Is Seo Effected by Switching Hosting Services?
-
I currently own a domain that is hosting by yahoo! However, they have no blog and they are not "responsive" to smart and mobile phones. I am looking to go from Yahoo! Hosting to maybe hostagor and looking to go from static to CMS for seo purposes.
My fear is of loosing SERP's as I do rank good for some majotr local keywords.
Any opinions?
James
-
If done correctly, changing DNS for an existing site shouldn't result in any downtime, Charles. There will likely be a short period where some users will begin seeing the new site while others are still seeing the old site, the site will never appear "down".
The length of time where visitors may see a mix of the old & new sites can be significantly reduced by setting short TTL times on the DNS settings before the actual final changeover takes place.
Paul
-
There's essentially no restriction on the type of url you can redirect from or to, James. Going from different file types to other file types is no problem. In fact, it's not uncommon to redirect from a specific page to a directory in the new website design, because the old page no longer has an exact equivalent on the new site.
You should be making a decision for every single page on your existing site. (Make certain you have an accurate list of every page as one of the first steps in the migration!) Each old page should redirect to either the location of the same page on the new site, or to a relevant equivalent page. This must be done regardless of how deep the pages are in your site hierarchy.
If there's truly nothing on the new site that's equivalent or useful for the old page to point to (e.g. you've decided to drop a particular topic from the new site completely), then it's OK to intentionally allow that old page to be a 404 Not Found - to tell the search engines that it truly doesn't' exist anymore and can eventually be removed from the index. But this Not Found should be on purpose because that's what you've decided, not by accident because you didn't deal with it properly.
That answer your question?
Paul
-
Thanks so much for your input! My old site has .html extensions, if I go to wprdpress, should and could I use 301 directs from .html to NON/html deep links? If so, would that enable me to keep my SERPS', thanks!
Jimmy
-
You're actually asking two questions here Jimmy
- Is SEO affected by switching hosting services?
- Is SEO affected by switching from a static site to a CMS based version?
The answer to number one is generally no. As long as the different elements of the hosting changeover are managed efficiently and correctly, there shouldn't be any major effect on rankings. There have been isolated examples of this kind of switch causing problems however, so nothing can be absolutely guaranteed.
As for number two, there will definitely be effects on your SEO and rankings when you switch from a static site to a CMS, particularly as in almost all cases your URLs will have to change.
This process involves quite a number of moving parts and specific steps that must be completed correctly in order to transfer as much of the value from your old website's structure to the new one. It's not impossible to do, companies do it all the time, but there is almost always at least some level of fluctuation in rankings/traffic after the new site goes live.
As long as you've handled all of the specific requirements of the migration, those rankings will usually settle and come back to the level you were at before the migration, and often to even higher levels if the new site is structured better and better optimized. This settling process can take anywhere up to 6 weeks or more, so shouldn't be undertaken during a critical period in your site's yearly cycle.
Hope that helps?
Paul
-
Just make sure your URLs are good. You shouldn't have any problem with SEO. Also, make sure that your website is not down for long periods of time because if Google Bot sees that the site is down, it may affect rankings. G bot won't do anything the 1st time around, but if it comes back again and the site is still down, you might be removed from the SERPs.
If that happens, your site will be algorithmically back to where it was before once the site is back up.
I didn't have any problem in rankings going from one host to another. Talk to Host Gator and to Dreamhost. They can help you transfer your site from one host to another.
Got a burning SEO question?
Subscribe to Moz Pro to gain full access to Q&A, answer questions, and ask your own.
Browse Questions
Explore more categories
-
Moz Tools
Chat with the community about the Moz tools.
-
SEO Tactics
Discuss the SEO process with fellow marketers
-
Community
Discuss industry events, jobs, and news!
-
Digital Marketing
Chat about tactics outside of SEO
-
Research & Trends
Dive into research and trends in the search industry.
-
Support
Connect on product support and feature requests.
Related Questions
-
Multi National Company that Doesn't Want to Implement International SEO
I have got an interesting situation where I have a client who wants to merge two ccTLD's into one. They currently have .fi and .com and they want to merge both sites to .com .fi is for finland and .com for USA. They want to merge the sites and the original plan was to use subfolders for each country and pair with hreflang. However the team now wants to merge both sites with NO subfolders differentiating between finland or the US. My understanding of International SEO that this is the most opposite from best practices, but is there any specific reasons why they wouldn't want to do this? I'm struggling to find any specific reasons that I can cite to the client that would argue why we should at least do a subfolder or some sort of international seo strategy.
International SEO | | JKhoo1 -
International SEO & Duplicate Content: ccTLD, hreflang, and relcanonical tags
Hi Everyone, I have a client that has two sites (example.com & example.co.uk) each have the same English content, but no hreflang or rel="canonical" tags in place. Would this be interpreted as duplicate content? They haven't changed the copy to speak to specific regions, but have tried targeting the UK with a ccTLD. I've taken a look at some other comparable question on MOZ like this post - > https://moz.com/community/q/international-hreflang-will-this-handle-duplicate-content where one of the answers says **"If no translation is happening within a geo-targeted site, HREFLANG is not necessary." **If hreflang tags are not necessary, then would I need rel="canonical" to avoid duplicate content? Thanks for taking the time to help a fellow SEO out.
International SEO | | ccox10 -
Is using JavaScript to render translations safe for International SEO?
Hello World! Background: I am evaluating a tool/service that a company wants to use for managing the translated versions of their international/multi-lingual websites: https://www.transifex.com/product/transifexlive/ Transifex is asking webmaster to "simply add a snippet of JavaScript" to their website(s); the approved translations are added by the business in the back-end; and the translated sites are made live with the click of a button (on/to the proper ccTLD, sub-domain, or sub-directory, which is specified). CONCERN: Even though I know Google reads JavaScript for crawling and ranking,
International SEO | | SixSpokeMedia64
I am concerned because I see the "English text" when I view the source-code on the "German site", and I wonder if this is really acceptable? QUESTION: Is a service like this (such as Transifex using JavaScript to render translations client-side) safe for indexing and ranking for my clients' international search engine visibility, especially via Google? Thank you!0 -
Help! A never before asked query about using a ccTLD but hosting in a different country
Hi Guys, I've a website that has a India specific domain ending with .org.in. The website has ALL the traffic from India (as mentioned earlier, it's a website meant only for audience from India). Currently this _.org.in_domainis hosted on a server located in India. I'm thinking of hosting this website in Singapore. Do you think that will negatively affect the current rankings of the website (i.e. changing the server location of my website from India to Singapore)?
International SEO | | seotoseo0 -
International SEO - Help Make Tuff Decisions
Hey Moz Friends, I need help making a tuff decision. I just finished watching Rands Video here: http://moz.com/blog/international-seo-where-to-host-and-how-to-target-whiteboard-friday My website is www.pti-world.com , I'm trying to rank for the term "walk through metal detectors" for other countries. I am currently on the 2nd page in many countries. So here is the big question: Lets say I work hard and get 20 links from U.K. Should I point them to my page that is currently on page 2 in the u.k. ? OR... will I see better rankings if I start a "new" website under a subdirectory and point those 20 links to that new page? We don't have a large budget for this. The companies that are currently ranking in the top positions are "NOT" geotargeting there website from what I can tell (they are using .com domains). What route would you recommend I take??
International SEO | | brandon070 -
International SEO - Setting up reporting
What would you consider to be a best practice for setting up international keyword tracking? Both in MOZ and in Google Analytics? Would you set them up by language? IE Spanish, French, German... Or by country? Mexico, Spain, US Spanish, French Canadian, French... ect... *Our website is set up with our countries in subdomains. We currently are in about 10 different countries and plan on expanding globally. Any advice helps! Much thanks!
International SEO | | ScentsySEO0 -
Subdomains vs ccTLD in International SEO
I'm interested to see if anyone has any additional thoughts or recent experience on subdomains vs ccTLD for International SEO. An article I found on this site is from March 2011, so just wanted to check if this is still relevant? http://www.seomoz.org/ugc/folders-vs-subdomains-vs-cctld-in-international-seo-an-overview
International SEO | | edwardlewis0 -
Local SEO - My Ranking depends on City of the user - Rank tracker is failing
Hello, The search results differ completly depending on the user location. The websites yoagbarcelona.org targets poeple from barcelona: Barcelona; User location Barcelona web is on the last position on first page: http://screencast.com/t/ZsIeiCeLRM User location New York 1st. http://screencast.com/t/PzaLbwWW4xx: Also SEO MOZ rank tracker is showing me that im no 1in google.es for yoga barcelona. The problem is that this is only true for users outside the region 😞 The site has very bad ranking in google places and you need to go down to page 10 until my yoga studio shows up in the maps results. I did some hardcore citation building and signed up in almost all local directories that google pulls data from within one month and optimised the google places / plus profile. Please give me some advice how I could overcome the problem.??? Especially on what part should i focus when optimising the page. ??? Are there any other good strategies for getting into google places ??? Do I need more links from local sites or how is this local serps working ???
International SEO | | stereo690