Man this is some work. I have read almost all the how to’s on painless beta blogger migrations to wordpress and I have to say this is excruciating work! Still after having finally done it, everything seems worth the hours spent in front of my computer. A lot of the experts agree on two things to do the migration but with usually the same goal/s in mind– ensuring that the previous links don’t get broken and all that google juice and pagerank will not go to waste.
In my previous free blog I have already cranked up the PR meter to PR4 and have managed to land in the first page of some very competitive keywords. The problem was I was using a free account. I really should have started with a dotcom from the very start. Had I done that, I wouldn’t have to go through all the research I did in order to migrate successfully.
But still, there is a silver lining in all of these. Had I started with a dotcom from the get go, I wouldn’t have learned about 301/302 redirects, .htaccess, and all those meta tags redirect methods that a lot of experts were betting their nuts on as surefire remedies to the pain of migration.
The first instructions I did consider was Techcounter’s instructions, but the loooongg queu of questions scared the heck out of me. Then there were a lot of others in between before I arrived at bloggerbloke’s site. At first I had it made with his very nifty .htaccess system. It really worked for him and I think for others too. Even I was convinced I had it down pat. I typed my redirected blog address and voila, I was taken to blogger’s redirect page and then eventually to this site. It’s all good, except that in bloggerbloke’s case, there’s none of that temporary blogger stop.
I was prepared to live with it until I clicked on some of the permalinks pointing to my own blog. It did the usual redirect and ended up with a 404 error. I kinda slipped back down to earth after that. I had to play my final ace. I tapped on the great WordPress reserve for help. And there it was, the plug-in created by Sam Wong — the Blogger Redirector. I installed the template and removed the .htaccess code I pasted earlier. Everything worked real well after that. Including the permalinks.
I have already placed the noindex,nofollow meta in my old blog hoping that I won’t be penalized for duplicate content. I’ll also try to do a little 302 redirect so the search engines would know that I have moved to a new location and then later on will do the permanent 301 redirect.
Right now, my concern is how to get out of that blogger temporary stop when any of my link or my url is typed. I also have to work a little bit harder promoting this site. Also some of my internal links (of course they came with the migration) are still pointing to the old blog! I still have to see if there’s a quicker way of changing these internal links behaviour so they will recognize their new location. However I only have very few internal links to modify in case I decide to do everything manually.
It may take me a couple of weeks more to finally say that I have moved successfully and comfortably here in my self-hosted WordPress. But I’m not really that worried. After all, Rome wasn’t built in a day.
If you happen to be here and you have some questions about migration, shoot me a note, I may not be an expert yet but with all the internet literature I’ve read and the kinks I’ve encountered, I may just be able to offer a few insights.
Cheers!
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I’m one of Beta Blogger users.
I might go through things you’ve done.
[...] Migration From Beta Blogger To WordPress | Go, Blog! [...]
[...] Migration From Beta Blogger To WordPress | Go, Blog! [...]
[...] Migration From Beta Blogger To WordPress | Go, Blog! [...]
If you have a moment, just need your advice. Should I apply for my own domain name for my blog? What’s the advantage, if any? Is it easy to switch over?
Hi KWKSDVMSL, let me know how you fared if you decide to proceed.
Hi Plantbuddy, been to your site and you have lovely plants there!
On to your question. I do believe that it’s worthwhile to apply for your own domain. For one, people will have an easier time finding you. Having your own domain and optimizing it is way more effective for being searched in search engines such as google. It also gives you a more professional look.
Switching is actually very easy if you’re not too iffy on pageranks and all that. If you’re thinking of switching, you would want to consider switching now while you don’t have too many posts yet and doesn’t have that much pagerank. The longer you delay the switch, the more difficult it will be for you.
Awesome blog…I made the transition recently, but I am still going through growing pains…aaargghh!
ive tried a lot of blogging platforms and so far, its just wordpress that im comfortable with. i was ok with i.ph actually, it was easy customizing this and that but the problem that i was having was with the bandwidth. im no techie when it comes to blogging, everything that i know now, i learned on my own, thru trial and error. the support for my hosting is useless.