·8 min read

How to Create Custom Short Links for Your Brand

Learn how to create branded short links with custom domains. Boost click-through rates and brand recognition with personalized URLs.

By Kelvin Amoaba
custom linksbrandingcustom domainstutorial

Generic short links served their purpose in the early days of the internet, but modern brands need more than a random string of characters on someone else's domain. Custom short links turn every shared URL into a branding opportunity, building trust with your audience and giving you control over how your links look and perform.

What Are Custom Short Links?

Custom short links, often called branded links, are shortened URLs that use your own domain name and a meaningful alias instead of a generic shortening service domain with a random slug. Rather than sharing a link like:

https://generic.link/x7kQ9p

You share something like:

https://go.yourcompany.com/spring-sale

Both links redirect to the same destination, but the branded version immediately tells the person clicking it who the link belongs to and what they can expect on the other side.

A branded URL shortener makes this possible by letting you connect your own domain and choose custom aliases for every link you create. The result is a short link that looks professional, reinforces your brand, and is far easier to remember.

Why Branded Links Matter: The Psychology of Trust

When people encounter a link, they make a split-second decision about whether to click it. That decision is heavily influenced by trust, and trust starts with recognition.

Familiarity Breeds Confidence

A link on your own custom domain signals legitimacy. People are more likely to click a URL that contains a brand name they recognize than a generic short domain they have never seen before. This is especially true in environments where phishing and spam are common concerns, such as email and social media.

Higher Click-Through Rates

The data supports this intuition. Studies have consistently shown that branded links outperform generic short links, with some research indicating a click-through rate improvement of up to 34%. When your audience trusts the link, they click. When they click, your campaigns perform better.

Recall and Shareability

Custom short links are easier to remember and share verbally. If someone hears go.yourcompany.com/demo during a podcast or a conference talk, they can type it from memory. A random string like x7kQ9p does not have that quality. This makes branded links especially powerful for offline and audio channels where people cannot simply tap a hyperlink.

How Custom Domains Work Technically

Connecting a custom domain to a branded URL shortener involves DNS configuration and server-side routing. Here is how it works.

DNS Records and CNAME Setup

DNS (Domain Name System) translates human-readable domain names into IP addresses that servers understand. When you set up a custom domain for short links, you create a CNAME record that points your chosen subdomain to the shortening service's servers.

For example, to use go.yourcompany.com as your short link domain, you would add a CNAME record in your DNS provider's dashboard:

Type:  CNAME
Name:  go
Value: cname.ishortn.ink

This tells the DNS system that requests to go.yourcompany.com should be routed to iShortn's servers. Once the DNS change propagates (usually within a few minutes to a few hours), iShortn recognizes the incoming request, looks up the alias, and redirects the visitor to the correct destination.

SSL and Security

A professional branded link setup also includes SSL so that your custom domain serves links over HTTPS. Most modern shortening platforms handle SSL certificate provisioning automatically once you verify your domain, keeping your branded links secure without manual certificate management.

Step-by-Step: Setting Up a Custom Domain for Short Links

Setting up a custom domain is simpler than most people expect. Here is a walkthrough of the process.

1. Choose Your Short Link Domain

Pick a domain or subdomain that is short, memorable, and clearly tied to your brand. Common patterns include:

  • go.yourcompany.com
  • link.yourcompany.com
  • yourco.link (using a short top-level domain)

The shorter the domain, the cleaner your links will look. If you already own a short domain, that is ideal. Otherwise, a subdomain of your primary domain works well and inherits your brand's existing domain trust.

2. Configure Your DNS Records

Log in to your domain registrar or DNS provider and add a CNAME record pointing your chosen subdomain to the shortening service. If you are using iShortn, point the CNAME to the value provided in your dashboard settings and allow time for DNS propagation.

3. Verify the Domain in Your Shortener Dashboard

Most platforms include a domain verification step to confirm that you own the domain and that the DNS records are correctly configured. Once verified, the platform begins routing traffic for your custom domain.

4. Start Creating Branded Links

With the domain connected, every new short link you create can use your custom domain. Choose meaningful aliases for each link, and you are ready to share branded URLs across all your channels.

Best Practices for Creating Memorable Short Link Aliases

The alias, the part after the slash, matters just as much as the custom domain itself. A well-chosen alias makes the link self-explanatory, while a poorly chosen one defeats the purpose of branding.

Keep It Short and Descriptive

The alias should hint at the destination without being overly long. Aim for one to three words. For example, go.yourcompany.com/pricing is better than go.yourcompany.com/2026-pricing-page-updated-version.

Use Lowercase and Hyphens

Stick to lowercase letters and use hyphens to separate words. This avoids confusion when sharing links verbally or in print. spring-sale is clearer than SpringSale or springsale.

Be Consistent with Naming Conventions

Establish a pattern and stick with it. If your team uses campaign-name for promotions and product-feature for product links, keep that convention across all links. Consistency makes links predictable and easier to manage at scale.

Avoid Dates and Version Numbers When Possible

Unless a link is genuinely time-sensitive and disposable, avoid embedding dates in aliases. go.yourcompany.com/webinar is more reusable than go.yourcompany.com/webinar-march-2026. If the content changes, you can update the destination URL without needing a new link.

Use Cases for Custom Short Links

Branded links are versatile. Here are the channels and scenarios where they have the greatest impact.

Marketing Campaigns

Every campaign benefits from trackable, branded links. Use distinct aliases for each campaign so you can measure performance individually, such as go.yourcompany.com/summer-launch or go.yourcompany.com/partner-promo.

Social Media

Social media profiles and posts have limited space. A custom short link looks polished in a bio or a post and reinforces brand presence even in a crowded feed. Branded links stand out more than generic short URLs when users are scrolling quickly, which can translate into higher engagement.

Email Campaigns

Long URLs with UTM parameters clutter email copy and can trigger spam filters. Custom short links keep your emails clean while preserving all the tracking data you need, and recipients are more likely to click a link they recognize as belonging to your brand.

Print and Offline Materials

Business cards, brochures, event banners, packaging, and conference slides all benefit from clean, branded URLs. When someone sees go.yourcompany.com/menu on a restaurant menu card or link.brand.com/app on product packaging, the link is easy to type and clearly tied to the brand. Pairing a custom short link with a QR code covers both audiences: those who scan and those who type.

Brand Consistency Across Channels

One of the underrated advantages of custom short links is the consistency they bring to your brand presence. When every link you share, whether on social media, in an email, on a billboard, or in a text message, uses the same branded domain, you create a unified experience for your audience.

This consistency compounds over time. People begin to associate your short link domain with your brand, just as they associate your website domain with your company. Centralize link creation through a single platform, establish naming conventions, and ensure that everyone on your team uses the branded domain rather than falling back to generic shorteners.

Getting Started with Custom Domains on iShortn

iShortn makes it straightforward to set up and manage custom domains for your branded links. Here is how to get started:

  1. Sign up or log in at ishortn.ink and navigate to your dashboard.
  2. Go to the custom domains section in your settings and add the domain or subdomain you want to use.
  3. Configure your DNS by adding the CNAME record provided by iShortn to your domain's DNS settings.
  4. Verify the domain in your iShortn dashboard once DNS propagation is complete.
  5. Create your first branded link by selecting your custom domain and entering a memorable alias.

From there, every link you create carries your brand. The analytics dashboard tracks performance across all your domains, so you can monitor clicks, geographic data, device types, and referral sources in one place.

Whether you are running marketing campaigns, building a brand presence on social media, or simply want your links to look professional, custom short links are a small change that makes a measurable difference. A branded URL shortener turns every link into an extension of your brand.