If you’re running a WordPress site, at some point you may want to temporarily disable user registration — perhaps to stop spam sign-ups, prepare for a launch, restrict access until you’re ready, or simply maintain tighter control over user creation....
Welcome to our comprehensive guide on securing your WordPress website by enabling two-factor authentication (2FA). If you run a site on WordPress (whether a personal blog, business site, membership portal or e-commerce store), this is one of the best security...
If you’ve ever logged into your WordPress site (or visited it as a user) only to be greeted with the dreaded message: “Briefly unavailable for scheduled maintenance. Check back in a minute.”…then you know how frustrating it can be. The...
If you run a WordPress site—whether it’s a blog, an online store, or a fully fledged application—then the database is one of the most important pieces of the puzzle. It holds your posts, pages, users, settings and more. So when...
If you’re using WordPress to power your site, you already have a strong foundation for SEO — but that doesn’t mean your on-page SEO is perfect. Many WordPress users still make avoidable mistakes that hold back traffic, engagement and conversions....
Optimising images in WordPress is one of the most effective “quick win” strategies you can use to boost site speed, improve user experience, enhance SEO and drive higher conversions — all without compromising on image quality. In this guide you’ll...
Keeping a WordPress website healthy is not a “set-it-and-forget-it” task. Just like maintaining a car or a house, a WordPress site requires consistent upkeep. If you’re serious about performance, security, SEO and conversion optimisation, you need a robust maintenance process...
When you migrate your WordPress site from HTTP to HTTPS (or enable SSL), one of the most common headaches is the dreaded Mixed Content Error. Your site is supposed to be fully secure, yet some assets (images, scripts, stylesheets, iframes)...
When a WordPress site shows an error like: Fatal error: Allowed memory size of 67108864 bytes exhausted (tried to allocate 2359296 bytes) in /path/to/file.php on line 123 … it’s a frustrating indicator that your site ran out of PHP memory....
If you’re still running your WordPress site on HTTP, you’re not just behind — you’re at risk. Modern browsers mark non-HTTPS sites as “Not Secure,” scaring visitors away and hurting your SEO. But switching to HTTPS isn’t as simple as...