Short summary: A plain-English explanation of DNS for lawyers who need to connect a domain without becoming technical.
Why this matters
DNS is the internet address book for your domain. A small DNS mistake can disconnect a website or email, so lawyers should understand the basics before handing access to support or a vendor.
Founder insight
- Small operational details shape trust. A wrong contact route, unclear setting, or incomplete support request can slow down an otherwise simple fix.
- The strongest setup habits are calm and specific: check the right screen, make one change, preview the result, and escalate with enough context when support is needed.
Step-by-step guidance
- Identify your domain registrar.
- Check whether your website and email already use the domain.
- Understand that A, CNAME, MX, and TXT records do different jobs.
- Share DNS access carefully with authorised support only.
- Allow time for changes to propagate after updates.
Screenshot Needed
Screenshot needed: Domain registrar DNS records page
Caption: Dashboard -> Domain
What you’re looking at: This area shows the website address and custom domain connection path.
Why it matters: Domain changes affect website access and sometimes email, so lawyers need the right context before acting.
Location: Domain registrar DNS records page
Purpose: show the exact screen this guide refers to before the lawyer takes action.
Best practices
- Confirm who controls the domain account before requesting any technical change.
- Protect existing MX records if the firm already uses professional email on the domain.
- Share DNS access only through an authorised support path.
Common mistakes
- Deleting DNS records because they look unfamiliar.
- Changing MX records without checking whether existing mailboxes depend on them.
- Expecting domain changes to appear instantly before propagation has completed.
Related guides
Success signals to watch
- Trust: the page feels accurate, professional, and consistent with the firm’s public identity.
- Clarity: a visitor can understand the next step without needing legal or technical knowledge.
- Contact readiness: phone, email, WhatsApp, and support paths are current and easy to test.
Next recommended step
Do not edit DNS blindly. Contact support with the registrar name and your domain goal.