision.
Reserved subdomains
There are a number of subdomain names that are reserved for existing Imperial-wide activities and therefore will not be approved for use in relation to other content areas. Some examples of these include:
- news.imperial.ac.uk
- mail.imperial.ac.uk
- research.imperial.ac.uk
- courses.imperial.ac.uk
- study.imperial.ac.uk
- graduation.imperial.ac.uk
Subdomain management
Requests for <subdomain name>.imperial.ac.uk subdomains are reviewed by your Faculty Web Officer in relation to this policy, before being passed to the Digital team in the Communications Division for approval. Where an exception to the policy is being requested, it will be passed to the Head of Digital for final approval. Upon approval, the request is sent to Change Management in ICT for implementation.
Requesting a subdomain
1. All requests for subdomains are made using the Request a website (non T4), domain, URL or hosting space form and following the Website domain and hosting requests process.2. The form details all the information required including the business case for the subdomain, what you would like it to be named and where it should resolve to (usually a domain or IP address).
3. Requests must be submitted by a member of Imperial staff.
4. All requests will be discussed on a case by case basis, considering some or all of the following:
- alignment with Imperial’s Strategy
- whether the content in question should instead be published on the main Imperial (terminalfour) website
- size and significance of the target audience
- impact on Imperial’s information architecture and content strategy
- timescales
- appropriateness and justification for the request particularly for generic names (see point 5 of the formats section above)
Withdrawals
Use of all .imperial.ac.uk subdomains is subject to regular review by Communications and ICT, who reserve the right to remove websites that do not comply with accessibility standards, security, GDPR or other legislation Imperial is bound by.