Learn what to check after a site migration to protect rankings, traffic, and AI visibility. Avoid common SEO mistakes with this post-launch checklist.
Learn what to check after a site migration to protect rankings, traffic, and AI visibility. Avoid common SEO mistakes with this post-launch checklist.
After a site migration, you should immediately verify:
A site migration is supposed to be a step forward — a better design, a faster experience, a stronger foundation for growth.
But in SEO, migrations are also where things quietly break.
Traffic drops don’t always happen because of a “bad site.” They happen because small details, like redirects, internal links, and structured data, get lost in the transition. And when that happens, search engines and AI systems lose confidence in how your site is structured and what it represents.
The good news is most post-migration issues are preventable — or at least fixable — if you know what to look for.
Search engines don’t view your new site as a clean slate. They try to connect it to everything that existed before — your URLs, your content, your authority, your internal structure.
When those connections break, even slightly, you can start to see:
And with so much AI-driven search, this is more important than ever.
AI-driven search experiences rely heavily on clean site structure, consistent entities, and clear content relationships. If your migration disrupts those signals, your content becomes harder to interpret and easier to ignore.
If there’s one place migrations fail most often, it’s redirects.
Every URL on your old site carries value, whether that’s rankings, backlinks, or history. Redirects are what transfer that value to your new site. When they’re incomplete or incorrect, that equity doesn’t follow.
The biggest issues tend to be:
When this happens, search engines get confused and often treat your new pages as entirely new content with no history. That’s how rankings disappear overnight.
Validate This:
Ensure you have a redirect mapping document to keep as a record and governance tool. Make sure every redirect in your mapping document is accounted for in your new CMS environment.
It sounds obvious, but it happens all the time: a site launches with something unintentionally blocking search engines.
Sometimes it’s a leftover “noindex” tag from staging. Other times it’s a robots.txt rule that was meant to protect a dev environment but made it into production.
When that happens, your pages stop competing entirely.
Even subtle issues can cause problems, like incorrect canonical tags pointing to old URLs or duplicate versions of pages competing with each other.
Search engines lose clarity, and your visibility drops.
Validate this:
Test the site with a site crawling tool to ensure that all indexable pages are being discovered and returning a 200 status code and that you aren’t getting errors, such as: “Blocked by robots.txt” or “403 Forbidden.”
Internal links rarely get attention during a migration — but they should.
They’re how search engines understand your site’s structure:
If your internal links still point to old URLs (even if they redirect), you’re creating unnecessary friction. You’re also weakening the signals that help search engines and AI systems understand your content hierarchy.
This is one of the most common “invisible” issues that slows down recovery after a migration.
Validate this:
Use a site crawler to scan your site for 301 status codes. Identify URLs within a page’s content that can be updated to the final URL destination to remove unnecessary redirects.
Structured data often gets dropped or broken during migrations, especially when moving between platforms.
That’s a bigger problem than it used to be.
Schema helps search engines (and now AI systems) understand:
Without it, your site becomes less eligible for:
Losing your structured data can impact your visibility across new search experiences.
Validate this:
Use a site crawler to search each page for missing structured data. Alternatively, validate schema on pages from each page template type on your site using Schema’s Markup Validator and Google’s Rich Results testing tool.
New sites often introduce new problems that affect pagespeed performance:
Even if everything else is technically correct, speed and performance drops can impact rankings and user behavior.
Search engines factor this in. So do users. If your new site is slower than your old one, you may see:
All of these factors can contribute to post-migration losses.
Validate this:
Track and record pagespeed and Core Web Vitals on the different page types across your site pre-migration. Run those same or similar page types again post-migration and compare the scores to find which pages increased or decreased in speed performance.
One of the most overlooked parts of a migration is analytics. Tracking breaks more often than most teams realize — especially when tag managers, event tracking, or form tracking are involved.
If your data isn’t accurate:
Before analyzing anything post-launch, make sure your tracking is working exactly as expected.
Validate this:
Ensure your tracking scripts are firing correctly on your site before migrating (Google Tag Manager, Meta Pixel, third party scripts, etc.). Create a governance document that records your tracking scripts, the events they fire, what triggers the events, and what data you are trying to capture within that event. Use your governance document as a checklist post-migration to ensure all tags, triggers, and scripts are firing as expected.
Even with a clean migration, some fluctuation is normal. But there’s a difference between normal volatility and real problems.
After your migration, keep a close eye on:
If you see sharp or sustained drops, it’s usually tied back to one of the issues above. The sooner you catch it, the easier it is to fix.
A migration isn’t just a technical update — it’s a transition of your entire SEO footprint. When done correctly, search engines and AI systems understand that your content, authority, and relevance have simply moved.
When done poorly, that continuity breaks.
And once that happens, recovery isn’t immediate — it can take months to rebuild trust and visibility.
A migration shouldn’t derail your organic performance. GPO can support every phase — from technical audits to content preservation, redirect mapping, metadata reviews, and internal link reconstruction.
If you want expert help protecting your rankings and keeping your site eligible for AI-powered visibility, connect with us.
Learn what to check after a site migration to protect rankings, traffic, and AI visibility. Avoid common SEO mistakes with this post-launch checklist.
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