Services

Hosting & releases

Hosting fit, staging discipline, and calm releases—so launches and campaigns do not become all-night war rooms.

Server and release checklist on screen

Infrastructure choices and release ops

We advise on hosting fit for WordPress—dedicated, managed, or cloud—and run the release process your editors and developers rely on.

Staging mirrors production constraints, checklists cover cache, redirects, and search indexing, and rollback paths exist before DNS changes. We stay involved through high-risk windows when the brief includes launch support.

Hosting that matches traffic

We recommend providers and tiers based on geography, traffic spikes, and editorial concurrency—not affiliate deals.

Object cache, PHP workers, and database sizing are part of the conversation early.

Staging and promotion

Content and code move through environments with clear promotion rules.

We resist the pattern where editors test on a staging URL that shares nothing with production caching behaviour.

Release checklists

Pre-launch checks cover redirects, sitemaps, analytics, forms, and payment flows.

Campaign launches get a lighter checklist that still catches cache and tracking mistakes.

How we deliver

What you get on every engagement

Hosting and release work includes documentation, DNS cutover support, and post-launch monitoring.

Dedicated and email infrastructure

We configure application servers alongside SMTP, SPF, and DKIM so transactional mail delivers.

News publishers and registration flows are common beneficiaries of this work.

CDN and SSL alignment

TLS, HTTP/2, and CDN rules are verified before and after migration.

We catch mixed-content and stale asset URLs that only appear under production hostnames.

Hypercare windows

We monitor priority URLs and error logs during the first hours and days after go-live.

Issues are triaged with the same team that built the site—not a separate NOC reading a runbook cold.

Work with us

Send your URL. Get the plan.

We reply with a prioritized technical backlog — performance, stability, and conversion friction called out explicitly.