No migration context is the same. Many variables need taking into account. That doesn't mean, however, that you can't timeframe a migration project?
Let’s outline the most important variables in any website migration:
No matter how these variables are set in your context, there are fixed steps to take:
In any migration project, you can reserve 20 business days for these necessary steps. How the variables mentioned earlier are set in your context determines the amount of additional business days needed. Let’s take 3 different variables as an example.
When you’re in a large organization (5,000 employees or more), you can reserve extra time for meetings and procedures. Chances are you will encounter a messy IT landscape that needs drastic measures before it can be used for the migration project.
The variation in templates can quickly add to the time required for the migration. The more variety, the more analysis needed for mapping, gap analysis, and definition of business rules. Don’t be fooled by numbers; it’s the variations between them that matters most.
Before you start the migration, try to determine if the target system is ready to receive the content. Are all templates available and definitive? Has the site structure been agreed upon? This might be outside of your project scope, but you need to make it an integral part of your overall web migration planning.
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Because of security issues, Erasmus University wanted to perform a content migration from their outdated TYPO3 WCM to Drupal as soon as possible. Read the case to learn how they realized a website migration of 20.000 webpages within a couple of months.