About Us
WP Recovery Lab publishes practical content around WordPress incident response, plugin conflict recovery, safe update routines, and operational repair workflows. The site is written for site owners, freelance maintainers, and agencies that need calmer WordPress fixes without vague checklist spam, and every page is built to solve a clear search need with fast-loading static files and readable structure.
Effective date: May 15, 2026. We keep the site focused on Incidents, Plugins, Performance, and Maintenance so readers and crawlers can understand the publication scope quickly.
What we publish
Our editorial scope is intentionally narrow enough to stay useful. We cover topics that sit close to real search intent, buyer decisions, recurring problems, or skill development questions. That means fewer empty listicles and more pages with clear headings, grounded checklists, and realistic next steps.
We also structure the site for direct deployment. Each page is plain HTML, CSS, and JavaScript, which keeps maintenance simple and allows fast hosting through a standard Nginx setup.
Editorial standards
We write in American English, use concise sections, and keep our guidance practical. Articles are built around primary keywords plus supporting long-tail phrases, but they are still written to be readable first. We avoid filler introductions, hidden pagination, and distracting layouts that slow down decision-making.
Before a guide goes live, we check that the page answers a specific user problem, includes helpful internal links, and supports a mobile reading flow. That approach makes the content more trustworthy and far easier to monetize cleanly through contextual ads.
How we review content
- We keep Incidents, Plugins, Performance, and Maintenance split across core, fix, comparison, trust, and asset lanes so search intent stays clear.
- Trust and methodology pages explain how operational claims are reviewed before a recommendation expands.
- Commercial placements never replace the main runbook step, comparison framing, or recovery warning.
How monetization works
This site reserves inventory for Google AdSense and similar contextual ad programs. Advertising helps fund research, writing, updates, and hosting. Ad placement does not change our editorial process, and pages are structured so promotional space stays visually separate from the main advice.
Where useful, we may also test other compliant display or affiliate arrangements in the future. If monetization expands, the page structure and disclosures will continue to distinguish advertising from editorial content.
Contact
If you need to reach the editorial team, use editor@wpguide.xyz. This site does not offer user accounts, private dashboards, or paid member access.