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Last updated on Jan 2, 2025

AEM to WordPress: Post-migration essentials

After you’ve migrated from AEM to WordPress, the focus shifts to QA. This phase involves thorough testing, identifying and fixing any issues, and ensuring that everything works as expected.

Verification

What we’re calling verification here is more like post-migration QA—essentially ensuring that everything on the frontend, backend, and content fronts works as intended. 

1. Functionality check

Functionality check is ensuring that every feature/functionality, third-party integration, and user-facing component (like content) behave as intended. For e.g.: Can users submit forms? Do interactive elements like sliders and accordions work smoothly? Are plugins behaving as intended? Are the workflows triggering (and executing) correctly? etc.

Things to do

2. Performance QA

With performance QA, you’re mostly checking your new WordPress site for speed.

Things to do

3. Content validation

Content validation is ensuring that all content assets, media files, and metacontent are migrated cleanly. For content validation, first ensure that every piece of content that you intended to migrate has actually migrated. Also check for formatting issues, broken links, and missing media. You’ll need to verify that SEO elements—like meta titles, descriptions, and schema markup—are in place too. 

Things to do

Once you’ve worked through this post-migration QA, you can move to (ongoing) optimizations.

Optimization

Don’t just “lift and shift” from AEM to WordPress. Use this migration as an opportunity to reduce technical debt, improve performance, and build a better content experience for all stakeholders. 

Performance tuning

Here are a few ways to secure performance gains after migrating:

Feature enhancement

Identify opportunities to further enhance your website experience for all stakeholders. For users, for example, this might mean introducing newer and more immersive storytelling formats. WordPress’s flexibility makes it easier to experiment and adapt quickly. 

User feedback implementation

Once your WordPress website is up and running, use analytics and heatmaps to understand how your user engagement has changed with the migration.

Also, tap surveys to collect user feedback on your new website experience.

Unlike AEM, which comes with extensive development cycles, WordPress allows you to iterate faster. This means you can quickly incorporate any insights you learn to further refine your website user experience.

Before we wrap up this handbook, let’s see why implementing a solid maintenance strategy is also a key part of the AEM to WordPress migration process.

Maintenance

Ongoing maintenance is a crucial component of the migration process, as it ensures that your WordPress site stays aligned with your evolving business needs—the very reason you migrated from AEM in the first place.

Regular WordPress maintenance involves several ongoing tasks to ensure your site remains secure, functional, and optimized. One of the most critical aspects is keeping your WordPress core, plugins, and themes up to date. 

Regular security scans are also vital, as they help detect vulnerabilities, malware, or suspicious activity, keeping your site safe from threats. Equally important is backup management—performing routine backups of your files, theme, plugins, and databases ensure that your data is safe and can be restored quickly in case of any issues. 

Performance monitoring is another crucial task, as it involves checking your site’s load times, server health, and speed to spot any potential issues before they impact user experience. Depending on your WordPress stack, you’ll need to determine whether to handle maintenance in-house, outsource it to a specialized team, or opt for a managed service plan.


Credits

Authored by Disha Disha Disha Sharma Author , Shreya Shreya Shreya Agarwal Author