Site migration and transfer: securing your web transition
Switching CMS or host should never cost you your search rankings, your data or your customers. Here's the method for a transition with no nasty surprises.
- A poorly prepared migration can drop organic traffic by 30 to 70% within a few days
- Well-mapped 301 redirects are the number one protection for your search rankings
- A complete staging environment prevents disasters on launch day
- Monitoring doesn't stop at launch: plan for two to three weeks of active follow-up
Why migrate a website and what the risks are
A CMS that limits growth, a host that no longer meets performance needs, a desire to modernize the brand image: the reasons to migrate are concrete. But the operation carries real risks that many companies underestimate.
Poorly handled redirects: organic traffic can drop by 30 to 70%.
Content, media or forms transferred incorrectly.
A site that's unreachable for hours affects sales and image.
Analytics and forms that lose visitor tracking.
A secure migration therefore requires strict planning and methodical execution, often led by a specialized team or partner rather than going it alone.
Complete audit and inventory before the migration
This audit is the foundation of any successful migration: current technical architecture (CMS, database, host, SSL certificates), a complete inventory of content and media, forms and their configurations, users and permissions. Also list every connected marketing tool (Search Console, Analytics, Tag Manager, lead capture) along with their credentials and owners.
Finally, draw up a list of the pages to redirect as a priority: those that receive organic traffic, those that generate sales, and those with the most external backlinks. A complete audit takes one to two weeks depending on the size of the site, time that saves weeks of fixes after migration.
Technical preparation and execution plan
For most SMBs and mid-market companies, a parallel migration (new site tested on a staging domain, DNS switched at launch) is safer than a gradual migration. A complete staging environment, an exact copy of the new site, lets you test content, forms and tools without touching the live site.
Prepare a precise mapping table (old URL to new URL) for each page: this is the basis for 301 redirects, the number one protection against loss of search rankings. Choose a midweek launch date (Tuesday to Thursday morning), with a two-to-four-hour window on active alert, and a documented escalation plan.
Content transfer and tool configuration
Export the content, convert it to the new CMS's format, then import it: articles, media, users and permissions. Once the content is transferred, reconfigure each external tool: a new property in Search Console with an up-to-date sitemap, verified Analytics tracking code, Tag Manager reconnected, forms tested all the way to the CRM, SSL certificate installed with no security warning.
Thorough testing and validation before launch
The testing phase separates a smooth migration from one that creates chaos. Six categories to cover before going live:
Pages, links, images, design.
Every old URL tested one by one.
PageSpeed, GTmetrix, Core Web Vitals.
Valid SSL, encrypted forms.
Conversion events tested live.
Screen reader, contrast, keyboard navigation.
Going live and post-migration monitoring
The DNS switch takes only a few minutes to a few hours. During the critical window, active monitoring every 15 to 30 minutes is essential, with a rollback plan ready to activate in case of a major issue.
Consolidation and post-migration lessons
After two to four weeks of stabilization, do a documented review. Keep the 301 redirects in place for at least six months, monitor Search Console monthly for three months, and document the new platform (extensions, connected tools, backup plan) to make future maintenance easier.
Common mistakes and how to avoid them
Every lost page takes its Google ranking with it.
Google takes weeks to discover the new content.
Creates duplicate content that confuses Google.
Impossible to create the right redirects after the fact.
Conversion tracking stops for days.
No safety net before switching the real site.
Impossible to revert if everything breaks.
When to call in a specialized partner
A site of more than 500 pages, significant organic traffic, a complete change of technology, or a lack of in-house migration expertise are all signals that a specialized partner is needed. An expert who handles this kind of operation several times a year has a process, a checklist and the experience to handle the unexpected quickly: the cost is often recouped within a week or two, just by avoiding a drop in SEO traffic.
A secure migration is part of our website design and redesign support: audit, redirects, testing and monitoring handled end to end.
Frequently asked questions
How long does a complete migration take?+
Generally plan four to six weeks, from audit to post-launch monitoring, depending on the size of the site.
Does a migration always reduce traffic?+
A slight temporary drop (5 to 15%) is normal while Google reindexes. With well-executed redirects, traffic stabilizes within two to four weeks.
Can you migrate without taking the current site down?+
Yes: a parallel migration, tested in staging then switched over in a few minutes via DNS, reduces downtime to almost nothing.