RutSum

February 1st, 2008

Migration from Blogger to Wordpress


Shifting certainly hasn’t been easy. You lose quite a lot of things while shifting, the most important thing being traffic. Here are some of the tools that made the process much easier than it would be for others, who did most of the things manually.

1) Blogger Custom Domain Settings - With the Blogger publishing settings, it’s easy to redirect your old blogger domain to the new one. If you already have a domain and have pointed it to your new self-hosted blog, just enter the new domain URL in your Blogger settings, under advanced settings. It’s as easy as that.

2) Wordpress content importer - Wordpress supports importing posts and comments from a variety of publishing platforms, such as Blogger, LiveJournal, Movable Type and TypePad. For Blogger, you just need to grant access to your Google account to Wordpress, so that it can retrieve content through the Blogger RSS. This also means that if you have set any RSS footer content in Blogger, it will appear in posts in your new Wordpress blog. If you don’t want this, be sure to remove any RSS footer content in Blogger.

3) Blogger Redirector - A wonderful Wordpress plugin, created by Sam Wong. It can be downloaded over here. The installation is easy, just upload it to your /wp-content/plugins/ directory, and activate it from the WP admin panel.
Now here’s the magic. This plugin redirects all your old Blogger post links to your new Wordpress post links. For this, you obviously have to complete step 1, that is redirection from Blogger to the new domain. After you’ve done both step 1 and 3, here’s what happens.

* When somebody accesses http://rutsum.blogspot.com/2007/07/pclinuxos-2007.html, Blogger redirects it to http://rutsum.com/2007/07/pclinuxos-2007.html. This is a 301 redirect (which means permanently moved), so search engines come to know that the content has been relocated, Google transfers the PageRank accordingly. Though this may take some time.

* Now the Blogger Redirector plugin redirects http://rutsum.com/2007/07/pclinuxos-2007.html to http://rutsum.com/pclinuxos-2007/, based on string search or maybe some other heuristic method, just guessing.

This redirect is very, very accurate, but it’s limitation is that currently it works only for post pages and RSS and ATOM feed URLs. The archive and other pages have not been included, and will redirect to a 404 page. Also, this too is a 301 redirect, so PageRank from even your post links is transferred.

These steps should be more than enough to completely shift your Blogger blog to Wordpress. This ensures that you retain the maximum amount of your traffic, and so that migration doesn’t become a nightmare.


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2 Comments on “Migration from Blogger to Wordpress”

  1. Er, you CAN enable ‘Blogger-style’ URLs in Wordpress, if I’m not wrong. Anyway, there’s ONE more problem which you didn’t mention - images. Images uploaded in Blogger aren’t shifted by Wordpress. And since Blogger implements leech protection by limiting pic size being called from external sites to 200px, that’s an issue. Plus, if too many queries start coming from a particular external IP address, then it blocks that too.

    There’s a neat way to get around this I’ve figured out, and I wanna try it out when I move to Wordpress; but frankly, now is not the time for me to play around, because if it DOES go wrong I’ll be in deep shit (and I don’t have time to recover from deep shit right now).

  2. Apoorv KhatrejaNo Gravatar Says:
    February 4th, 2008 at 8:25 pm

    Yes, you CAN manually change your options to get Blogger style URLs. But what is the use of shifting to Wordpress if you don’t use it’s flexibility to the max?

    I wanted my post page URLs to be free of any time stamp, and to be short. Thus, I chose the format http://rutsum.com/%postname%/. This enhaces the readability of a URL, and people get attracted by short and descriptive URLs.

    Don’t see any image problem. I had all my images hosted on my blogger (picasa) account, and all of them are working fine. Even the links open up to give full sized images. From now on, I would be using Flickr for image hosting. Never heard of the IP blocking thing you mentioned there.

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This entry was posted on Friday, February 1st, 2008 at 7:24 pm and is filed under It's Called Web 2.0. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.

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