How to Monitor the Uptime of a WordPress Website

• 9 minutes READ

Technology advances in the blink of an eye, and no single programming language or software will be suitable for every job. Having said this, WordPress does make building websites and web apps easy and almost free!

While some people believe that WordPress isn’t powerful enough for building websites or web apps, it is possible to build scalable websites and applications. Thousands of plugins and themes online are available to enable you to start creating your website, depending on your project requirement.

Developing a WordPress website may seem easy at first but maintenance can be complex. If you are not sure what needs to be done to maintain a WordPress website or maintain efficiency to keep it updated, safe and secure, then it can be intimidating.

Even with necessary precautions to maintain and make your WordPress website safe and secure, your website can still go down for reasons beyond your control. Downtime of a website could cost you potential customers, visitors, and money. When this happens, you need to be always informed and prepared to quickly put things back in order and notify your website’s potential customers, visitors, and even your team for outages and incidents.

Why Do You Need to Monitor WordPress Uptime?

Uptime monitoring is the process of checking your website’s availability, including server response time in a publicly or privately accessible manner. Uptime monitoring provides an overview of your website and domain availability history and performance metrics which sometimes include country and region server monitoring. It may also have an alert feature that will notify you or your team about your website’s problem as soon as it occurs via several technology mediums or tools.

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Some benefits of uptime monitoring include:

  • Test website and server performance from multiple locations.
  • Receive alerts when a problem with your website occurs.
  • Get an overview of your website’s uptime and downtime history.
  • Solve your website’s issues as quickly as possible.
  • Avoid losing potential customers or website visitors.
  • Show status pages to your visitors.

The goal of every website server is always to get 100% uptime which is unattainable most of the time, but 99.999% (also known as “five-nines availability”) of uptime is considered the industry standard if you want your website to rank higher on search engines.

There are various tools, platforms, and services available online that you can use to monitor the uptime of your website. In this tutorial, we will use Pulsetic to monitor WordPress website uptime.

Pulsetic is an uptime monitoring service platform that allows users to manage incident reports by giving downtime alerts via phone call, SMS, email, or Slack when a user’s website is down. It comes with four pricing plans which can be subscribed to monthly or annually.

G2 reviewers have awarded Pulsetic an impressive 4.8-star rating, highlighting its standout performance in comparison to its competitors.

Pulsetic monitors from more data centers around the globe to guarantee redundancy and localize outages as it shows you in which part of the world your website is down or slow. The best thing about Pulsetic is that it sends users an alert notification via email, SMS, and Slack, where users can access the uptime monitoring metrics to learn more about your website’s uptime performance.

Install a WordPress Theme

Assuming that we already have a fresh installation of WordPress at our disposal, let’s first choose a WordPress theme that we will use in our demo. Please refer to my previous tutorial if you need a guide on installing a WordPress theme using Softaculous Cpanel Software.

When choosing a WordPress theme, selecting a Gutenberg-ready theme is crucial. In this tutorial, we will use Blocksy, the most innovative, lightning-fast, and supercharged Gutenberg-ready WordPress theme.

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How to Monitor the Uptime of WordPress Website

Blocksy is faster and lightweight than most similar WordPress themes. It  is packed with dozens of cool key features inside, including:

  • Lightning Fast. It feels fast, and numbers confirm that it is ranked high in most speed testing platforms.
  • Gutenberg Ready. Made compatible with the Gutenberg editor and blocks.
  • Code Splitting. Load JavaScript behavior when you need it using webpack’s support for dynamic imports.
  • eCommerce Ready. Quickly develop and customize your online store in a  few minutes.
  • Translation Ready. Ready to be translated into any language with the hardcoded strings.
  • Clean Code. Every line of code is thoughtfully written and open for changes and new features.
  • Live Preview. Customizer changes are synced in real-time in the preview window without slowing your workflow.
  • Fully Responsive. Preserve the user experience and layout across all modern devices, especially on mobile.

To add the Blocksy WordPress theme, head to your WordPress login URL and log in using your username and password.

Once logged into the WordPress Dashboard, click on “Appearance” followed by “Themes” located on the left menu panel. Afterward, click on the “Add New” button, as seen in the image below.

Installing a WordPress Theme

Next, search for “Blocksy” and it will return the Blocksy WordPress theme on the search result as seen in the image below.

Blocksy

From here, hover your mouse on the Blocksy WordPress Theme search result and click on the “Install” button. Next, click on the “Activate” button to activate the theme.

Blocksy WordPress Theme

At this point, the Blocksy WordPress Theme is already installed. The next step is to activate Blocksy Companion to select our preferred design for our WordPress website. Click on the “Activate Blocksy Companion” button and it will install the companion settings of the theme, as seen in the image below.

Blocksy Companion

After installing the companion settings, go to the Blocksy WordPress Theme Dashboard and click on the “Starter Sites” Tab. We can choose the look and feel we prefer for our WordPress website on this tab.

Starter Sites

In this tutorial, let’s use the “Persona” theme, which can be found in the middle part of the first row of the theme’s list. To install this theme, click on the “Import” button, and it will start prompting a few questions about the import, such as if you want to install it as a child theme, including the plugins and widgets that you want to install that comes with the theme design.

A new modal window will then pop out on the screen; click on the “Next” button until the “Install” button appears, and we are good to go.

Next button
Install theme

Once the installation is complete, visit our homepage URL to see the look and feel of our chosen theme. Please feel free to customize the content as you may like, but this should work for the sake of our demo.

Create a Pulsetic Account

We need to create a free account before adding our website to the Pulsetic dashboard. To do this, go to https://pulsetic.com/ and click on the “Signup” button on the upper right corner of the homepage and we will be redirected to the signup page.

Creating a Pulsetic Account

Next, fill in the signup form.

Note: You need to verify your email at sign up.

Verify Email Pulsetic

After your email verification process, we will see the dashboard.

Add WordPress Website to Pulsetic Monitors List

Now it’s time to add our WordPress website to Pulsetic’s Monitors List. From the Monitors Dashboard, enter the website URL and click on the “Add Monitor” button located in the upper right corner of the screen, as seen in the image below.

Adding our WordPress Website to Pulsetic’s Monitors List

Once Pulsetic has verified our WordPress website, we will see our website on the Monitors list.

Alert Notifications & Uptime/Downtime Overview

Now that our WordPress website is added to the Monitors List, we will start receiving emails about our website’s uptime and downtime similar to the images below.

Alert notifications & Uptime/Downtime Overview
WordPress Uptime

If you click on the “Open your dashboard” button, it will redirect you to the Pulsetic’s Monitor Overview, similar to the image below.

Note: By default, Pulsetic will monitor your website every one minute. You can customize this under “Advanced Settings.” More on this later.

Advanced Settings

As you can see on the image above, the “Overview” tab provides a history of our website’s uptime and downtimes along with some other information, including accessibility information, performance details on both mobile and desktop, SSL certificate, and more.

By default, you will only receive alert notifications via email. Suppose you want to receive alerts via SMS/Calls, Slack, Telegram, Twilio SMS, Twilio Voice, Webhook, or SIGNL4. In that case, you can configure the settings by clicking on the “Alerts” tab on the Monitors Dashboard.

Alerts

Keep in mind that each platform might require some specific setup as needed.

Advanced Settings

Under the “Advanced Settings” tab, there are three tabs that you can customize according to your needs:

  • General Settings
  • Request Settings
  • Response Settings

Under “General Settings,” you can customize the URL, Name, and Request frequency of your website being monitored. Under these settings, you can also change the check frequency related to how often you want to receive alert notifications, which can be 1 minute, 5 minutes, 10 minutes, 15 minutes, 30 minutes, or 1 hour.

Advanced Settings

Under “Request Settings,” you can customize the method and request body type under “Request Settings,” including the HTTP headers whenever the platform is making the request. If you are not sure how these settings work, I’ll recommend leaving these settings as they are.

Response Settings

Under “Response Settings“, you can customize the response text, headers, and test under ” Response Settings “. Instead of receiving default response settings from Pulsetic, you can use these settings to control the response from the platform. Again, if you are not sure how these settings work, I recommend leaving them as they are.

Response Settings

Locations

With Pulsetic, you can get an overview of your website’s uptime and downtime in specific locations or countries. Under the “Locations” tab, you will see this information and settings. You can enable or disable each location where you want your website to be checked. The best part of this tab is that it provides users the uptime percentage, response time, the last time and date checked, and a location map with the specific IP address on each country.

Locations

Failed Checks

Pulsetic also provides an overview of failed check occurrences, including information about the date, response code, request time, and location when or where the platform was unable to receive any feedback from your website. This information can be found under the “Failed Checks” tab.

Failed Checks

Last, if you wish to directly access these settings on a specific website that was added on the Pulsetic’s Monitors List, click on the three dots icon on the right corner of the website URL you wish to select and then click on the specific action you wish to do as seen in the image below.

Dropdown settings

Wrapping Up

Website downtime can be expensive in terms of website revenue, search engine ranking, and branding. Reliability and consistent presence on the web are vital for any online business. That’s why Website uptime monitoring is such a tedious process. While there are many reasons for a website to go down, monitoring uptime and timely alerts will minimize the potential costly downtime.

In this tutorial, we’re able to discuss how Pulsetic can help you as a website owner or developer monitor your WordPress website’s uptime and downtime in a series of simple steps. Pulsetic is one of the great uptime monitoring services, which provides you with uptime/downtime overview, performance metrics, and incident management reports by giving you downtime alerts by phone call, SMS, email, or Slack when your website is down. The best feature is that it offers many customizable settings according to your website need or configuration.

Sam Norton

Sam is an expert Full Stack Developer who loves making digital solutions that are meaningful and new. Sam is an expert in web design and development. He uses his knowledge of HTML/CSS, JavaScript, jQuery, Ruby, Ruby on Rails, WordPress, Node.js, React, Express.js, Gatsby.js, GraphQL, and Strapi.js to make custom websites that reflect clients' unique brands and serve their business niches. Committed to staying ahead of the curve, Sam harnesses the power of the latest technologies, CMS, and platforms to build cutting-edge websites that outperform competitors.

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