WP6 – WordPress Maintenance
A site can function well today and still become fragile over time without any dramatic visible event. Old plugins, abandoned themes, doubtful backups, inflated media libraries, badly managed permissions, or small errors…
WordPress is a content management system or CMS (Content Management System) used to create and manage websites. It was launched in 2003 as a blogging platform and has become one of the most popular content management systems in the world.
WordPress offers a wide variety of features and tools to customize and optimize websites, making it ideal for a wide range of users and needs.
A site can function well today and still become fragile over time without any dramatic visible event. Old plugins, abandoned themes, doubtful backups, inflated media libraries, badly managed permissions, or small errors…
The problem is that the conversation often starts too late. People move immediately to keywords, plugins, or search results, but leave for later something far more important: site architecture. In WordPress that matters…
Once a site has moved beyond installation and already has content, users, or important pages, customization stops being cosmetic. At that point a theme defines more than colors or typography. It also shapes templates…
Every time someone publishes in WordPress, they are affecting more than the text itself. They are touching hierarchy, navigation, taxonomies, internal links, archives, media, and the site’s long-term maintainability….
The first important decision is not automatic or manual. The first important decision is where the site will live and under which conditions. Hosting, PHP version, database access, backup policy, staging availability…
The main reason WordPress gained so much ground is quite concrete: it reduced the friction of publishing and maintaining sites. Pages, posts, users, media, menus, templates, and extensions can all be organized inside one…