After WordPress is installed, the site is not automatically ready to launch. You still need to check the basic settings, security habits, theme, plugins, pages, forms, backups, SSL, and search visibility.
This first setup pass can prevent common problems later, especially if the site belongs to a business and customers will use it to contact you, book, buy, or request a quote.
Confirm the Site Opens Correctly
Start by opening the public website and the WordPress dashboard.
Check:
- The domain loads the WordPress site
- The
wwwversion works if you plan to use it - HTTPS works
- The dashboard login works
- The admin email address is correct
- The site is installed in the right location
If WordPress appears in a subfolder by mistake, fix that before building the full site.
Update General Settings
In WordPress, go to Settings and review the basics.
Check:
- Site title
- Tagline
- Admin email address
- Time zone
- Date format
- Site language
- User registration settings
- Default new user role
Do not allow public user registration unless your site actually needs it. If registration is open, review the default role carefully.
Set the Homepage
Many business websites use a fixed homepage rather than a feed of latest posts.
In Settings > Reading, choose whether the homepage should show latest posts or a static page. If you use a static page, choose the homepage and, if needed, a separate posts page.
This setting affects what visitors see when they visit your main domain.
Check Permalinks
Permalinks control the URL format for posts and pages.
For most small business websites, readable page URLs are easier to share and understand than URLs full of numbers or query strings.
Choose a permalink structure early. Changing URLs later may require redirects so visitors and search engines can still find moved pages.
Tech Help Canada’s basics of website URLs resource can help you understand how page addresses affect a site.
Choose a Theme Carefully
Your theme affects layout, design options, templates, and sometimes performance.
Before committing to a theme, check:
- Mobile layout
- Page speed
- Editing experience
- Compatibility with the current WordPress version
- Reviews and update history
- Whether it adds features you do not need
- Whether it works with your planned plugins
Do not install several themes and leave them active or neglected. Keep the active theme and a default fallback theme, then remove unused themes when you are sure you do not need them.
Add Plugins Slowly
Plugins add features, but they can also slow down or break a site if you install too many or choose poorly maintained ones.
Start with only the plugins the site needs for launch.
Common plugin categories include:
- Forms
- SEO
- Security
- Backups
- Caching
- Analytics
- Ecommerce
- Spam protection
After adding a plugin, test the site before adding the next one.
Set Up Backups
Take a backup before major edits, plugin installs, theme changes, migrations, or updates. A WordPress site usually needs both files and database content backed up.
Backups are especially useful before launch because early site-building involves many changes.
Review Security Basics
At minimum:
- Use strong passwords
- Remove unused admin accounts
- Give each person their own user account
- Use the lowest role that fits the job
- Keep WordPress, themes, and plugins updated
- Delete unused plugins and themes
- Use SSL
- Keep backups current
If someone only needs to write posts, they usually do not need administrator access.
Build the Core Pages
Most small business websites need:
- Home
- About
- Services or products
- Contact
- Privacy policy
- Location or service area pages, if relevant
- Blog or resources, if part of the plan
Test the navigation after creating pages. Make sure visitors can reach the main actions without hunting.
Test Before Launch
Before sharing the site publicly, test:
- Forms
- Buttons
- Phone links
- Email links
- Mobile layout
- SSL
- Page titles
- Menus
- Footer links
- Search visibility
Tech Help Canada’s on-page SEO checklist can help you review titles, headings, internal links, and page structure before launch.
If you want a backup option for your WordPress website, you can explore Website Backup through Tech Help Canada Hosting.

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