Sites That Grow
[ Services ]
[ CARE ]Care & Maintenance

Website Hosting and Migration

Website migration and modern hosting setup for businesses moving off slow, fragile, or aging platforms without losing content, SEO value, analytics, or email stability.

[ 01 ]
Who it's for

Businesses outgrowing WordPress, Wix, Squarespace, shared hosting, or an old vendor setup, and anyone whose site is slow, fragile, difficult to update, or risky to keep running as-is.

[ 02 ]
Timeline

1-2 weeks for most migrations

[ 03 ]Problems

The problems this solves.

  • The current hosting is slow, unreliable, or hard to manage.
  • Nobody is sure who controls the domain, DNS, email, or analytics.
  • The old platform is blocking design, SEO, or content improvements.
  • You need to move without breaking forms, email, redirects, or important pages.
  • The site needs a stronger foundation before more marketing work.
[ 04 ]Outcomes

What should be better after the work.

Cleaner ownership

You know where the site runs, who controls the domain, and how key systems are connected.

Faster foundation

Modern hosting and cleaner delivery can improve speed, reliability, and maintenance.

Lower migration risk

Content, URLs, forms, analytics, and DNS are handled with a launch checklist instead of guesswork.

[ 05 ]What's included

Everything that’s in the scope.

  • Current platform, hosting, DNS, analytics, and content audit
  • Migration plan that protects pages, redirects, and search visibility
  • Modern hosting setup with fast delivery and SSL
  • DNS, domain, email forwarding, and environment configuration support
  • Content, media, and CMS migration where needed
  • Redirect map for changed URLs
  • Post-launch monitoring, QA, and handover documentation
[ 06 ]Process

How we work together.

We audit the current site, plan a migration that protects your traffic and search visibility, set up the new hosting and DNS, run a full test pass, then cut over with minimal downtime. After launch we monitor closely and tighten anything that needs it.

[ 07 ]Cost

What affects cost and timeline.

  • Size of the site and amount of content/media to migrate
  • Whether URLs are changing and redirects need to be mapped
  • DNS, email, domain, and third-party access complexity
  • Whether the migration includes a redesign or only a platform move
  • Amount of post-launch monitoring and support needed
[ 08 ]Detail

The full picture.

Migration is part technical work, part risk management

Moving a website sounds simple until DNS, email, analytics, redirects, forms, media, and CMS content are involved. A sloppy migration can create broken links, missing pages, lost tracking, email problems, or search visibility drops.

A clean migration starts by identifying what already exists and what needs to keep working after the move.

What gets reviewed before moving

Before cutover, the migration plan should account for:

  • Current hosting and platform.
  • Domain registrar and DNS provider.
  • Email records and forwarding.
  • Form destinations and notifications.
  • Analytics and conversion tracking.
  • Important URLs and organic landing pages.
  • Media, downloads, and CMS content.
  • Redirects for changed pages.
  • Sitemap and robots settings.

The goal is to avoid surprises on launch day.

When hosting is the real problem

Sometimes a website does not need a full redesign first. It needs a better foundation. Slow shared hosting, fragile plugin stacks, unclear ownership, and old vendor setups can make every future improvement harder.

Moving to a cleaner hosting setup can make the next redesign, landing page, SEO campaign, or care plan easier to manage.

[ 10 ]Next

Keep exploring the topic.

[ 11 ]FAQ

Questions buyers usually ask.

Will migration cause downtime?

Most migrations can be planned to keep downtime very low. The exact risk depends on DNS access, platform constraints, and whether the migration includes a redesign or URL changes.

Can you move my site without losing SEO?

A migration can protect SEO value when important pages, URLs, metadata, redirects, and internal links are planned before launch. No migration is risk-free, but the risk is much lower with a proper map.

Do you handle DNS and email?

Yes, DNS and email-related records can be included in the migration plan. Email is handled carefully because a bad DNS change can interrupt mail delivery.

Should migration happen before or after a redesign?

If the current platform is blocking the redesign, migration and rebuild can happen together. If the current site is stable, a phased approach may be better.

[ ]Next

Ready to get started?

Tell us about your project. We’ll come back with a clear plan and an honest timeline.