When creating a new website, there’s always a degree of risk to your organic search engine rankings. Changes like moving content, removing text, deleting or adding pages, and adjusting title tags can all impact your rankings. This SEO migration guide will ensure that your rankings are looked after.
Questions like “Will I lose keyword rankings?” “Are my current keywords effective?” “How can I be sure the new website will be better?” and “What if something goes wrong?” are common concerns.
With careful preparation, it’s possible to prioritise your important traffic-driving keywords and maintain their rankings. By strategically managing the transition, we can help ensure that your new website not only preserves but potentially enhances your SEO performance.
NOTE – it might be good to refer to our list of FREE SEO resources to help with this SEO migration process.
The keyword research required for an SEO migration project is slightly different from typical keyword research. Instead of focusing on sourcing new keywords for ongoing marketing, the goal here is to identify the keywords that are already driving traffic to your site. This allows us to ensure that the new website either retains or improves upon these valuable keywords.
Using Google Search Console, you can identify which keywords are bringing the most traffic to your website. To do this, navigate to your property in Search Console, then go to Search Traffic → Search Analytics. Download the keyword list into a spreadsheet so you can review and manage them effectively. As you assess each keyword, consider the following:
This thorough approach helps ensure that the new website will maintain or even enhance its search engine performance.
You now have insight into which keywords are currently working for your website and have begun to form a strategy for SEO migration. However, there are still some gaps in your spreadsheet that need to be addressed before you can finalise your action plan.
By filling in these details, you’ll be better equipped to create a targeted and effective SEO strategy for your website migration.
Now that your keyword research and analysis are complete, you can develop a well-considered strategy for the sitemap of your new website.
The insights you’ve gained allow you to identify the essential pages needed to retain your keyword rankings. Pages associated with keywords marked in red, amber, or green all have a strong case for inclusion in the new sitemap. As you update your proposed sitemap, it’s important to balance these SEO insights with your planned customer user journey.
Remember, this SEO migration exercise is focused on identifying the content that must be included in your new website to prevent any loss of rankings.
To successfully migrate SEO from one website to another, it’s crucial to understand why a particular page is ranking highly. While many ranking factors come into play, the main variable you can control during a migration is on-page SEO. You’ll need to thoroughly examine the page and its attributes to understand what contributes to its success.
Is the keyword, or a part of it, included in the following?
By reviewing these elements, it will usually become clear why a page is ranking well for a specific keyword. This understanding will help you effectively migrate and preserve your SEO performance.
At this stage, you should have a list of pages that didn’t make it into the new sitemap and a list of pages that will require a URL change. Now, it’s time to prepare your 301 redirects to implement at launch to help with the SEO migration.
By carefully planning and implementing these 301 redirects, you can minimise the risk of losing traffic or rankings during the migration.
Even with meticulous planning, SEO migration comes with uncertainties. Competitors might make changes, or search engine algorithms could shift. That’s why it’s crucial to closely monitor your new website after launch. We recommend analysing key metrics daily for the first six weeks to ensure everything is on track.
Here are the key metrics to focus on during your SEO migration:
It’s common for your new website to be indexed quickly, and fluctuations in rankings—both up and down—are typical following a launch. This is why it’s important to track these metrics regularly until things stabilise, and to avoid reacting too hastily to early changes.
Have your rankings dropped?