A few weeks ago I received an email from the Google Blogger folks that they will no longer support the ftp version beginning sometime in March. Unfortunately I had 4 Blogger services running. While I was a little bothered by this abandonment, I wanted to move over to a better platform anyway. WordPress was the most appealing choice.
I needed a little advice on migrating and I posted the question on LinkedIn. The generous responses were quick and concise. It turns out that WordPress has an import feature…awesome! I was excited to get moving, but this domain was hosted on a friend’s server which was a bit bare bones, without all the bells and whistles you get from new hosting services. It has been there for about 10 or more years, but I needed more control. So, I setup an account with a new hosting provider and moved my files over. Then we changed the dns and all was ready to begin.
The new hosting provider made it easy to install WordPress. A couple of clicks and I was working in the admin. I spend an hour or so looking for a theme I liked and voila, we were in business. Moments later I find the import function in WP and that process began. Unfortunately, it didn’t work. I was able to make the connection to blogger, but received a generic message that “nothing was imported”. Frustrated, I tried this a few different ways still with no luck.
I decided to manually pull the content and post them in the new app. On this blog it was easy since there are only a few posts. However, I have hundreds of posts on my other blogs and will NOT be copying everything over manually. I will need to investigate an alternative that helps ease this process.
Once the content was uploaded I made some changes to the templates and added a few widgets and we were done…almost. Now I had two blogs running with the same content and that would not be good. My hosting provider offers a redirect function from control panel. All I had to do was setup redirects for all the pages and we were done. Well, the redirect function did not work either. There might have just been a delay, but either way I was not seeing the results I expected. That meant I needed to edit the .htaccess file and manually plug in each redirect. This would include the actual post pages and any other page indexed by the search engines. A little time consuming, but not a huge problem either.
I then added a few more pages and some ads and the job was complete. Overall, it took about 10 hours to complete, including time spent choosing a theme/template and tweaking the layout. Another 3 – 5 hours should be enough to make the additional changes I would like. I’m happy with the results.
So there you have it. A small blogger ftp account converted to WordPress manually. Now I have to tackle the larger blogs!
Kevin
Comments
Leave a comment Trackback