The Complete Guide: What to Do When You Part Ways

Whether it’s a clean breakup or a digital divorce, you need control. Period.

If you don’t own the assets, you don’t own the business.

Let’s break this into 3 phases:

  1. Before the separation
  2. During the transition
  3. After they’re gone

PHASE 1: Before You Announce Anything

Do NOT emotionally fire them. Secure assets first. Then talk.

1. Make Sure You Own These Assets

You must have direct access (not “they’ll send it later” access):

Domain Name

– Login to registrar (GoDaddy, Namecheap, etc.)

– Make sure it’s registered in YOUR name

– Check expiration date

– Enable 2FA

If your developer registered it under their email?

🚨 Fix that immediately.

Hosting Account

– Direct login access

– Billing under your company

– SSH / cPanel / server access if needed

– Backups enabled

If hosting is under their account:

– Either transfer hosting

– Or prepare to migrate before you terminate

Website Files & Database

Full backup of:

– Website files

– Database

– Media

If WordPress:

– full backup + admin login

Never rely on “we have backups.” Download your own copy.

CMS & Admin Access

You need:

– WordPress admin

– Shopify admin

– Webflow owner access

– GA4 admin

– Google Search Console owner

– Google Tag Manager

– Google Business Profile

– Facebook Business Manager

– HubSpot admin

– Email marketing platform access

If they are “primary owner” anywhere?
Transfer ownership before ending the contract.

PHASE 2: During the Transition

Now you’re ready to talk. Keep it professional. Keep it documented.

1. Send a Clear Written Notice

Include:

– Final working date

– Request for handover

– Assets to be delivered

– Ongoing tasks to pause

No emotional language. Just business.

2. Request a Formal Handover Package

For Web Designers/Developers, you need:

– Final backup

– Documentation of custom code

– Plugin list

– Theme license details

– API keys used

– Server configuration notes

– SSL info

– CDN setup info

For SEO Companies, you need:

– Keyword research files

– Backlink reports

– List of built links

– Content plan documents

– Ranking reports

– Technical audit results

– Disavow files

– Access to SEO tools used (if paid under your account)

If they built backlinks? You need a full list. Period.

3. Change Passwords Immediately After Separation

All of them.

– Hosting

– CMS

– Admin emails

– Analytics

– Social media

– CRM

– FTP

– Database

– CDN

And enable 2FA everywhere. No exceptions.

PHASE 3: After They’re Gone

This is where most businesses relax.

Don’t.

This is where hidden damage appears.

1. Audit the Website Immediately

Check for:

– Malware

– Hidden links

– Hidden users in WordPress

– Expired licenses

– Hardcoded tracking codes

– Suspicious redirects

– Hidden backlinks

Some agencies insert backlinks into footer files. Run:

– Google Search Console coverage report

– Site:yourdomain.com search

– Crawl with Screaming Frog (if possible)

2. SEO Risk Check

If you parted ways with an SEO company, check:

– Were backlinks spammy?

– Any manual penalties?

– Traffic drop?

– Over-optimized anchor text?

If they used PBNs and those die later?
You’ll feel it.

Pull a fresh backlink profile from:

– Ahrefs

– Semrush

– Majestic

Compare anchor text distribution.

3. Verify Ownership Everywhere

Double-check, you are the OWNER — not just admin — in:

– GA4

– GSC

– Business Manager

– Hosting

– Domain registrar

Ownership is power. Admin is temporary.

Common Pitfalls (This Is Where Businesses Get Burned)

Let’s be blunt.

❌ Pitfall 1: They Registered the Domain

Fix immediately.

❌ Pitfall 2: Proprietary Website Builder

If they built your site on a locked custom system?
You may not be able to move it.

Always ask:
“Can I migrate this site anywhere?”

❌ Pitfall 3: License Blackmail

Some developers use:

– Premium themes

– Paid plugins

– Custom licenses

When you leave, the license expires.

Clarify which licenses you own.

❌ Pitfall 4: SEO Link Bomb

Some unethical agencies build links they control.
If you leave, they remove them.

Sudden ranking drop.

Solution:
Always diversify backlink sources.

❌ Pitfall 5: No Documentation

If your new developer says:
“Who built this?”

And no one knows?

You’re in technical debt territory.

What You Should Always Have (Even Before Hiring Anyone)

Forward-thinking move here:

Create a Digital Asset Control Document.

Include:

– Domain registrar login

– Hosting provider

– DNS provider

– CMS login

– Analytics access

– Social media ownership

– CRM access

– Email platform

– CDN

– SSL provider

– Paid subscriptions

Keep it updated quarterly.

How to Make a Clean Transition

Best practice:

  1. Hire the new provider first
  2. Let them audit
  3. Then terminate the old provider
  4. Migrate cleanly
  5. Monitor traffic daily for 30 days

Never create a gap where no one is responsible.

Legal & Contract Considerations

Review:

– Notice period

– Ownership clauses

– IP ownership

– Content ownership

– Termination penalties

– Non-compete clauses

If they created content: Make sure contract states it belongs to you.

If not? That’s a legal gray area.

Final Advice (This Is the CEO Mindset)

Your website is not a design project. It’s a revenue asset. You wouldn’t let someone register your warehouse in their name. So don’t let someone register your domain in theirs.

– Stay in control.

– Document everything.

– Own every login.

– Audit regularly.

And here’s the honest truth:

If an agency resists giving you ownership access?
That’s already your red flag.