Lost ranking after domain switch
-
I recently migrated from https://whitefusemedia.com to https://whitefuse.com. The website URL structure and content remained the same and I followed all the best practice guidance regarding checks on the new domain and appropriate 301 redirects.
I have seen traffic drop by about 50% and the traffic that is still coming through is mainly coming through links still listed by Google under the old domain (https://whitefusemedia.com).
Is this normal? Should I expect to see this bounce back, or is there anything I can do now to regain the rankings?
-
faced the same issue, i have redirected my old domain spotifymod.com to new domain spotypremium.com on Nov 20, and till 24 everything was going very well, even i see some increase in traffic, new redirected domain was showing on some new keywords as the domain name also have some volume.
I have redirected following all the guidelines according to https://developers.google.com/search/docs/crawling-indexing/site-move-with-url-changes
But i have checked today and some of my keywords are totally vaniched from serp, there are no results of some pages even in top 200 results. The pages which was gaining more traffic are
https://spotifymod.com/spotify-vanced-apk/
https://spotifymod.com/spotify-downloader-apk/
https://spotifymod.com/download-spotify-plus/which was ranked on 2 or 3 before i have switched domain. Now i want to know what i can do, till now i have created new social media accounts for the new domain, domain was fresh i have registered it 1 month ago,
I am trying to reach out to webmaster to ask them to change teh link towards new domain,
But i am getting some video out of the viewport errors for new domain on google search console, while domain is still moving in search console and according to google do not change content for 2,3 weeks.
Some pages are still intact in search now i am confused.
-
This is a great response. Thanks for this!
-
Thanks for the responses. The posts I read on moving domains didn't prepare me for a permanent drop in domain authority. I had picked up that it was possible to transfer this over, so a bit disappointed if that's not the case! Ouch.
It's only been two weeks so I'll hang in there a little longer but also take the advice about trying to build new inbound links.
-
How long has the drop in traffic been happening for?
I have switched names of a few branded domains to shorter URLs like it looks like you are doing and I saw a significant drop in traffic for a while, around 3 months. I was sweating it hard, but it did eventually pop back up.
Just try to build some new quality links to the new URL using your brand name as the anchor text and also the naked URL as the anchor text so Google can see that it is emerging as the new preferred domain. A blog post also helps to announce the domain change and once created spread it far and wide on social media.
-
Wowser - sorry to hear about the drop in rankings & traffic.
RE: "Is this normal?" Yes.
It's normal to still see traffic coming from your "old" links. Google needs time to get all of your old domain URLs out of its cache and replace them with new. Your 301 redirect map and your new domain's XML sitemap will definitely help speed up the process of the replacement. You can keep an eye on how far Google's come with removing the old URLs from its cache by searching "site:whitefusemedia.com" as well as see how many of your new domain's URLs it has indexed by searching "site:whitefuse.com."
It's also normal to see your traffic drop like this with a domain switch, unfortunately. You've switched a domain with a domain authority of 40+ to a domain with a domain authority of under 20. Your website, even with the redirect strategy, is less authoritative than it once was, and thus, it will rank lower.
RE: "Should I expect to see this bounce back?" It depends.
You have a big gap to make up with your domain switch in the overall authority your new domain has. You will see some improvements likely happen over the first few months after launch, but in my experience, it's not very likely you're going to be able to close that gap just with a redirect strategy. (Remember, too, a 301 redirect doesn't transfer 100% of the previous value). If it's been more than a few months already, then you might expect that this is your new baseline of organic traffic. In order to reach authority levels at the same level, you're going to have to undertake a significant amount of authority-building and link-building efforts. In past projects like these, we've even gone so far as trying to contact/reach out to some of our most credible back-link suppliers to let them know that we've updated our site, and to link directly to the new site at the new location. We had some success with those, but you're relying a lot on webmasters to make those updates on their time/own merits. Regardless, it will take time and energy, and unfortunately a lot of it.
RE: "is there anything I can do now to regain the rankings?" Yes.
Are you willing to switch back to the previous domain? That is the best way to reclaim your lost rankings/traffic at this point (and do the reverse 301 redirect strategy, now that the new URLs are also in the world.
If you can't go back for branding/internal/other reasons, then my recommendations are to:
-
Survey your most credible backlinks from the old domain and reach out to see if they're willing to link to the new site/location.
-
Work on building new/credible links. As a first step, making sure your new domain is replaced across the main reputable web directories is a good start. You can find categorization directories for your business here: https://moz.com/local/categories. Make sure you update your Google Business listing, Yahoo!, Bing, Social Media profiles, YellowBook, etc, etc.
-
Build new content and promote it to get more valuable shares/links/traffic!
Hope that helps and good luck!
-
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
-
Website ranking on Google dropping for unknown reason while rankings are improving on Bing. Please help!
one of my websites www.resumeble.com is showing a constant drop in rankings. Earlier the website was ranking for major keywords like resume writing services etc. I used Ahrefs site audit to find issues. According to Ahrefs there was a huge issue of duplicate pages, which is now resolved by proper canonical tag insertion. The site is built on Angular. Fetch report in Google shows perfect code and Sitemap is also perfect. Manual action reporting in webmaster shows no warning. Please suggest what steps should I take to fix this issue.
Technical SEO | | mayyaa40 -
New domain wipes out domain authority
A client wanted to change their domain name, which we have now done. The site content itself is exactly the same. We put 301 redirect links in so that Google searchers would redirect from the old site to the new one. However Moz then said that it couldn't crawl the old domain because of the redirects and advised creating a brand new campaign for the new domain. We have done this but now Moz says that the domain authority of the new site is 2 (it was 14 on the old domain). Specifics are:
Technical SEO | | mfrgolfgti
old domain: https://ryemeadcleaning.co.uk
new domain: https://ryemeadgroup.co.uk So basically it seems like we're starting again from scratch with the new domain and all the SEO from the old domain has been lost? Have we done it wrong?0 -
Choice of domain
Hi. I want to build a new site that is optimised for a training product that we have. We have an existing domain which I'm considering pointing at this new site. This domain is one of the new .training TLDs. Let's call this domain foo.training where my main keyword to optimise for will be "foo training". I've also looked and can see that foo-training.com is available. I read up on best practices for domains here : https://moz.com/learn/seo/domain My question is will the .training domain be seen as "spammy" in any way? Am I better to just go ahead and register the .com?
Technical SEO | | rmcatalyst0 -
Which domain we should continue with?
Hello All, We are working with a client who had manual penalty from Google. We worked on that and now penalty has been removed. Client had already started working on the new domain and now the big dilemma is- Which domain should we continue with? Old or New? We are suggesting them to continue with the old one as that domain had good PR, good backlinks, better visibility on their social profiles etc. What do you suggest? any inputs are highly appreciated. Thanks
Technical SEO | | sachin-sv0 -
Transfer a Main Domain to a Sub-Domain
My IT department tells me they want to transfer my main site domain, which has been in existence since 1999 as an e-commerce site (maindomain.com) to a sub-domain (www2.maindomain.com) or a completely new domain (newdomain.net). This is because we are launching a new website and B2C e-commerce engine, but we still have to maintain the legacy B2B e-commerce engine which contains hard-coded URLs, and both systems can't use the same domain. I've been researching the issue across SEOmoz, but I haven't come across this exact type of scenario (mostly I've seen a sub-domain to new domain). I see major problems with their proposal, including negative SEO impact, loss of domain authority/ranking and issues with branding. Does anyone know the exact type of impact I can expect to see in this scenario and specific steps I should go about to minimize the impact? Btw, I will be using Danny Dover's guide on properly moving domains where appropriate. Thanks!
Technical SEO | | AscendLearning0 -
What is the advantage of using sub domains instead of pages on the root domain?
Have a look at this example http://bannerad.designcrowd.com/ For each category of design, they have a landing page on the sub domain. Wouldn't it be better to have them as part of the same domain? What is the strategy behind using sub domains?
Technical SEO | | designquotes0 -
Different domains
Firstly apologies for the very brief question as I am mainly looking for your thoughts as opposed to specific help about a specific problem. I am working on a site which has two sepreate domains and within one domain, two sub domains. The two different sites both havea high page rank, PR6 each, one is the corporate site and the other is the company blog. There are also two sub domains within the corporate site, again both domains have high pr and tons of content. My question is would it be better to consolidate all the assets under one domain or is it better to keep the sites sepreate, from an seo perspective that is.
Technical SEO | | LiquidTech0 -
How to improve my ranking for spain
Hi i have been redoing my site www.in2town.co.uk because i needed to start from scratch and as a result i lost a lot of rankings and traffic but things will get better when i have finished the site and got it the way i want it, but my question is. i am in spain at the moment and i looked at my site and foiund that it is not on the first page but in england it is on the first page and would like to know how i would need to improve this to make my site go on the front page for spain. Any advice would be great as i want to try and gain global traffic for the site
Technical SEO | | ClaireH-1848860