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Site Migration Done Properly Doesn't Always Lead To Fast Google Rankings

Nuts.com LogoI’ve been following a thread at Google Webmaster Help where a webmaster said he migrated his site from one domain to another, followed the moving site instructions Google has laid out for webmasters exactly and almost two months later still doesn’t have the rankings the old site had on the old domain.

The site migrated from NutsOnline.com to Nuts.com, the webmaster said:

Yea, this is a large site and it will take time, but Googler John Mueller chimed in with his somewhat disappointment in Google taking this long to pick up the new site. John wrote:

He basically said, yea – you did everything right but Google’s algorithms were in flux causing a slow down in the migration time. At least that is how I read it.

Maybe more interesting is the comment he made about “over time, as our algorithms get used to the new content and are able to migrate all associated signals properly.” So no, 301 redirects do not lead to immediate ranking signal migration from the origin URL to the destination URL.

Alistair Lattimore who has been in correspondence with me on this thread felt that you can look into his comment as saying, a ” 301 redirect doesn’t magically transfer all ranking data over to the new domain/URLs, such as Google Panda signals as an example.”

I hope the webmaster keeps us posted on the migration status.

Forum discussion at Google Webmaster Help.

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