How to migrate from Pressable to Siteground

Migrate away from Pressable using the Migrate Guru plugin

After investing lots of hours using the steps below, I learned there’s a plugin called Migrate Guru that can do the job much more simply! Using Migrate Guru will save you lots of headaches – plus…it’s FREE!

  1. On Siteground, create the website using “existing domain”, install WordPress, and choose the option to not migrate.
  2. Set up the ftp user on Siteground.
  3. Install Migrate Guru, choose the FTP option, and go to town. Your entire site will get migrated to Siteground with a few clicks.
  4. Update dns.

Done!

Alternate Steps to migrate from Pressable to Siteground:

  1. Add an “existing” website to Siteground.
    Select “Existing Domain” -> “Start New Website” (because Pressable is not compatible with the Siteground Automatic Migration plugin).
    Select “WordPress” or “WooCommerce”.
  2. Get the full backup from Jetpack.
  3. Export the database from Pressable via phpMyAdmin.
  4. Import the database into Siteground via phpMyAdmin.
  5. Unzip the backup you got from Jetpack. Then zip up the “uploads”, “plugins”, and “themes” folders for uploading.
  6. Upload the zipped “uploads”, “plugins”, and “themes” folders to Siteground using either FTP or the “File Manager” in the Siteground dashboard. Then unzip in the appropriate places on your Siteground server.
  7. Open wp-config.php on Siteground and change the table prefix to your old prefix, if needed.
  8. Update DNS to point to Siteground.
  9. After you confirm DNS is propagated to the Siteground IP, Add SSL Certificate on Siteground.

That’s it!

ALTERNATE METHOD of Migrating from Pressable to Siteground: Using Migrate Guru WP Plugin

Step 1:

NOTE: For the path field, type: /yourdomain.com/public_html/

Step 2:

  1. Create a new “temporary” site on Siteground. Copy the FTP info from the temporary Siteground site (we’ll use this ftp info in Migrate Guru WP Plugin).
  2. Once you have the FTP details in hand, update the main domain in Siteground from the temporary domain to the live domain url. (e.g. We only needed to set up the temporary domain to grab the ftp info.)
  3. Install the free Migrate Guru WP Plugin on the live site on Pressable and run the migration using the “FTP” option and entering the Siteground FTP info.
  4. Once the migration is complete, update the nameservers to point to Siteground.
  5. Go to Siteground and add the Let’sEncrypt SSL Certificate.
  6. Once the SSL certificate is rocking, then turn on the “Force HTTPS” setting in Siteground and in your WordPress site’s SG Cachepress options.

How to Speed Up Your Siteground Site

  1. Turn on Memcache both on the Siteground dashboard and within the SG Cachepress settings on your WP site.
  2. Minify html and css in “Frontend” settings within the SG Cachepress plugin.
  3. Turn on “WordPress Heartbeat Optimization” within the SG Cachepress plugin settings.
Posted in

Toby Cryns

RSS From Toby’s Blog

  • How Digital Ocean Cost Us Thousands of Dollars in a Single Day
    Here’s the rub for me: My belief is that bad stuff happens, and you need to own it. Digital Ocean definitely did not own it in this case. I wonder how the original founders of Digital Ocean would have reacted had they been in charge… For example, wouldn’t it be nice if an actual human… […]
  • Where uncertainty exists, don’t order specific.
    4 Idiot Case Studies with 2 simple age-old business lessons. The post Where uncertainty exists, don’t order specific. appeared first on Toby Cryns, WordPress Trainer in Minneapolis, MN.
  • “Now THAT was a good meeting!”
    A single effective meeting can change the course of history for a company. Imagine if you could lead effective meetings EVERY DAY! You can, but it takes curiosity & practice. This article is a good place to start your journey to a more effective you. The post “Now THAT was a good meeting!” appeared first […]

More posts from themightymo.com

How to style FacetWP checkbox hierarchy results using jQuery

By The Mighty Mo! Design Co. | February 21, 2023

I recently invested many hours trying to target and style a FacetWP taxonomy facet that uses hierarchy for display. It should be noted that you can use straight up CSS for some styling (and should use css wherever possible), but sometimes you need javascript to target parent elements and such. I thought I’d document the…

ballooning disk space

How to fix SpinupWP ballooning disk space issue

By The Mighty Mo! Design Co. | February 1, 2023

A site we host on Digital Ocean recently went down. It took me a lot of troubleshooting and digging before realizing that the issue was that our disk space was maxed out on Digital Ocean. The site in question needs ~20gb of space, so our 50gb server should be plenty. But alas, there it was…

google business reviews disappeared 1

Google Removed Our Business Listing – How we restored our biz to the Map and got our reviews back.

By The Mighty Mo! Design Co. | January 31, 2023

I was about to send an email to a potential customer pointing them to our 5-star Google Reviews via our Google Business profile (e.g. the Google Map), hoping this added information about our customers’ past experiences might help me close a deal. But when I checked the Google Reviews link, it was down. And after…

RSS From Toby’s Blog

  • How Digital Ocean Cost Us Thousands of Dollars in a Single Day
    Here’s the rub for me: My belief is that bad stuff happens, and you need to own it. Digital Ocean definitely did not own it in this case. I wonder how the original founders of Digital Ocean would have reacted had they been in charge… For example, wouldn’t it be nice if an actual human… […]
  • Where uncertainty exists, don’t order specific.
    4 Idiot Case Studies with 2 simple age-old business lessons. The post Where uncertainty exists, don’t order specific. appeared first on Toby Cryns, WordPress Trainer in Minneapolis, MN.
  • “Now THAT was a good meeting!”
    A single effective meeting can change the course of history for a company. Imagine if you could lead effective meetings EVERY DAY! You can, but it takes curiosity & practice. This article is a good place to start your journey to a more effective you. The post “Now THAT was a good meeting!” appeared first […]