Rebranding a blog can be a horrific death of a blog brand. I’ve had a lot of questions from other bloggers regarding rebranding a blog.
It also happened to me, I rebrand my own blog Passive Blogger (formerly known as MyStartupbBlog.com)
Basically, I was feeling burned out and wanted to change the focus to Blogging, Personal finance instead of just Web Hosting topics.
However, since I’ve been blogging there for about a year and a half, it wasn’t as easy as just starting a new blog and abandoning the old one.
Once you’ve established your brand and people recognize it, changing that brand can be a difficult task!
While many of my readers have been supportive of the change, just as many were confused and even a little upset.
I had to balance the risk of alienating the web hosting community with my need to expand my repertoire, and I fully expect to lose some followers and subscribers as a result.
I only made my decision after months of careful debate, and I would encourage others to do the same.
Here are a few of the things I learned from my rebranding experience that might help you if you’re debating a similar transition.
Table of Contents
3 Things to Do Before Rebranding Your Blog
1. Remember, People Fear Change
Ask your readers what they think! Once I decided to change the name of my blog, I sent out a survey to my RSS subscribers. I asked three basic questions:
- Would it bother you if I posted less about web hosting and more about blogging, and personal finance things?
- Would you be upset if the name of the blog changed?
- Or Would you unsubscribe or stop reading if these changes happened?
I had an 18% response rate in the 24 hours after the survey went live, which was actually pretty impressive!
Overwhelmingly, my readers were okay with the idea of fewer web hosting-related posts, though they were a little wary of a name change.
Luckily I had already anticipated that, which is why the new site title is so similar. I wanted to generalize the site a little without giving up the writing style I’ve always used.
In these cases, Here are two things you can do:
Firstly, If you’re rebranding, try to keep the look of your site close to the old one. I realize that isn’t always possible, but it really helps if you can do it.
Several months ago when I was leaning toward rebranding, I changed to the new color scheme I planned to use ahead of time (even though it was more work for me).
That way my readers could get used to the new look before I announced the other changes. If your new brand requires drastic changes, at least keep the structure of the site close to the way it was before so people don’t get lost.
Secondly, Explain exactly what’s happening and why. I moved to my new domain name more quickly than I planned (I’ll explain why in a minute), so I didn’t get to warn my readers in advance.
They literally woke up one morning this week to a whole new site! However, I did put up a post that explained why I rebranded and what it would mean for the future of the blog.
I wanted them to understand that I had a good reason for doing it and that most things would stay the same.
2. Anticipate Technical Glitches
When things change there are many technical things that come toward. But you have to be aware of that, here’s the thing that can happen:
1. Don’t Move Your Content First
Don’t move your content until you’re ready for the changes to be live. Weeks before I planned to transition to the new site. And I exported the posts from my old blog so I could see how they looked on the new theme (I changed themes but left the layout and color scheme identical).
But guess what? I forgot that all the blogs I’ve linked to in the past would receive trackback notifications once the posts were live on the new domain.
Within minutes, I had people emailing me asking, “Why do you have two sites? What’s going on?” Talk about a facepalm moment!
That blunder forced me to spend half the night finalizing the design so the new site would be ready for launch.
2. RSS Feed Get Messed Up
Accept the fact that your RSS feed will probably get messed up. If you’re just moving to a new domain with the same site title (or from Blogger to self-hosted WordPress, for instance).
All you have to do is change your original feed address on Feedburner. You’ll keep all your subscribers and nothing will happen.
However, as I learned yesterday, if you want the name and URL to change, you have to do a bunch of complicated wizardries that result in a 30-day redirect to the news feed.
After which your subscribers will get a note saying “This feed is no longer active. Please follow the new one,” with a link.
The odds of people clicking that link and subscribing to the news feed are pretty slim. However, it’s important to me to erase all traces of the old brand. I made the change and I’m hoping for the best.
3. Lose Site Stats
Be prepared to lose ALL your stats, at least temporarily. If you use a 301 redirect to send traffic from the old domain to the new one, your PageRank, mozRank, and other stats should return the next time those metrics are updated.
In the meantime, though, your new site will show N/A and your ranking will reset completely. You can also lose your place in search rankings while Google reindexes and updates all your links.
For me, the temporary drop wasn’t a big deal, but it may not be worth it for everyone. Especially if you have income from your blog that could be affected by a change in stats.
Overall Recommendations for Rebranding Your Blog
Here are my overall recommendations you can follow to rebrand your blog;
Step 1. Understand your reasons for wanting to rebrand.
Sometimes you can make changes to your website without going through the hassle of a name change. Before you make the leap, make sure there is no other way to accomplish your goals.
For me, because I originally chose a blog name that was so specific to my journey out of debt, there was simply no other way to write about other things without feeling like I was disappointing readers.
After all, many of them probably came to my site for web hosting-related posts, not the random things I wanted to write about more regularly. With the new name, I feel like it’s more clear that I will write about a variety of topics.
Step 2. Plan every step in excruciating detail.
Make a list of all the things you’ll need to change if the name of your site changes.
My list included all the obvious things, like the RSS feed, email address, and social media profiles.
But I also had to update my About page, change the entry for my blog on a ton of blog directories, and ask other bloggers to update their blogroll links…
It seems like I remember something else every few minutes, and it will likely take months to get everything completely switched over.
It’s also essential that you plan each step of the transition so that things happen when you’re ready and hire a design agency branding for you. (and not before, like in my situation!)
Step 3. Own your decision
As I mentioned, I received some criticism for changing the name of my blog, both from readers and fellow bloggers. Some have even gone as far as telling me I’ve made a huge mistake.
But the fact is, my blog belongs to me. If I’m burned out and don’t enjoy blogging anymore, is it better to change things so that I’m motivated to keep going?
Or should I just delete the blog and forget it ever existed? I’ve put 16 months of serious work into building my site, and there’s no way I was going to walk away from it.
So I don’t worry too much about what people think – if I lose some readers, that’s okay. If my social media numbers stay small forever, that’s okay too.
I’m proud of my new site (passiveblogger.com) and I’m excited about its future, even if that means moving forward with a smaller audience.
Over to You: Rebranding Your Blog
That’s it! If you planning to rebrand your blog, above the things should be followed. When you follow these steps, there should be minimal hassle or traffic loss to your new site.
Have you ever rebranded or thought about rebranding? What questions or concerns do you have about the process? Has a blog you enjoy reading ever changed drastically?