Working With Goto I.T.

A SIMPLE PLAN TO KEEP YOUR WEBSITE WORKING.

Why websites now require ongoing maintenance

Websites used to be built once and left alone. Today they behave more like software — and software needs periodic upkeep to stay reliable.

Most websites don’t fail gradually — they fail suddenly after an update or security change.
WHY MAINTENANCE MATTERS NOW

What actually changed?

Your website itself didn’t suddenly become fragile. The environment around it became stricter.

Automated systems scan the internet for outdated software. Hosting providers upgrade servers. Browsers enforce modern security rules.

Because of this, a site can work perfectly for years — and then stop working overnight after a routine update or security check.

Maintenance keeps the site compatible with today’s web environment — and reduces surprise downtime.

WHY THEY’RE DIFFERENT

Hosting and maintenance are different responsibilities

Hosting keeps the site online

server space
domain connection
traffic handling
uptime availability

Maintenance keeps the site working

software updates
compatibility fixes
security patching
functionality checks

Owning hosting without maintenance is similar to owning a vehicle without servicing it — it will run, until it suddenly doesn’t.

WHAT’S INCLUDED IN MAINTENANCE

What website maintenance includes

This is preventative care — identifying problems early so decisions can be made calmly rather than during an outage.

WordPress core updates

Keeps the website compatible with modern servers and browsers.

Plugin and theme updates

Prevents features from breaking as software changes.

Backup verification

Confirms a working restore point exists before changes.

Security patching

Closes known vulnerabilities discovered on the web.

Form & email testing

Makes sure customer inquiries still reach you.

Functionality verification

Checks key pages still behave as expected after updates.

Safe rollback if needed

If an update causes issues, the site is restored quickly.

Compatibility review

Identifies outdated or abandoned plugins before they fail.

WHAT MAINTENANCE DOESN’T COVER

What maintenance does not include

Maintenance keeps the current website working as it already does.

It does not include:

  • content edits (text or images)

  • adding new pages

  • redesign or layout changes

  • SEO or marketing work

  • new features or integrations

  • fixing unrelated problems

These can still be done — they’re just handled as normal support work.

WHY IT’S MONTHLY

Why this is a monthly service

A one-time update only makes a website current for that moment.
Security patches and compatibility changes appear continuously.

Maintenance keeps the site current over time — not fixing it once.

The goal is predictability:
routine upkeep instead of emergency repair.

IF A SITE IS NOT ON MAINTENANCE

A website can continue running without maintenance —
but it becomes unmanaged software.

This means:

  • reliability cannot be guaranteed

  • security risk increases over time

  • repairs are billed as support work if problems occur

Many sites run fine for long periods — failures just become unpredictable.

What we offer

Maintenance plans

Before enrollment, the website is reviewed and brought to a supported baseline so future updates can be predictable.

Standard business websites
Cost:
$39
/month or $398/year
Includes:
Sites with advanced functionality
Cost:
$59
/ month or $602/year
Includes:
FINAL STEP

The purpose of maintenance

Maintenance doesn’t make a website perfect.
It makes it dependable.

The goal is simple:
fewer surprises, fewer emergencies, normal operation.

Request a maintenance review

F.A.Q.

Maintenance Questions

Clear answers about how website maintenance works, what it covers, and what happens if a site isn’t enrolled.

For full technical details and service boundaries, see the complete maintenance terms.

A modern website is software, not a static brochure.

WordPress, plugins, and hosting platforms are constantly updated for security and compatibility. Even if nothing changes on your end, the internet around the site changes every week.

A site can run perfectly for years — and then stop working overnight after a routine server update or automated security scan.

Maintenance keeps the site compatible with today’s web environment.

Automated bots continuously scan the internet for outdated software.
Small business sites aren’t targeted personally — they’re simply easier to compromise if not updated.
The web became stricter; maintenance keeps the site normal and safe.

Most failures don’t happen gradually — they happen all at once after:

  • a server upgrade

  • a security disclosure

  • an automated scan

Maintenance reduces the chance of sudden downtime.

Yes — because you rent their software.
WordPress gives you ownership and flexibility, but it requires periodic upkeep just like a computer or vehicle.

Hosting keeps the website online (server space, traffic, uptime).
Maintenance keeps the software working (updates, compatibility, security).

Updates are scheduled periodically — not daily monitoring.
The frequency depends on how important and complex the site is.

No.
Maintenance keeps the existing site working.
Edits, new pages, and redesign work are regular support requests.

A restore point is created first.
If a normal update causes an issue, the site is corrected or rolled back.
If a plugin is permanently discontinued, repair options are discussed first.

Backups greatly improve recovery chances but cannot guarantee it in every situation — especially if a problem existed unnoticed for a long time.

Nothing can guarantee a site will never be hacked.
Maintenance significantly reduces risk by patching known vulnerabilities.

The site can still run, but it becomes unmanaged software.
If problems occur, repairs are billed as support work.

A one-time update only fixes today’s issues.
Maintenance keeps the site current over time.

No — maintenance is preventative work.
Urgent fixes are handled as support based on availability.

Yes.
However, issues that occur while not enrolled are treated as repair work.

Scroll to Top