What a storefront is
A storefront is the public sales website your buyers use to order guest posts and backlinks. It can run on your own custom domain, use your logo and colors, show your services, collect buyer billing details, and process payments.
Storefronts are designed to be white-label. Buyers should experience your brand, not WPLinker. This is especially useful if you operate multiple publishing brands, websites, or companies.
When to create multiple storefronts
Create separate storefronts when you need different company details, invoice numbers, payment accounts, branding, or custom domains. For example, Storefront A can belong to one company with one Stripe account, while Storefront B belongs to another company with bank transfer only.
This structure is useful for agencies, publishers with multiple legal entities, and operators who sell different website groups under different brands.
Storefront creation flow
The storefront wizard asks for domain details, company or personal information, payment settings, branding, and SEO. Complete each step carefully because these settings affect buyer trust, invoices, and checkout.
- Choose a domain that is not already used as a WordPress website in your account.
- Add the company or personal billing details that should appear on invoices.
- Enable only the payment methods you are ready to support.
- Upload your logo and set storefront colors.
- Write a clear storefront title and meta description for search engines.
Branding and SEO
Use a logo that works on a clean white header and avoid tiny or low-contrast files. The storefront title should describe the brand or publishing offer, while the meta description should explain what buyers can order.
Good examples are direct and buyer-focused: “Order guest posts and backlinks from Example Media” or “Editorial publishing services across verified WordPress websites.”
Custom domains
After creating the storefront, point the domain or subdomain to WPLinker using the DNS instructions shown in your dashboard. WPLinker will check DNS and SSL readiness automatically.
Do not use the same domain for a storefront and a connected WordPress website. The website domain is where content gets published; the storefront domain is where buyers place orders.