Free with every project

Your content. Your rankings.
Nothing gets lost.

Switching from Squarespace, Wix, or ShowIt doesn't mean starting over. I migrate your entire site — every page, every blog post, every image — and make sure Google doesn't skip a beat.

“But I have 50 blog posts
on Squarespace.”

I hear this all the time. You've spent years building up content, your site ranks for local keywords, clients find you through Google — and you're worried a redesign will throw all that away.

It won't. The only time a migration hurts SEO is when someone skips the redirects or deletes content. Both are entirely preventable.

Your blog posts, your rankings, your backlinks — they all come with you. The design changes. The content and SEO stay intact.

The process

How it works.

01

SEO Audit

Before I touch anything, I crawl your existing site and document everything — every URL, every page that ranks on Google, every blog post with traffic, all your backlinks. This tells me exactly what needs to be protected.

  • Full site crawl of every page and URL
  • Google Search Console data review
  • Identify which pages rank and drive traffic
  • Document all backlinks pointing to your site
  • Record every meta title, description, and tag
  • Benchmark current site speed and Core Web Vitals
02

Content Migration

I pull everything from your old site — pages, blog posts, portfolio images, testimonials, all of it. Nothing gets left behind. Everything is reformatted and optimized for the new site.

  • Export all page content and copy
  • Download and optimize every image
  • Migrate all blog posts with formatting intact
  • Transfer portfolio galleries
  • Carry over testimonials and client content
  • Preserve all alt text and image metadata
03

URL Mapping & Redirects

This is the step most people skip — and the reason most migrations kill SEO. I map every old URL to its new equivalent and set up 301 redirects. Google follows these and transfers your ranking authority to the new URLs.

  • Map every old URL to its new destination
  • Set up 301 redirects in the codebase
  • Keep URL slugs identical where possible
  • Handle edge cases (Wix hashbang URLs, Squarespace date-based paths)
  • Test every redirect before launch
  • No broken links, no 404s, no lost pages
04

Build & Launch

The new site goes live with all your content in place, all redirects active, and all SEO preserved. I submit your new sitemap to Google the same day so it starts recrawling immediately.

  • All content live on the new site
  • All redirects active from day one
  • New XML sitemap submitted to Google Search Console
  • DNS pointed to new hosting
  • SSL certificate configured
  • Final speed and SEO check before going live
05

Post-Launch Monitoring

I watch Google Search Console for 2-4 weeks after launch. If anything pops up — a crawl error, a missed redirect, an indexing issue — I fix it the same day. You don't have to think about it.

  • Daily Search Console monitoring for 2-4 weeks
  • Fix any crawl errors or 404s immediately
  • Track indexing of new pages
  • Monitor keyword rankings for any movement
  • Verify all redirects are working correctly
  • Final report once everything is stable

What to
expect.

A small dip is normal.

Google takes a few days to 2 weeks to recrawl and reindex your site after a migration. During that time, you might see a slight dip in rankings. This is completely normal and temporary — it recovers, usually to better rankings because the new site is faster and has stronger technical SEO.

Your traffic won't disappear.

301 redirects tell Google “this page moved here.” Google follows the redirect, sees the same content at the new URL, and transfers the ranking authority. Your visitors never see a broken page.

I monitor it so you don't have to.

For 2-4 weeks after launch, I'm watching Search Console daily. If a redirect breaks, if a page isn't indexing, if anything looks off — I fix it before it becomes a problem. You get a final report once everything is stable.

Ready to switch?

Migration is free with every project. Tell me what you're on and I'll tell you how the move works.