Migration services

Migrations planned around lower downtime and cleaner cutovers

Searchzilla approaches migrations the way strong hosting platforms present them: as a guided process that covers environment preparation, data movement, DNS coordination, validation, and post-cutover checks.

Migration stylePrepare first, cut over second
Operational goalKeep customer-facing disruption as low as possible
Scope

What gets migrated

Websites

Public pages, CMS installs, and storefronts

Common migrations include brochure sites, content platforms, agency sites, and ecommerce environments.

Applications

Custom code and supporting services

This includes APIs, dashboards, internal admin tools, and services with background workers or scheduled jobs.

Servers

VPS and infrastructure moves

Teams often migrate controlled server environments when they need more clarity, better regional placement, or a cleaner upgrade path.

AI stacks

Inference and attached data layers

AI migrations may include model-serving services, vector stores, document pipelines, and storage paths that need coordinated placement.

Method

Migration process

1. Discovery

Inventory domains, records, certificates, storage paths, integrations, scheduled jobs, and application dependencies before touching production traffic.

2. Environment preparation

Build the target environment, validate configuration, issue certificates, and confirm that critical workflows behave correctly before the public switch.

3. Data transfer

Move files, databases, or service data into the target platform while keeping the current production environment stable.

4. DNS and cutover planning

Review TTL values, target records, rollback values, and the exact sequence of changes before making the final customer-facing move.

5. Post-cutover validation

Test not only the homepage, but also login flows, forms, uploads, support paths, and any workflow that customers depend on in daily use.

This staged approach reflects how mature hosting providers talk about migrations: prepare the destination, guide the transfer, keep the site online where possible, and coordinate DNS propagation carefully to minimize visible disruption.

Risk factors

Why migrations fail

Incomplete inventory

Teams forget mail, webhooks, scheduled tasks, or hidden dependencies that were never documented.

Superficial testing

A homepage load is treated as proof of success even though critical customer flows were never validated.

Weak rollback planning

When the fallback path is vague, teams hesitate during cutover and small problems become longer outages.

Planning

Who this page is for

This migration page is meant for customers comparing providers, planning a move from an older host, or preparing to shift from a simpler environment into VPS or AI-ready infrastructure. It is intentionally written as an operational page rather than a generic promise page. Customers should be able to understand the likely workflow before they start the move.

Only existing clients can access the full support suite and account-linked migration portal, but the migration planning model shown here gives prospective customers a clear view of how Searchzilla approaches the work.