Moving to New Domain - Ranking impact
-
I understand that when migrating to a new site, even if done perfectly (page level 301s etc) that rankings will drop in the short term and each site will be impacted differently. I picked up the following comment and was wanting to get a few experts thoughts on whether I can quote this to my client:
"In our experience, even when 301's are correctly executed, we see a short term fall back (7-30) days and then about a 90% carry through after that period for about 90 days and then back to full strength. "
-
Hi Conrad,
Unfortunately every migration is going to yield different results in terms of how well the redirection goes and how long you have to wait to get your rankings back if they suffer. Thomas' experience is fairly typical (and the resources he cites here are good too). It's impossible to say what will happen - a particularly large site (let's say a big e-commerce site for a high-street retailer) might suffer due to the sheer volume of URLs that need to be moved and picked up by Google; a small website may have an easier time. However, metrics like the age and authority of the moving website may well play into how successful the move is as well. As such, it's really hard to say exactly how a migration will go without seeing the sites (and even then, ranking problems can crop up that were unexpected).
Cheers,
Jane
-
If the hosting company changed servers or you changed hosting companies it should not matter in terms of domain switching unless you forgot to update something like the database file for all the URLs if you are using Word press or another CMS that has a MySQL database.
Obviously moving to a new domain has a lot of complications and switching the hosting can just really add to it. However, sometimes it must be done.
I have swapped hosting companies and not seeing a drop in any way shape or form many times. In fact I cannot recall a time that I have ever seen a drop from swapping just hosting.
I am not saying it is impossible but when done right it should not make a difference.
Having said that if you are a hosting company that gives you a staging server that you are supposed to incorporate into your DNS to get rid of the possibility of duplicate content that could be a huge issue. All staging server should be no follow no index robots-X
if it is a company that had an alias or staging server be certain that URL is not in a database somewhere.
however if you find you have a database and you have not updated it to reflect the new domain I would recommend a tool like this
https://interconnectit.com/products/search-and-replace-for-wordpress-databases/
Any CMS to CMS
http://www.cms2cms.com/supported-cms/wordpress/
For WordPress
http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/velvet-blues-update-urls/
-
I think this post from a few months back will help shed some light on the situation. In my experience from moving a company using a .de to .com it was a drop time of only 3 1/2 weeks to a month however we constantly told Google that we were changing domains remember to do that.
I hope this helps as well
http://moz.com/blog/domain-migration-lessons
http://moz.com/community/q/how-to-keep-old-url-juice-during-site-switch
http://moz.com/blog/achieving-an-seo-friendly-domain-migration-the-infographic
sincerely,
Thomas
-
That almost sounds like the result of a host changing servers on you. I hate it when that happens. That would be the absolute smoothest transition. I would account for a little error.
But as the man said, that's with painstaking attention to detail - all things being equal - and some off-site concerns. I would be careful about how you link clients. It seldom hurts to have a new domain with greater age and a good history. A new or younger domain will likely be a little more difficult.
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
-
Moving Blog Question
Site A is my primary site. I created a blog on site B and wrote good content and gave links back to site A. I think this is causing a penalty to occur. I no longer want to update site B and want to move the entire blog and it's content to sitea.com/blog. Is this a good idea or should I just start a fresh/new sitea/blog and just remove the links from site B to site A?
Technical SEO | | CLTMichael0 -
Redirect Impact - Moving From SEOmoz to Moz
Hey Guys, This has been on my mind ever since the big announcement, so today I did some searching around for some posts/talk about what the impact of their full site redirect has been for them and didn't find anything. Have they posted on this or are there any threads that I'm missing out on? I'd love to hear more about what the impact has been or any general thoughts/insights people may have. Thanks!
Technical SEO | | TakeLessons
Jon1 -
Redirect to new domain
We are moving our website from http://mysyncpad.com to http://syncpadapp.com The old site ranks pretty well for some specific keywords, will a 301 allow the new site to rank as well or will it be penalized by good for the transfer?
Technical SEO | | fifthlayer0 -
New website, to www or not
I was just wondering if there are any advantages to using the www instead of just the domain name for seo. Can these be elaborated on?
Technical SEO | | simvegas1 -
Redirecting root domains to sub domains
Mozzers: We have a instance where a client is looking to 301 a www.example.com to www.example.com/shop I know of several issues with this but wondered if anyone could chip in with any previous experiences of doing so, and what outcomes positive and negative came out of this. Issues I'm aware of: The root domain URL is the most linked page, a HTTP 301 redirect only passes about 90% of the value. you'll loose 10-15% of your link value of these links. navigational queries (i.e.: the "domain part" of "domain.tld") are less likely to produce google site-links less deep-crawling: google crawls top down - starts with the most linked page, which will most likely be your domain url. as this does not exist you waste this zero level of crawling depth. robots.txt is only allowed on the root of the domain. Your help as always is greatly appreciated. Sean
Technical SEO | | Yozzer0 -
Domain Alias
I have a client that picked up a bunch of keyword rich domain names and he wants to point them to his current corporate site as domain aliases. Could this in anyway negatively or positively effect his SEO? or ranking? Thanks - Kyle Chandler
Technical SEO | | kchandler1 -
Sub Domain SEO
I am thinking to Add Sub Domains to get better rankings for Local Searches. So I will develop City Specific Sites with Specific Language. For Example qatar.wisnetsol.com. IT will be in Arabic. If my Good standing and Ranking on Google for wisnetsol.com will help my subdomain to rank better? if we setup wisnetsol.com/qatar, how it can target Qatar in Google Webmaster tools? Will links for qatar.wisnetsol.com and wisnetsol.com are seprate? What do you think about this strategy? Is it good or bad?
Technical SEO | | Khuram0