Technical SEO Services

Website Migration SEO That Protects Visibility Through Complex Change

Rudrriv helps founders, SEO leaders, ecommerce teams, technology departments and agencies plan and control website migrations. We combine baselines, URL mapping, redirect validation, technical requirements, staging QA and post-launch monitoring to reduce avoidable search disruption during redesigns, replatforming, domain moves and site consolidation.

4.9 out of 5 from 6,284 reviews
  • Priority URLs tied to traffic and conversion baselines
  • Redirect, crawl and indexation controls
  • Project, embedded and managed support models
  • Documented risks, sign-offs and monitoring
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SEO migration workspaceMigration Control Centre
Illustrative
01InventoryURLs · traffic · links
02MapRedirects · canonicals · links
03ValidateStaging · rendering · schema
04MonitorIndexation · traffic · fixes

Launch controls

Priority URL setBaseline approved
Redirect logicDestination verified
IndexationCrawl signals checked
Issue governanceOwners and severity
Risk lensOrganic continuity
Validation cadencePre and post launch
Support modelProject or embedded
Direct answer

What Do Technical SEO Services Include?

Website migration SEO is the structured work used to preserve crawlability, indexation, relevance, authority signals and measurement when a site changes domain, platform, design, URL structure, content architecture or rendering technology. Rudrriv combines discovery, baselines, URL inventory, redirect mapping, technical requirements, staging QA, launch validation and post-launch monitoring. The service supports startups, ecommerce operations, agencies and enterprise teams. Results depend on early involvement, representative staging, implementation quality, search-engine processing and timely remediation.

Service plan

Technical SEO Services We Offer

The scope is designed around the migration risk you need to control: valuable URL preservation, clean redirects, crawlable templates, consistent metadata, reliable analytics, launch readiness and measurable post-launch recovery.

Audit and migration planning

Establish the baseline, inventory URLs, classify risk, define requirements and align stakeholders before implementation decisions become difficult to change.

Core outputs: baseline, risk register, priority URL matrix and migration plan.

Mapping and technical QA

Design redirect mappings, review architecture, validate templates, compare content and test crawl, indexation, rendering and tracking signals.

Core outputs: redirect map, technical requirements, staging QA and launch checklist.

Launch and recovery support

Validate production, monitor indexation and performance, triage defects and coordinate remediation through an agreed support model.

Core outputs: launch report, monitoring dashboard, issue backlog and handover.

Have a migration, redirect or indexation question?

Share your migration type, platform, site size, launch stage and known risks with Rudrriv.

Contact Rudrriv
Business value

Key Value Propositions

01

Preserved search equity

Map valuable legacy URLs to the most relevant new destinations and validate redirect behaviour before launch.

Business outcome: Lower risk of avoidable ranking and traffic loss
02

Controlled technical change

Coordinate crawlability, canonicals, robots directives, sitemaps, internal links and rendering requirements.

Business outcome: More reliable discovery and indexation
03

Clear launch governance

Define owners, checkpoints, issue severity, rollback criteria and sign-off responsibilities across SEO and development.

Business outcome: Fewer preventable launch defects
04

Indexation continuity

Protect analytics, search console verification, event tracking, dashboards and pre-migration baselines.

Business outcome: Faster diagnosis after launch
05

Prioritised remediation

Separate critical migration blockers from lower-priority improvements so teams can act under launch pressure.

Business outcome: Better use of limited delivery capacity
06

Flexible specialist support

Use a fixed migration project, embedded SEO specialist, managed service or extended technical team.

Business outcome: Support aligned with project complexity
Common challenges

Problems This Service Solves

Website migrations combine content, technical, analytics and governance risk. These common problems can interrupt discovery, weaken relevance signals, break user journeys and make post-launch diagnosis harder.

The problem

Legacy URLs are changed without a complete redirect map

Business impact

High-value pages can return errors, redirect to irrelevant destinations or disappear from search results.

How Rudrriv helps

Rudrriv inventories indexable and traffic-driving URLs, defines mapping rules and validates redirect status, chains, loops and destination relevance.

The problem

SEO is involved too late in the migration

Business impact

Templates, navigation, content, JavaScript and platform decisions may be difficult or expensive to correct near launch.

How Rudrriv helps

We join discovery and requirements early, document SEO acceptance criteria and review designs, templates and staging builds.

The problem

The new site blocks crawling or sends conflicting signals

Business impact

Robots directives, canonicals, noindex tags, rendering issues or sitemap errors can slow recovery and reduce index coverage.

How Rudrriv helps

We test crawl access, directives, canonicals, status codes, structured data, rendering and sitemap consistency before and after release.

The problem

Content and internal links lose important context

Business impact

Removed copy, weaker headings, orphaned pages and changed anchor text can reduce relevance and authority flow.

How Rudrriv helps

Rudrriv compares content, metadata, internal linking and page purpose between legacy and replacement URLs.

The problem

Analytics and search reporting break at launch

Business impact

Teams cannot distinguish migration effects from tracking defects, seasonality or unrelated marketing changes.

How Rudrriv helps

We establish baselines, preserve tracking requirements and create a monitoring plan across analytics, Search Console and crawl data.

The problem

Several teams work without one migration control plan

Business impact

SEO, engineering, content, product and vendors may apply inconsistent decisions or miss dependencies.

How Rudrriv helps

We provide a shared issue register, ownership model, launch checklist, escalation path and post-launch review cadence.

Need an independent migration risk review?

Rudrriv can scope a pre-migration audit, embedded delivery support or post-launch recovery review.

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Suitability

Who the Service Is For

The service can support different website sizes, industries, platforms and migration stages, but it works best when SEO is involved early and accountable teams can provide data, staging access and implementation capacity.

Good fit

  • Startups redesigning or replacing an early website platform
  • SMBs changing CMS, navigation or domain structure
  • Ecommerce teams replatforming products and categories
  • B2B organisations consolidating service and resource content
  • Enterprise teams merging domains, regions or business units
  • Agencies seeking white-label migration SEO support
  • Teams needing independent launch QA and recovery monitoring

May not be the right fit

  • No URLs, content, rendering or indexation signals will change
  • You require a guarantee of unchanged rankings or traffic
  • No team can provide access, approve mappings or implement fixes
  • The primary need is a permanent technical owner or platform engineer
  • The project only needs hosting, design or software procurement
  • The site is already decommissioned and no usable legacy data exists
  • You need automated tooling only, without expert review or governance
Applications

Practical Use Cases

Ecommerce platform replatforming

Business situation: A retailer is moving product, category and editorial pages to a new ecommerce platform.

Recommended scope: URL inventory, template review, faceted-navigation controls, redirect mapping, schema checks and launch monitoring.

Typical deliverablesMigration specification, redirect file, QA log, launch checklist and KPI dashboard.
Engagement modelFixed-scope project with post-launch managed monitoring.
Relevant KPIsOrganic sessions, indexed product and category pages, crawl errors, revenue from organic search and redirect validity.

Corporate redesign with information-architecture change

Business situation: A B2B company is consolidating sections, changing navigation and rewriting priority service pages.

Recommended scope: Content equivalence review, internal-link mapping, metadata preservation, redirect design and staging crawl.

Typical deliverablesPriority URL matrix, on-page requirements, crawl comparison and release sign-off report.
Engagement modelEmbedded SEO specialist or time-and-materials support.
Relevant KPIsVisibility for priority topics, landing-page traffic, index coverage and lead conversion continuity.

Domain merger or acquisition

Business situation: An enterprise needs to consolidate multiple acquired domains into one governed web estate.

Recommended scope: Domain and backlink assessment, destination architecture, redirect waves, canonical strategy and cross-property verification.

Typical deliverablesConsolidation plan, domain mapping, risk register, monitoring schedule and executive reporting.
Engagement modelProgramme-based project or dedicated migration team.
Relevant KPIsTransferred visibility, referring-domain continuity, branded demand, indexed URLs and unresolved legacy errors.

CMS move with headless or JavaScript rendering

Business situation: A technology team is replacing a traditional CMS with a modern front-end architecture.

Recommended scope: Rendering review, metadata delivery, internal-link testing, sitemap generation, performance checks and log-based validation.

Typical deliverablesTechnical acceptance criteria, test cases, crawl results and remediation backlog.
Engagement modelStaff augmentation or dedicated technical SEO support.
Relevant KPIsRendered-content parity, crawl efficiency, Core Web Vitals, indexation and defect closure.
Scope

Website Migration SEO Capabilities

Migration discovery and risk assessment

Business objectives, migration type, critical journeys, search performance, technical dependencies and launch constraints.

Activities
Stakeholder workshops, analytics and Search Console review, crawl analysis, backlink sampling, template inventory and risk scoring.
Typical inputs
Legacy site access, analytics, Search Console, platform documentation, proposed architecture and launch governance.
Deliverables
Baseline report, risk register, priority URL set, evidence request and SEO migration plan.
Technology
Crawlers, analytics, search-console platforms, backlink tools, log analysis and collaboration systems.
Business value
Identifies where migration errors would have the greatest commercial or search impact.
Dependencies
Accuracy depends on complete access, representative data and visibility into planned technical changes.

URL mapping, redirects and information architecture

Legacy-to-new URL mapping, redirect logic, page consolidation, navigation, internal links and canonical destinations.

Activities
URL classification, one-to-one and many-to-one mapping, redirect rule design, chain and loop testing, orphan-page review and link updates.
Typical inputs
Legacy crawl, proposed URL list, content decisions, product taxonomy and server or platform constraints.
Deliverables
Redirect map, mapping rules, exception list, internal-link requirements and validation report.
Technology
Spreadsheet or database mapping, server configuration, CMS routing, edge rules and automated testing scripts.
Business value
Helps transfer users and search signals to relevant working destinations.
Dependencies
Final destinations, content ownership and implementation method must be stable enough for testing.

Technical SEO and staging quality assurance

Status codes, robots controls, canonicals, metadata, structured data, rendering, sitemaps, hreflang, performance and mobile behaviour.

Activities
Staging crawls, template sampling, rendered-page checks, source-code review, schema validation, accessibility-aware checks and defect triage.
Typical inputs
Staging access, authentication method, build notes, templates, release candidates and issue tracker.
Deliverables
Technical QA report, severity-ranked defect backlog, acceptance status and release recommendations.
Technology
Site crawlers, browser developer tools, Lighthouse, schema validators, testing environments and issue-management tools.
Business value
Finds migration defects while they are still easier to correct.
Dependencies
Staging must represent production behaviour and permit appropriate crawling or test access.

Launch monitoring and recovery support

Production validation, indexation, crawl behaviour, traffic, rankings, conversions, server responses and remediation governance.

Activities
Launch-day checks, redirect sampling, crawl comparison, Search Console monitoring, log review, dashboard analysis and issue escalation.
Typical inputs
Production access, baselines, deployment notes, analytics, Search Console and engineering availability.
Deliverables
Launch report, incident log, prioritised remediation plan, KPI updates and handover documentation.
Technology
Analytics, Search Console, rank tracking, crawlers, log platforms, BI dashboards and alerting tools.
Business value
Supports faster diagnosis and correction when search behaviour differs from expectations.
Dependencies
Recovery speed depends on issue severity, implementation capacity, crawl demand and search-engine processing.
Outputs

Deliverables We Offer

Deliverables are selected according to the scope and buyer decision. The table shows common outputs rather than a mandatory package.

Typical website migration SEO deliverables
DeliverableWhat it includesFormatDelivery stageClient input required
Migration discovery briefObjectives, migration type, stakeholders, dependencies, risks and success criteriaWorkshop summary and scope documentInventoryyProject plan, owners and intended launch approach
SEO baselineOrganic traffic, rankings, conversions, index coverage, crawl profile and priority landing pagesBaseline report and dashboardAssessmentAnalytics, Search Console and reporting access
URL inventory and priority matrixLegacy URLs classified by traffic, links, indexation, conversions, template and business valueSpreadsheet or databaseAuditCrawl access, sitemaps, exports and business priorities
Redirect mapping specificationSource URLs, target URLs, redirect type, mapping rationale, exceptions and implementation notesValidated mapping fileDesign and implementationApproved destination URLs and platform constraints
Technical SEO requirementsCrawl, indexation, canonical, metadata, schema, sitemap, rendering, performance and international requirementsAcceptance-criteria documentRequirementsArchitecture, templates and technical owners
Staging QA reportCrawl findings, template checks, content parity, internal links, status codes and severity-ranked defectsIssue log and sign-off reportPre-launch QARepresentative staging environment and access
Launch checklistPre-launch, launch-day and rollback checks with owners and evidence fieldsOperational checklistLaunch readinessRelease plan, responsible teams and escalation routes
Post-launch monitoring reportRedirect validation, crawl comparison, indexation, visibility, traffic, conversions and critical defectsDashboard and written reviewPost-launchProduction data and timely remediation access
Handover and trainingProcesses, monitoring routines, issue ownership and future migration guidanceDocumentation and sessionsHandoverRelevant team attendance and named owners
Ongoing recovery supportIssue triage, technical recommendations, stakeholder reporting and optimisation backlogManaged-service reportingOngoing supportEngineering capacity, data access and agreed cadence

Need a migration deliverable tailored to your release plan?

Rudrriv can define a focused scope around your URLs, platforms, teams and launch risks.

Request a Consultation
Delivery method

Our Website Migration SEO Delivery Process

Each stage connects business priorities, legacy evidence, architecture, redirects, content, templates, analytics and release governance. The sequence can align with development sprints, but critical requirements and quality controls should be resolved before launch.

01

Inventoryy and migration alignment

Objective: Confirm the migration type, commercial priorities, scope and governance.

Main output: Scope, risk register, stakeholder map and SEO work plan.

Stage responsibilities and controls

Rudrriv: Facilitate discovery, define evidence needs and identify high-risk assumptions.

Client: Provide project plans, stakeholders, platform decisions and business priorities.

Inputs: Roadmap, architecture, release model, analytics and current site information.

Review: Alignment review with SEO, product, technology and business owners.

Quality control: Documented assumptions, dependencies and decision rights.

Timing factors: Depends on project maturity and stakeholder availability.

02

Baseline and legacy-site audit

Objective: Establish what must be protected, improved or intentionally retired.

Main output: Baseline, URL inventory, risk findings and priority matrix.

Stage responsibilities and controls

Rudrriv: Crawl the site, review search data, classify templates and identify priority URLs.

Client: Provide data access, exports and known business-critical journeys.

Inputs: Analytics, Search Console, sitemaps, backlinks, logs and CMS exports.

Review: Validation with content, product and commercial teams.

Quality control: Cross-check multiple data sources and record known gaps.

Timing factors: Varies with site size, data quality and access.

03

Architecture and redirect design

Objective: Define where legacy pages, signals and user journeys should move.

Main output: Redirect map, architecture recommendations and exception register.

Stage responsibilities and controls

Rudrriv: Map URLs, review hierarchy, identify consolidation rules and specify redirects.

Client: Confirm destination ownership, content decisions and platform constraints.

Inputs: Legacy inventory, proposed URLs, taxonomy and page-retirement decisions.

Review: Joint review before implementation is locked.

Quality control: Relevance checks, duplicate detection and chain prevention.

Timing factors: Affected by URL volume and unresolved content decisions.

04

Technical requirements and build support

Objective: Embed SEO requirements into templates, routing and release work.

Main output: Requirements, annotated issues and implementation guidance.

Stage responsibilities and controls

Rudrriv: Specify acceptance criteria and answer implementation questions.

Client: Build features, expose test environments and manage technical decisions.

Inputs: Designs, templates, platform documentation and development builds.

Review: Regular checkpoints with engineering and product owners.

Quality control: Trace requirements to test cases and named owners.

Timing factors: Depends on sprint cadence and platform complexity.

05

Content and on-page parity review

Objective: Protect topic relevance, metadata and internal-link context.

Main output: Parity findings, content actions and metadata requirements.

Stage responsibilities and controls

Rudrriv: Compare priority pages, templates, headings, metadata and internal links.

Client: Provide final content, approvals and rationale for removals or consolidation.

Inputs: Legacy pages, new content, brand rules and keyword or audience priorities.

Review: Content and legal review where required.

Quality control: Priority-page sampling and approved exception tracking.

Timing factors: Affected by content volume and approval cycles.

06

Staging crawl and release QA

Objective: Identify critical defects before production launch.

Main output: Severity-ranked QA log and launch-readiness status.

Stage responsibilities and controls

Rudrriv: Crawl staging, test rendering, validate directives, redirects and templates.

Client: Provide representative builds, fixes and release-candidate details.

Inputs: Staging site, redirect implementation, sitemaps and test credentials.

Review: Go-live review with unresolved-risk acceptance.

Quality control: Repeatable tests, evidence capture and regression checks.

Timing factors: Depends on build stability and remediation capacity.

07

Launch validation

Objective: Confirm production behaves as approved and escalate critical failures.

Main output: Launch report, incident register and immediate actions.

Stage responsibilities and controls

Rudrriv: Run priority checks, compare crawls and monitor key systems.

Client: Deploy, maintain engineering coverage and authorise fixes or rollback.

Inputs: Production release, launch checklist, baselines and monitoring access.

Review: Launch-day and early-life checkpoints.

Quality control: Evidence-based pass, fail and risk statuses.

Timing factors: Follows the agreed release window and operational coverage.

08

Post-launch monitoring and optimisation

Objective: Track search-engine processing, business impact and remediation progress.

Main output: Performance reviews, remediation backlog and handover.

Stage responsibilities and controls

Rudrriv: Monitor indexation, crawl errors, traffic, rankings and conversions.

Client: Implement fixes, explain unrelated changes and approve priorities.

Inputs: Search, analytics, crawl, log and commercial data.

Review: Cadence based on risk, data volume and launch behaviour.

Quality control: Separate observed data, interpretation and recommended action.

Timing factors: Meaningful recovery signals vary by site size and crawl demand.

Technology ecosystem

Technology and Platforms We Use

Platform choices should follow the strategy, data requirements, team capability, integration environment and total operating cost. Specific expertise should be confirmed during scoping.

Search and webmaster data

Supports baseline analysis, index coverage review, search-query evidence and post-launch monitoring.

Google Search ConsoleBing Webmaster ToolsGA4Adobe AnalyticsSearch Console API
Selection considers data availability, site scale, permissions, retention, API limits and reporting requirements.

Analytics and data

Supports event tracking, reporting, dashboarding, diagnosis and decision routines.

Screaming FrogTag ManagerSchema validatorsBrowser developer toolsCRM data
Implementation depends on data definitions, consent, access, integrations and governance.

Platforms and infrastructure

Supports lead management, segmentation, nurture, lifecycle communication and handoffs.

WordPressShopifyDrupalMarketing automationZapier
Selection considers process maturity, record quality, permissions and ownership.

Web and ecommerce

Supports content publishing, conversion journeys, product discovery and transaction experiences.

WordPressShopifyWooCommerceWebflowCMS platforms
Recommendations account for performance, SEO, content workflow, integrations and maintainability.

Planning and collaboration

Supports briefs, calendars, responsibilities, approvals, knowledge and delivery visibility.

AsanaJiraTrelloNotionMicrosoft 365
The tool should fit the operating model rather than add unnecessary process overhead.

Content and creative workflow

Supports asset planning, design coordination, version control and publication readiness.

FigmaAdobe toolsCanvaDAM systemsEditorial tools
Brand governance, licensing, accessibility and approval requirements remain important selection criteria.

Reviewing your marketing technology stack?

Rudrriv can connect platform decisions to strategy, workflows and measurement needs.

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Ways to work

Engagement Models

A fixed project suits a defined migration with stable scope. Time-and-materials, embedded specialists and dedicated teams suit evolving builds, complex programmes and post-launch remediation.

Comparison of website migration SEO engagement models
ModelBest forClient involvementFlexibilityBilling approachMain advantageMain limitation
Fixed-scope migration projectDefined redesign, replatform or domain moveWorkshops, approvals and technical accessMediumMilestone or project feeClear deliverables and launch checkpointsLess suitable when architecture changes continuously
Time-and-materials supportComplex migrations with evolving requirementsFrequent prioritisation with project leadsHighAgreed rates and actual effortAdapts as technical evidence changesFinal cost varies with effort and rework
Monthly managed monitoringPost-launch recovery, remediation and reportingRegular decisions and engineering coordinationHighMonthly retainer based on scopeContinuity after launchRequires clear support boundaries and access
Dedicated SEO specialistAn internal team needing embedded migration expertiseHigh day-to-day integrationHighMonthly capacity allocationDirect collaboration with product and engineeringDepends on internal governance and delivery capacity
Dedicated migration teamLarge, multi-domain or multi-market programmesShared programme governanceHighTeam-based monthly pricingCoordinated technical, content and analytics capacityNeeds disciplined programme management
White-label migration supportAgencies delivering client redesigns or buildsAgency manages end-client relationshipMedium to highProject, capacity or retainer basisAdds specialist SEO delivery without permanent hiringRoles, confidentiality and approvals must be explicit
Illustrative examples

How the Service Can Be Applied

Example 01

Multi-region domain consolidation

Situation: Several regional domains are moving into one governed corporate platform.

Scope: Domain inventory, destination architecture, redirect waves, hreflang review, verification and monitoring.

Model: Programme project with a dedicated migration team.

Measurement: Indexed destinations, transferred visibility, redirect validity and unresolved regional exceptions.

Example 02

Ecommerce replatforming

Situation: A retailer is moving products, categories and editorial content to a new commerce platform.

Scope: Faceted-navigation controls, URL mapping, template QA, schema validation and launch monitoring.

Model: Fixed project with post-launch managed support.

Measurement: Organic revenue, indexed category pages, crawl errors, page performance and redirect success.

Example 03

Agency white-label migration support

Situation: An agency is delivering a redesign but needs independent migration SEO capacity.

Scope: Legacy audit, technical acceptance criteria, redirect review, staging crawl and launch validation.

Model: White-label project or allocated specialist capacity.

Measurement: Defect closure, redirect validity, launch readiness and client-approved handover.

Measurement

Expected Migration Outcomes and KPIs

Business outcomes

Better continuity of organic demand, priority landing-page traffic and conversion journeys through the migration.

Customer outcomes

Working legacy links, relevant redirects, preserved journeys and fewer dead ends for users arriving from search or external references.

Operational outcomes

Clearer ownership, launch checkpoints, issue severity, evidence capture and faster remediation decisions.

Technical outcomes

Cleaner crawl signals, indexable templates, validated redirects, consistent canonicals, reliable sitemaps and better performance.

Financial outcomes

Reduced avoidable rework and clearer visibility into migration defects, implementation priorities and recovery costs.

Learning outcomes

A reusable migration checklist, evidence baseline, defect history and documented standards for future releases.

Example KPI framework for website migration SEO
KPIWhat it measuresBaseline requiredReporting frequencyImportant limitation
Organic sessions to migrated pagesChange in search visits to legacy-equivalent landing pagesYes: pre-launch page-level baselineDaily initially, then weekly or monthlySeasonality, demand and tracking changes affect comparisons
Priority keyword visibilityRanking and visibility movement for agreed topics and pagesYes: representative tracked setWeekly or monthlyRankings fluctuate and do not measure all search demand
Index coverageImportant new URLs indexed and legacy URLs removed or redirected as intendedYes: expected URL setWeeklySearch engines control crawl and processing speed
Redirect validityShare of mapped legacy URLs returning the intended direct redirect and destinationYes: approved redirect mapAt launch and during remediationSampling can miss URLs outside the inventory
Crawl errors and blocked URLsErrors, loops, chains, inaccessible resources and unintended directivesYes: pre-launch and staging crawlDaily initially, then weeklyCrawler configuration and authentication affect findings
Organic conversions or revenueLeads, transactions or other outcomes attributed to organic landing sessionsYes: validated analytics and definitionsDaily, weekly or monthlyAttribution, consent and business changes limit interpretation
Core Web Vitals and performanceUser-experience performance across priority templatesHelpful: legacy and staging measurementsWeekly or by releaseField data needs sufficient traffic and updates slowly
Migration defect closureCritical and high-priority issues resolved within agreed governanceYes: severity model and issue registerDaily during launch, then weeklyClosure speed depends on engineering and approval capacity

Actual outcomes depend on the starting position, available data, implementation quality, client participation, search-engine processing, market conditions, technology constraints, and agreed service scope.

Commercial planning

Pricing and Cost Factors

Rudrriv prepares estimates from the agreed outcomes, deliverables, delivery model, required capabilities and implementation dependencies. Media spend and third-party software are normally separate unless explicitly included.

Scope complexity

Number of URLs, templates, domains, markets, languages, migration waves and architecture changes.

Evidence and data

Analytics and Search Console access, crawl completeness, log availability, backlink data and baseline quality.

Team and seniority

Required SEO, analytics and technical specialists, launch coverage, seniority and coordination needs.

Technology and integration

CMS or commerce platform, JavaScript rendering, CDN, server rules, integrations, tracking and deployment dependencies.

Production volume

URL mapping volume, content parity reviews, redirect testing, templates, reporting and localisation requirements.

Governance and security

Approvals, access controls, compliance reviews, documentation and audit requirements.

Service coverage

Launch-window coverage, time zones, languages, monitoring frequency and response expectations.

Change and uncertainty

Changing architecture, delayed content, incomplete staging, unavailable access and scope changes after mapping approval.

Common pricing models: fixed-scope project, time and materials, monthly managed service, dedicated specialist or dedicated team. Estimates should define assumptions, inclusions, exclusions, change control and billing milestones.

Request a scope-based estimate

Provide your migration type, approximate URL volume, platforms, markets, launch stage and preferred engagement model.

Request a Consultation
Provider evaluation

Why Consider Rudrriv

01

Cross-functional migration delivery

Rudrriv can connect SEO with content, design, development, analytics, infrastructure and programme delivery. This matters because migration outcomes depend on coordinated implementation rather than recommendations alone. Evidence required: confirm the named team and relevant project experience during scoping.

02

Flexible delivery structures

Choose project delivery, managed services, dedicated specialists, staff augmentation or a coordinated team. This helps align responsibility and capacity with the work. Evidence required: review proposed roles, allocation and service boundaries.

03

Documented workflows

Plans can include assumptions, responsibilities, review points, quality checks and reporting definitions. This improves continuity and reduces dependence on informal knowledge. Evidence required: inspect sample documentation appropriate to your confidentiality requirements.

04

Baseline-led monitoring

Rudrriv separates observed migration signals, business outcomes, technical defects and external influences. This supports more realistic diagnosis and prioritisation. Evidence required: agree KPI definitions and source systems before delivery.

05

Scalable capacity

Specialist support can expand or narrow as priorities change, subject to contract, availability and transition planning. This can reduce pressure on internal teams. Evidence required: confirm continuity, backup and ramp arrangements.

06

Clear communication

Working sessions, decision logs, written status and escalation routes can be defined for the engagement. This matters when several departments or suppliers are involved. Evidence required: agree cadence, owners and response expectations.

Map Rudrriv against your requirements

Ask for a proposed scope, team structure, assumptions, governance model and measurement approach.

Start a Conversation
Controls

Security, Quality, and Compliance We Follow

Website migration SEO may involve analytics, search data, staging environments, source code, credentials, server logs and commercially sensitive release plans. Controls should be agreed according to the systems, data, geography and client policies.

Access and identity

Role-based access, least privilege, multi-factor authentication where available, named accounts and prompt access removal.

Credential handling

Secure credential sharing, avoidance of passwords in routine messages, access inventories and controlled ownership transfer.

Data minimisation

Use only the information necessary for the agreed scope, with secure transfer, retention and deletion expectations.

Quality review

Documented briefs, peer review, pre-launch checklists, tracking tests, approval records and post-launch validation.

Change and incident control

Change logs, escalation routes, impact assessment, rollback planning where practical and timely stakeholder communication.

Continuity and responsibility

Backup staffing, handover documentation and clear separation between operational support and the client’s legal, regulatory or statutory responsibility.

Rudrriv can provide administrative, operational, technical and analytical support within the agreed scope. The service does not replace licensed professional advice or transfer the client’s statutory responsibilities.

Recognition, technology ecosystems, and delivery experience

Connected SEO, Development, Data, and Platform Capabilities

Website migration SEO depends on development, content, analytics, infrastructure and release management. Rudrriv can coordinate these connected workstreams through project delivery, managed services or dedicated specialists, subject to confirmed capabilities, access and implementation scope.

Rudrriv digital consulting, marketing and technology delivery experience
Rudrriv customer feedback

Customer Feedback on Website Migration SEO Delivery

These feedback examples reflect the service qualities buyers commonly value: early risk visibility, practical redirect mapping, technical QA, clear issue ownership and monitoring that helps teams act after launch.

★★★★★

“The migration plan gave product, engineering and marketing one shared view of priorities. Redirect mapping, staging checks and the launch issue register made decisions much clearer during a complex redesign.”

Aarav MehtaHead of Monitorth · B2B Software
★★★★★

“Rudrriv helped our team organise thousands of product and category URLs before replatforming. The work was practical, documented and easy for developers and merchandisers to use.”

Sarah KhanEcommerce Director · Retail
★★★★★

“The strongest part of the engagement was the connection between SEO requirements and release governance. Critical defects were separated from lower-priority improvements, which helped us manage launch risk.”

Daniel LeeTechnology Programme Lead · Professional Services
★★★★★

“The baseline and monitoring framework helped us understand what changed after launch instead of relying on isolated ranking screenshots. Reporting was clear about assumptions and limitations.”

Neha PatelMarketing Operations Lead · Business Services
★★★★★

“Rudrriv supported our delivery team with technical SEO requirements, redirect validation and launch checks. The white-label workflow was structured and responsibilities were clearly documented.”

James MorganAgency Partner · Digital Agency
★★★★★

“For a multi-market migration, the shared templates, exception register and review cadence helped regional teams follow common standards without ignoring local requirements.”

Elena RossiRegional Web Lead · Technology

View More Testimonials

Buyer questions

Frequently Asked Questions

What is website migration SEO?
Website migration SEO is the planning, implementation support, quality assurance and monitoring used to protect search visibility when a website changes platform, domain, URL structure, design, content architecture, protocol or rendering technology. It focuses on preserving valuable URLs and signals while ensuring the new site can be crawled, rendered, indexed and measured correctly.
What is included in Rudrriv’s website migration SEO service?
The scope can include discovery, baseline reporting, URL inventory, risk assessment, redirect mapping, information-architecture review, technical requirements, content parity checks, staging crawls, launch checklists, production validation and post-launch monitoring. The final scope depends on migration type, site size, platforms, markets and internal delivery responsibilities.
When should an SEO specialist join a website migration?
SEO should normally be involved during discovery and architecture planning, before URL structures, templates, navigation and content decisions are final. Early involvement makes requirements easier to build and test. Late involvement can still reduce risk, but may limit the changes possible before launch.
Which types of website migration need SEO support?
Common examples include redesigns, CMS or ecommerce replatforming, domain changes, HTTP-to-HTTPS moves, subdomain or folder changes, site mergers, international restructuring, headless builds and large content consolidations. Even visually small projects can create substantial search risk if URLs, rendering or indexation signals change.
What deliverables will we receive?
Typical deliverables include a baseline, URL inventory, risk register, redirect map, technical SEO requirements, content and metadata actions, staging QA findings, launch checklist, production validation report, KPI dashboard and remediation backlog. Deliverables are selected during scoping rather than applied identically to every migration.
How long does website migration SEO take?
The timeline depends on site size, URL volume, platform complexity, migration type, staging readiness, content changes, number of markets, approval cycles and engineering capacity. SEO work should align with the broader migration plan. Rudrriv should confirm checkpoints after reviewing the project rather than promising a fixed duration.
How much does website migration SEO cost?
Pricing depends on URL volume, templates, domains, languages, redirect complexity, data quality, platform access, technical involvement, launch coverage, reporting frequency and post-launch support. Estimates should identify assumptions, inclusions, exclusions and change-control rules. Development, hosting, software subscriptions and content production may be separate.
Can a migration guarantee that rankings will not fall?
No provider can guarantee unchanged rankings or traffic because search engines, demand, competitors, content, seasonality and platform behaviour are outside the provider’s full control. A structured migration process reduces avoidable risk, improves visibility into defects and supports faster remediation.
How are redirects handled?
Legacy URLs are inventoried and mapped to the most relevant live destinations. Permanent redirects are usually appropriate for lasting moves, but the correct approach depends on the change. Redirects should avoid irrelevant blanket destinations, chains, loops and unnecessary hops, and should be tested in staging and production.
Which tools and platforms can be used?
Relevant tools may include Google Search Console, Bing Webmaster Tools, Screaming Frog, Lighthouse, site crawlers, log-analysis platforms, backlink tools, rank trackers, Lighthouse, schema validators, CMS platforms, ecommerce platforms, CDNs and issue-management systems. Selection depends on the client stack, permissions and confirmed capability.
What access does Rudrriv need?
Access may include analytics, search-console properties, crawlable staging, CMS or platform documentation, sitemaps, redirect configuration, issue trackers, server logs, rank tracking and project plans. Least-privilege access should be used, with named accounts, secure credential sharing and removal after the engagement.
What happens immediately after launch?
Priority production checks normally cover status codes, redirects, crawl directives, canonicals, sitemaps, analytics, key templates, internal links and critical journeys. Teams then monitor indexation, crawl errors, traffic, visibility and conversions while resolving issues according to severity and business impact.
How long should redirects remain in place?
Redirects should generally remain long enough for users, search engines and external links to adopt the new destinations, and often should be retained long term when legacy URLs continue to receive visits or links. The exact retention policy should consider infrastructure, risk, external references and future architecture.
Can Rudrriv work with our agency or development team?
Yes. Rudrriv can operate as an independent SEO advisor, embedded specialist, managed migration workstream or white-label partner. Responsibilities, communication paths, issue ownership, confidentiality, approvals and release authority should be defined at the start.
How are migration results measured?
Indexation uses agreed baselines and compares organic traffic, conversions, priority visibility, index coverage, redirects, crawl errors, performance and defect closure. Reporting should distinguish migration effects from tracking changes, seasonality, market demand, unrelated releases and search-engine updates.