Many WordPress sites load more code than they need to.
Minifying CSS and JS can reduce file sizes and improve speed.
Have you tested the impact on your site?
https://t.co/9whDzzwlcj
#WordPress#WebsiteSpeed
CORS errors can quietly break forms, APIs, and scripts while the site still looks “fine”.
Often frustrating to diagnose.
What caused the last CORS issue you dealt with?
https://t.co/xN7LWYtFhW
#WordPress#WebDevelopment
A 502 Bad Gateway error can take a WordPress site offline instantly.
Plugins, caching, hosting, and server overload can all cause it.
What has caused the most 502 errors for you?
https://t.co/LuZDhG1jnA
#WordPress#WebsiteSupport
WordPress email issues often go unnoticed.
Missed contact forms and failed notifications can quietly cost business.
Do you test your site emails regularly?
https://t.co/kzmfRR9lkI
#WordPress#WebsiteSupport
Large unoptimised images quietly hurt SEO and slow websites down.
Alt text and file size matter more than most people think.
Do you optimise before uploading?
https://t.co/6DLY4XvJyk
#WordPress#SEO
Editing theme files directly can break your site or wipe changes on update.
Safer methods keep control without the risk.
Have you been caught out before?
https://t.co/txYl61IXvN
#WordPress#WebDevelopment
Unused plugins are not harmless.
They can create security risks and slow your site down.
Do you delete them or just deactivate them?
https://t.co/o71iEIsXVg
#WordPress#WebsiteSecurity
WordPress revisions are useful but too many can bloat your database.
They also increase backup size.
Do you limit revisions or leave them unlimited?
https://t.co/2AFCXSx9Zo
#WordPress#WebsiteMaintenance
Your WordPress media library fills up fast.
Unused images and duplicates can slow things down.
Have you cleaned yours recently?
https://t.co/gEucKAMbDL
#WordPress#WebsiteMaintenance
Mixed content errors happen when HTTPS pages load HTTP assets.
They can break layouts and trigger warnings.
Have you run into this before?
https://t.co/76C9tud56x
#WordPress#WebsiteSecurity
A bloated WordPress database can slow your site down.
Revisions, spam, and old data add up.
Have you cleaned yours recently?
https://t.co/FiovsnLE0X
#WordPress#WebsiteSpeed
A CDN speeds up WordPress by serving content from servers closer to visitors.
Often one of the fastest performance wins.
Do you use one?
https://t.co/NA7qowZpnJ
#WordPress#WebsiteSpeed
Slow WordPress sites usually suffer from small issues that add up.
Images, caching, plugins, hosting.
Which one has caused you the biggest slowdown?
https://t.co/EZof8yeo0y
#WordPress#WebsiteSpeed
If search engines cannot find your pages, they cannot rank them.
An XML sitemap acts as a roadmap.
Have you checked yours recently?
https://t.co/C8J2nHKPsY
#WordPress#SEO
Plugin updates can sometimes break sites.
Knowing how to safely roll back saves time and stress.
Have you ever had to undo an update?
https://t.co/lLhUfyZTZo
#WordPress#WebsiteMaintenance
Many site owners assume backups exist until something breaks.
Automated backups are your safety net.
Do you know when your last backup ran?
https://t.co/qcFa1IUGQx
#WordPress#WebsiteSecurity
WordPress updates protect your site but rushed updates can break it.
Backups and safe testing matter.
Have you ever had an update go wrong?
https://t.co/9I76wHr2Ku
#WordPress#WebsiteMaintenance
Many slow WordPress sites just lack proper caching.
It is one of the highest impact speed fixes you can make.
Have you set up caching or are you relying on defaults?
https://t.co/xistIOXO8u
#WordPress#WebsiteSpeed
DNS propagation can make a working site look broken.
Different visitors see different versions during updates.
Have you been caught out by this before?
https://t.co/jWNqvuWeOF
#WordPress#DNS
If your website goes offline, how would you know?
Many site owners only find out after lost leads or angry emails.
Do you actively monitor uptime or rely on luck?
https://t.co/jd3rpEAf3k
#WordPress#WebsiteUptime