We have services for Topeka based website owners offering WordPress Maintenance to individuals, small businesses, medium size businesses, and large corporations. Our team of experienced WordPress developers can keep your WordPress installation, plugins and themes all up to date on a monthly basis. We believe that the most important part of creating a secure online presence in Topeka Kansas is making sure your website has the highest levels of security, with maintaining security updates.
We provide comprehensive WordPress maintenance solutions, to help ensure your WordPress website always up to date. Our Topeka team members have expertise in web hosting, malware protection, vulnerability scanning and malware removal.
Industry standard WordPress hardening and our special security features as a bonus.
Setup an automated backup system for a fail safe version of your WordPress installation.
Monthly WordPress core and Plugin updates, with human inspection afterwards.
Up time monitoring that notifies our team to detect any server issues.
WordPress Maintenance Services in Topeka Kansas
Our maintenance and support services include:
The term "Managed WordPress" is misleading, they do not actually manage your WordPress. They do not update WordPress core, WordPress plugins or WordPress themes. They only thing that is managed is the server operating system. It's not really any different than a standard hosting plan. Only you are paying a premium for a fancy term, "Managed WordPress". Our services is the real managed WordPress, as we keep everything up to date on a continuous basis, ensuring all security patches are installed. We also use real humans for updating and inspecting your website to make sure nothing breaks. There are some automated update services but they use robots and could care less if your website breaks after an update.
With our Topeka, KS team the initial setup takes 24 hours, which includes creating a back up system on your server (where applicable), updating WordPress Core, WordPress Plugins and WordPress Themes. Afterwards we look over the website manually to ensure nothing has broken. Moving forward updates and inspection is done routinely on a monthly basis.
The internet is a vulnerable and insecure place, there is never a guarantee that your website won't be compromised at some point in time. Even big companies that have very intelligent cyber security professionals get compromised from time to time. Our service is for mitigating risk by keeping your site up to date with “known” patches. As well as implementing best security practices to minimize your risk. With our monthly maintenance plan if in the rare case your site does get infected with malware we will remove it for free! (with the stipulation that you are following our recommended strong password policy)
Topeka ( tə-PEE-kə; Kansa: tó ppí kʼé; Iowa-Oto: Dópikˀe or Dópiúkˀe) is the capital city of the U.S. state of Kansas and the seat of Shawnee County. It is along the Kansas River in the central part of Shawnee County, in northeast Kansas, in the Central United States. As of the 2020 census, the population of the city was 126,587. The Topeka metropolitan statistical area, which includes Shawnee, Jackson, Jefferson, Osage, and Wabaunsee Counties, had a population of 233,870 in the 2010 census. The name "Topeka" is a Kansa-Osage word that means "place where we dig potatoes", or "a good place to dig potatoes". As a placename, Topeka was first recorded in 1826 as the Kansa name for what is now called the Kansas River. Topeka's founders chose the name in 1855 because it "was novel, of Indian origin, and euphonious of sound." Mixed-blood Kansa Native American, Joseph James, called Jojim, is credited with suggesting Topeka's name. The city, laid out in 1854, was one of the Free-State towns founded by Eastern antislavery men immediately after the passage of the Kansas–Nebraska Bill. In 1857, Topeka was chartered as a city. The city is well known for the landmark U.S. Supreme Court case Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, which overturned Plessy vs. Ferguson and declared racial segregation in public schools to be unconstitutional.