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Mike
Check WordPress Health – 10 Things
Check Your WordPress Health – 10 Things You Must Do Now
It is January 2015. The beginning of the new year. Lots of ideas. Goals. Plans.
And for those in the United States, it is probably time to get out of the house and start working off some of the
wonderful food that we have been enjoying over the holiday season.
And while goal planning is essential to your online business, here are a few practical tips to make sure your virtual
empire of sites are humming along smoothly.
This is a good way to start off the new year – that all your WordPress sites software is up to date, the sites are backed
up on a regular basis, you are tracking visitors and sales, and each site is humming along smoothly.
We want to check the health of our WordPress sites.
10 Things to Do Today to Check Your WordPress Health
Before you log into each website, we are first going to do an overview of your websites. Take note of things to get done
which you can pass on to your tech people.
1. Review the Status of Your Domain Names
Sometimes domain names expire or are about to expire, and we forgot to set up auto renew, or an old credit card was
used. What ever the reason, don’t let a great domain name and great website slip away.
Go to your domain name registrars, login and do a quick check to see if you have missed anything.
2. 2. Google Analytics Reports
Log into your Google Analytics and look at the upper level reports for each website. Don’t go too far down into the
rabbit hole and start looking at keywords, and visitor demographics.
What you want to know, is Google Analytics collecting visitor data from your websites? Sometimes because of plugin
updates or WordPress theme updates, GA gets disconnected from your website, and tracking stops.
So check this and make notes if there is something that appears to be broken.
3. WHM/Cpanel Overview
From your reseller or VPS login, go to your WHM panel, and then to each cPanel for each domain and do a quick
overview.
You are looking for overall signs of health and activity. We are just trying to check WordPress health, and don’t want to
get bogged down into the details.
Look at the statistics for bandwidth and disk usage. All within the limits you set up when you set up the domain?
Good.
As a side note, if you are using a shared hosting account to host all your domains, and you are not using a reseller or
VPS for your many niche sites, then you are asking for trouble.
Now Log Into Each WordPress Website
We are going to take a deeper dive, and look at each website’s health from a WordPress perspective.
4. Backup Software Installed and Working?
Imperative! Before doing ANY updates to your website, backup your website. You should be backing up off-site, off
your server to either Dropbox or Amazon S3. Dropbox is free and Amazon S3 is super cheap, really cheap.
Backup your website before upgrading plugins.
Backup your website before upgrading themes or theme frameworks.
Backup your website before upgrading WordPress.
I use both Backup Creator and WPTwin, and back up my sites on at LEAST a weekly basis to my Amazon S3 account.
And this is done automatically.
5. Check for Plugin Updates
Check for any needed updates on your plugins. You should be running a plugin such as WordFence that will alert you
when a plugin needs updating.
Older plugins may pose a security risk to your website. Keep your WordPress website running smoothly and keep
those plugins updated.
What plugins do you have? Do you have the right security plugins and other plugins necessary for niche/business
sites? I recommend Top 20 WordPress Plugins for Business training by Connie Ragen Green and Adrienne
Dupree which shows you twenty of the free WordPress plugins indispensable to building your business.
4. You do not need a date. That is just my opinion.
But I am not an attorney. If this really bugs you, then get legal advice from an attorney that specializes in copyright law
and follow their advice.
9. Approve or Delete Comments
Hopefully your WordPress niche blog is not only getting traffic, but comments from folks. Be sure to approve
comments from real live people.
This shows to your other human visitors and to search engine robots that you have an active and healthy website.
Just a side note – even you you don’t like the comment or appreciate it, approve anyway. Other folks will come to
your rescue and reply back and support you.
You might start a lively conversation, which leads to engaged readers which leads to more traffic.
10. Check Your Money Links
Quickly go through your website and click on your money links and make sure these work.
Money links are your links in the website to products, either your own products or products that you are an affiliate for.
Why do this?
Sometimes vendors drop support for a product and take it off the market place.
If you are using Amazon affiliate program, and you are linking to specific merchandise, those items change. Just make
sure that you are sending your traffic to where you want them to go.
Health Checklist for Your WordPress Sites
Here again is a quick summary of the 10 things you should do at the start of the new year, to keep your niche empire of
WordPress sites running happy and smoothly.
1. Review the Status of Your Domain Names
2. Google Analytics Reports
3. WHM/Cpanel Overview
4. Backup Software Installed and Working?
5. Check for Plugin Updates
6. Check for Theme Updates
7. Check for WordPress Update
8. Check for Up to Date Contact Information
9. Approve or Delete Comments
10. Check Your Money Links
Resources Mentioned in this Blog Post
Dropbox – Store your important stuff in the Cloud. Great for sending website backups to. Also great for sharing
information between teams. I have Google Drive and use it for other things. For teams and for sharing and easy