Protecting your investment is just good business. Following best practices around backing up your website’s data and a good website security plan are your best defense against expensive offline or down time.
Consistency and trust are big features in technology’s system of values. You want to be there when a potential customer comes looking for you, and they should trust and feel secure navigating around your site.
There are some simple basics to keep in mind – never use admin or info as part of your log-in protocol, for example. Other precautions might require a bit more planning.
Don’t ever work on your live site. Separate out your development site from your main site in order to test new material, or when fixing glitches. Figure out a backup solution – either cloud storage or another server somewhere.
If you are using a CRM such as Wordpress, there are ways to schedule automatic backups of your content. This is usually triggered by a plug-in that will itself need to be updated from time to time.
It’s important to have a security plan in place because sites do get hacked or attacked (or in a best scenario, overloaded with traffic from an overly successful promotion), it can bring your site down. Having your site go down is already a headache, but if your customers see this, it may raise questions in their mind about security. They could lose faith in your site and your product – and the trickle down from that is you can lose customers. For a high profile client doing e-commerce that would be very bad.
For more, read parts 1 and 2 of this series.
Contact us to see what we can do for your website security.