Your blog depends upon traffic for its success.
Anything that affects the traffic to your blog, such as any change in the URL, affects the success of your blog. Publishing the blog to a custom domain, like renaming the blog, will affect traffic to your blog. The effects of the change will vary from blog to blog, because of the different traffic to every different blog.
The differing combinations, of traffic sources, will make every custom domain migration unique.
Migration results are not predictable - but they can be improved.
You cannot predict what will happen to your blog, during the migration - but you can plan, and improve the experience.
Planning and executing the migration properly will help your blog recover faster, from traffic loss caused by the URL change.
The better you plan this simple process, the faster the traffic to your blog will pick up, after the URL change. And, that's all that you should want - to get from point 1 to point 2, faster.
A blog with a new URL is again unknown, by URL, to the search engines.
When your blog has a new URL, that URL is initially unknown to the search engines, and other web services. The search engines, and other external web services, index by URL.
You use the content and readers, and regain your search engine reputation. And you watch your statistics.
If your blog has its own search engine reputation, it gets indexed by the search engines, directly. As the BlogSpot URL of your blog is indexed, the "301 Moved Permanently" redirect, from the BlogSpot to custom domain URL, will contribute to reputation for the domain URL.
A blog with established readers has reputation - and a start to re indexing.
If your blog has readers who link their blog to yours, your blog gets indexed by the search engines, indirectly. As a readers blogs is indexed, and a link to your blog is found, the link to your blog is followed. Readers blogs that point to the BlogSpot URL, again using the "301 Moved Permanently" redirect, will similarly contribute to reputation for the domain URL.
Each of the various traffic sources - people (Followers / readers / subscribers), and robots (search engines and other automated services) - will contribute, in different ways, to the indexing of the domain URL.
First, learn how to prepare and support a custom domain.
Before you start, understand the right way to purchase and setup a custom domain. And understand the nature of, and need for, the 3 to 5 day Transition Period, which follows the purchase of a new domain, using "Buy a domain" - and should be observed with any new domain.
During the migration, you'll find:
Beware gratuitous scripts, which interfere with BlogSpot to domain redirection!
If your blog has gratuitous scripted redirection, installed to block country local domain redirection, you'll want to remove this code. Country local domain redirection blocking, followed by BlogSpot to domain redirection, will leave some readers (only some, not all) seeing
or similar advice, in their browser. Other readers may simply see the blog as offline, because of its new URL.
The transition period, and loss of reputation and traffic, can't be avoided.
You cannot avoid the new domain transition period, and reduced traffic level - you will have to endure it. In the end, if you manage the migration properly, you'll find that it was worth it.
With a new, properly setup non BlogSpot URL, more blog content, and the same reader population (forwarded from the BlogSpot URL), search engine reputation (and Page Rank) will pick up and should continue rising, beyond where it was before you started the migration.
Anything that affects the traffic to your blog, such as any change in the URL, affects the success of your blog. Publishing the blog to a custom domain, like renaming the blog, will affect traffic to your blog. The effects of the change will vary from blog to blog, because of the different traffic to every different blog.
- Followers. People who find your blog because of recommendations by other people.
- Search engines. Robotic processes which methodically surf your blog, and provide dynamic indexing to people who search for information.
- Subscribers. People who read your content from their newsfeed reader, such as the dashboard Reading List.
- Viewers. People who read your content from their browser.
The differing combinations, of traffic sources, will make every custom domain migration unique.
Migration results are not predictable - but they can be improved.
You cannot predict what will happen to your blog, during the migration - but you can plan, and improve the experience.
Planning and executing the migration properly will help your blog recover faster, from traffic loss caused by the URL change.
- You'll start with a new URL, which will be unknown by the search engines. Your blog won't get as much new reader traffic, until it's indexed, under the new, non BlogSpot URL.
- You'll end up with a better known blog, with a non BlogSpot URL - and more new reader traffic because of the new, non BlogSpot URL.
The better you plan this simple process, the faster the traffic to your blog will pick up, after the URL change. And, that's all that you should want - to get from point 1 to point 2, faster.
A blog with a new URL is again unknown, by URL, to the search engines.
When your blog has a new URL, that URL is initially unknown to the search engines, and other web services. The search engines, and other external web services, index by URL.
- With a new blog, you have no content, no readers, no search engine reputation, and no statistics.
- With a new URL, there is no indexed content, and no statistics.
- With a blog recently republished under a new URL, you have content and readers - but no search engine reputation, or statistics, under the new URL.
You use the content and readers, and regain your search engine reputation. And you watch your statistics.
If your blog has its own search engine reputation, it gets indexed by the search engines, directly. As the BlogSpot URL of your blog is indexed, the "301 Moved Permanently" redirect, from the BlogSpot to custom domain URL, will contribute to reputation for the domain URL.
A blog with established readers has reputation - and a start to re indexing.
If your blog has readers who link their blog to yours, your blog gets indexed by the search engines, indirectly. As a readers blogs is indexed, and a link to your blog is found, the link to your blog is followed. Readers blogs that point to the BlogSpot URL, again using the "301 Moved Permanently" redirect, will similarly contribute to reputation for the domain URL.
Each of the various traffic sources - people (Followers / readers / subscribers), and robots (search engines and other automated services) - will contribute, in different ways, to the indexing of the domain URL.
First, learn how to prepare and support a custom domain.
Before you start, understand the right way to purchase and setup a custom domain. And understand the nature of, and need for, the 3 to 5 day Transition Period, which follows the purchase of a new domain, using "Buy a domain" - and should be observed with any new domain.
During the migration, you'll find:
- You'll get better results from a properly setup domain. Always start, with a properly setup domain.
- You'll find the diagnostic utilities in Google Webmaster Tools to be essential, in helping you objectively observe and correct any problems.
- As search engines index your blog, they adjust their indexing to follow the rate that you publish. If you publish weekly, they will, at most, re index your blog weekly. The less often you publish, the less often the blog gets re indexed.
- The entire blog won't be re indexed at one time. You'll always have new posts, that have not been individually indexed.
- While re indexing of the blog is in progress, you'll have some posts indexed under the BlogSpot URL, and other posts indexed under the domain URL.
- As additional posts are indexed under the domain URL, those same posts will drop from indexing under the BlogSpot URL. If this were not so, you'd end up with "duplicate content" penalties. The purpose of the "301 Moved Permanently" redirect is to avoid this duplication, and penalties.
- With the indexing of the blog split between the two base URLs, the reputation overall will be lower. You get better reputation with all content indexed under one base URL - and this won't be the case until the migration is complete.
- With lower reputation, your posts will have poorer SERP position - some posts indexed under the old BlogSpot URL, others under the new domain URL - though all SERP entries will get your readers to the new domain.
- With poorer SERP position overall, you'll have a period of significantly less search originated traffic.
- The more often that you publish, during the migration, the more you'll compensate for the drop in reader traffic.
- As the blog is re indexed under the new URL, reputation - and Page Rank - will pick up again.
- You'll observe activity, in Webmaster Tools, for both the old and new URLs, for a while after the domain becomes active.
- Some tools, used under simple blog renames, are not used with custom domains. Specifically, custom domain publishing does not use the post feed redirect.
Beware gratuitous scripts, which interfere with BlogSpot to domain redirection!
If your blog has gratuitous scripted redirection, installed to block country local domain redirection, you'll want to remove this code. Country local domain redirection blocking, followed by BlogSpot to domain redirection, will leave some readers (only some, not all) seeing
Too many redirections!
or similar advice, in their browser. Other readers may simply see the blog as offline, because of its new URL.
The transition period, and loss of reputation and traffic, can't be avoided.
You cannot avoid the new domain transition period, and reduced traffic level - you will have to endure it. In the end, if you manage the migration properly, you'll find that it was worth it.
With a new, properly setup non BlogSpot URL, more blog content, and the same reader population (forwarded from the BlogSpot URL), search engine reputation (and Page Rank) will pick up and should continue rising, beyond where it was before you started the migration.
Comments
A bit of both, I should think. It's only half done, anyway, so stay tuned.
Once again thank you for responding to my anxieties on Blogger Help Forum.
I recognize that Search Engines gather URL information from Sidecar Bloglists and embedded links specific to individual posts which contributes to indexing. I still, however, do not grasp how this factors in to embedded search on a homepage; in short, why is it that a specific search would yield (internal) results prior to a migration, but fail to function on an even rudimentary basis after the process ?
Is there any manual step which might be made to point the engine to - and incrementally register - previously published and seemingly 'lost' content ? Or is the process entirely outwith administrator control ?
Like many bloggers, my interest is primarily in the published content; its accessibility to readers. My archives are still accessible on the sidecar, albeit by chronological 'trawling' only.
I still cannot quite fathom while the embedded search yields no results, while a Google search from an an external browser continues to return post specific material.
Let's say that there are 100 posts in the blog.
1. What's in each post is in 1 post each, and is different in each post.
2. What's in the sidebar is published, with each of the 100 posts, as part of the page containing each post. So what's in the sidebar is 100 times more common, and will be indexed more rapidly.
So if this makes you think, why not post in Blogger Help Forum: How Do I?, so we can discuss this in detail?
I have a lot to learn. CSEs and indexing not withstanding, I have issues too in the switch from Blogger's old editor to its 'new' one. Another can of worms.
I switched to custom domain using your A and CNAME instructions. My domain is from Godaddy.
I waited a few days before writing this but now both my old blogspot address and the new custom url shows up in the search results (same identical posts are displayed from both urls!!)
What to do for this, do you have any suggestions? Thanks in advance.
My custom domain is www.emlakgurmesi.com
My redirected blogspot address is cdsyapi.blogspot.com
Here I yet again suggest that you ask this in a question in Blogger Help Forum: Something Is Broken, so we may diagnose the problem, interactively.
Need your advice,
During domain migration from blogspot to custom domain, should i continue to post or wait until the migration completed? I'm planning to migrate my blogspot domain which is currently have 1.7k total post and 30k uv daily. I know there will be a drop of traffic but is this needed to migrate to custom domain?
You're starting a new URL, which has no reputation, a page rank of 0.0000, and no residual traffic. With the reputation in the old BlogSpot URL, and resulting traffic directed to the new URL, the reputation for the new URL will build up faster than with a new blog that is completely unknown. But you will see a drop in traffic - and yes, this is needed.
The more that you post during migration, the faster the blog will recover. Post heavier.
Bubaqulishus.com
i have recently made the switch to a .com from a blogger, waited the 3 days, got the in transition message, and now that the 3 days are over, i am now getting a 404 not found error message. what do i do now? also do you have tips or a step by step tips of things to do once the .com website is working? obviously i need all blogs that have my site on their blog list to update? but are there any other tips?
Thanks
He
Whenever you change the URL of the blog - whether you publish to a different BlogSpot URL, or publish to a non BlogSpot URL, you have to make a new GWT entry. Many external services will require similar changes.
do you have articles which explain complete process from buying a custom domain from godaddy and then doing all the dns settings and other settings.
And do i need to change the url in webmaster tools,feedburner and other please give links so that i can get the idea
I'll suggest that you plan the setup process properly.
Predicting how long the reindexing will take, for any given blog, is impossible to predict. What we can predict though is that it will take longer, if you don't aggressively manage the reindexing.
Yesterday I registered a custom domain name for my blog http://google-n-i-share-a-birthday.blogspot.com. My new domain name is http://www.vidyasury.com. I got this via the easy-peasy wizard in Blogger. It seems thats all there is to it after I've paid the $10. So I also created a custom email under the new domain. Then I thought I'd get an information overload on the forums.
My burning question is this: Will I continue to own http://google-n-i-share-a-birthday.blogspot.com ? Or will it become available for someone else to register? I want to keep it. So what do I do?
I had a very reputed blog www.currentvacancy.blogspot.com since 2007 in lat april 11 i changed my blogspot to custom domain www.naukriblog.com after changin i got allmost doubled traffic for 2-3 days but after that my traffic gradually started to decrease and after a week i lost my all traffics and search reputations, only i am getting my feed traffics, when i submitted for reconsideration to google i got reply that some or more pages of my site is violating google webmst guidlines, then i have deleted my all the pages and post some news pages and submitted for reconsideration but got the same anwered, now what to do, my site is getting indexed but not getting search reputation some posts are indexed some are not, i am confused please help me to sort out my problem please thanks your sir
You have a problem with your DNS addresses, to start. We really should discuss this, after you start a discussion in Blogger Help Forum: Something Is Broken.
and 1 thing more i am using webmaster tools and analystics ,
and i am going to add my url in webmasters and, analystics and feed burner is this is a right way or i have to stay with my old url webmaster tools and analytics data??
please reply me soon i am waiting
Thanks for following up to my question last night in the blogger forum (drays1998). After reading this post, I have noticed that my traffic is slowly (very slowly) making it's way back up. You've got a ton of great advice throughout your blog. I'm glad to be a new follower.
Original URL with link juice http://www.tweet2eat.co.nz/2011/04/opera-kitchen-cafe-hastings.html
Desired URL for SEO http://www.tweet2eat.co.nz/2011/04/hastings-cafe-opera-kitchen.html
Crappy Blogger Generated URL:
http://www.tweet2eat.co.nz/2011/04/hastings-cafe-opera-kitchen_2397.html
How do I make the above Crappy Blogger Generated URL back to the original URL ?
Any help greatly appreciated!
Ryan
If you want the original URL back, you're going to have to recover the deleted post - and update from there.
Never delete a post, to simply clear the content, hoping to publish the same URL - you cannot re publish to the same URL.
http://blogging.nitecruzr.net/2012/01/retrieving-postid-to-recover-deleted.html
http://blogging.nitecruzr.net/2006/09/duplicate-post-be-careful.html
~Dale
www.savvyspice.com
thanks very much. very confusing and any answer would be very much appreciated.
ruth.
www.yeshivathamekubalim.org
Thanks
Thank you!
I have quoted you in my Post-
http://www.anitaexplorer.com/2014/09/blogspot-to-own-domain-name.html
Do let me know what you feel :)
I see that you started a topic in the forum, 3 days ago. I answered you, too.
Here I once again strongly suggest that you post in Blogger Help Forum: Get Help with an Issue, so we can diagnose your problem.
Thanks for the question. Pictures are a very intense subject. You will find out, when you follow my suggestion - which is that you start a discussion in Blogger Help Forum: Get Help with an Issue, so your problem can be properly diagnosed.
I'll look forward to seeing your question, there.
Thanks for the question. Pictures are a very intense subject. You will find out, when you follow my suggestion - which is that you start a discussion in Blogger Help Forum: Get Help with an Issue, so your problem can be properly diagnosed.
I'll look forward to seeing your question, there.
Thanks for your thoughts!
Moving a Blogger blog to a custom domain is not a turn key project - there will always be decisions to be made. You should only move, if you believe that the advantages outweigh the disadvantages.
That said, your domain is not properly setup - and bogus DNS addressing will also damage domain performance. If you want to explore the problem, you can post in Blogger Help Forum: Get Help with an Issue - and ask for advice there.
http://blogging.nitecruzr.net/2015/06/setting-up-dns-addresses-for-custom.html