Traditionally, most websites have a single domain name or URL that leads to them. If you type google.com into your navigation bar, you’ll see the familiar search bar appear.
However, a lot of websites also have what are called parked domains or ‘aliases’. Those are additional URLs leading towards the same page.
There are a lot of ways you can use parked domains to your advantage, including:
Securing common misspellings of your primary domain name
Registering your primary domain using other Top-Level Domains (TLDs)
Saving names you can later sell
Benefits of Parked Domain are
This can be a single-page website where Internet browser see when they type the domain name with in the web browser or follow a link in a web browser. You can have multiple domain names pointing to your main web site. The updation with in the name servers for the domain name is also updated with the registrar or reseller potentially has use of the domain rather than the final registrant. In the latter, an “Under Construction” or a “Coming Soon” message may or may not be put up on the domain by the registrar or reseller. To increase your online visibility the best way is park multiple domains where as these parked domain are on main domain which shows website of the main domain you are using presently . Similarly parked domain on the subdomain would show website of subdomain. Domain names can be parked before a web site is ready for launching. Domain which is parked on subdomain is called addon domain.
I hope this information will be helpful!
Mark Wilson
Creating additional email accounts using your alias, which forward messages to your primary domain
Parked domains can also refer to URLs that you register and don’t point towards any website in particular (hence the term ‘parked’). Whatever you decide to do with your parked domain or alias, however, setting it up is downright simple.