Post-launch monitoring shows whether the migration is behaving as expected.
Quick answer
After a website migration, monitor redirects, crawl errors, indexation, organic traffic, rankings, XML sitemaps, analytics tracking, important templates and Search Console reports. The first few days are about catching avoidable issues quickly.
Launch is not the end of the migration.
The site going live is only one point in the process. Search engines still need to crawl the new setup, process redirects and understand any template or content changes.
What to check immediately.
- Do old priority URLs redirect correctly?
- Are important new pages live and indexable?
- Are there spikes in 404s or 500 errors?
- Are analytics and conversion tracking working?
- Are XML sitemaps updated?
- Are canonicals pointing to the right URLs?
What to monitor over time.
Some signals need more time. Rankings, traffic and indexation can move around while Google processes changes. The key is to separate expected fluctuation from fixable errors.
A structured migration support process should include post-launch checks, not just pre-launch planning.
Use real URLs, not only dashboards.
Dashboards help, but they can hide page-level problems. Keep a list of priority URLs and manually test them after launch. That list should include high-traffic pages, linked pages, important templates and commercial landing pages.
Practical checklist
- Crawl the live site
- Test priority redirects
- Check GSC coverage
- Review analytics tracking
- Monitor rankings for key pages
- Watch 404 reports
- Fix urgent issues quickly
Common mistakes
- Only checking the homepage
- Waiting weeks to review errors
- Ignoring redirect chains
- Missing tracking changes
- Assuming all traffic movement is normal
When to get support
If this sounds familiar, Migration Support gives you practical SEO recommendations, clear priorities and next steps that are easier to implement. This note also supports Technical SEO.
FAQ
How long should migration monitoring continue?
At least the first few weeks, with the closest checks in the first few days after launch.
Is a traffic dip always bad?
Some fluctuation can happen, but sharp drops on important sections should be investigated quickly.