What WPLinker does
WPLinker helps publishers, agencies, and website owners sell guest posts and backlinks without managing every request through email. You connect your WordPress websites, define the services you want to sell, and launch a white-label storefront on your own domain.
Your buyers see your brand, your company details, your payment methods, and your storefront. WPLinker handles the operational layer behind the scenes: customer data, orders, invoices, publishing jobs, notifications, and WordPress delivery.
Recommended setup order
Use this order when setting up a new account: complete your profile, activate a subscription, add your WordPress websites, install the WPLinker Connector plugin, create your services, configure payments, and finally create your storefront.
This sequence matters because services and storefronts need connected websites and synced categories. If you create a storefront before your websites are ready, buyers may not see the correct category choices during checkout.
- Complete your profile with private or company billing details.
- Add at least one WordPress website from the Websites page.
- Install WPLinker Connector from the official WordPress plugin repository.
- Verify the connection and sync WordPress categories.
- Create Guest Post and Backlink services.
- Create a storefront and connect payment methods.
- Place a small test order before opening the storefront publicly.
Your first test order
Before sending traffic to your storefront, create one test order yourself. Use a real category, upload a featured image, write a short article, and complete checkout with the payment method you plan to offer.
After payment, open your seller dashboard and check the order timeline. You should see the payment status, publishing status, invoice, customer details, and WordPress publishing result. This gives you confidence that the public buyer flow is ready.
What to check before going live
Make sure every service has the right currency, price, publishing mode, and assigned website. Review the storefront branding, SEO title, meta description, payment credentials, bank transfer details, and company information.
If you sell from multiple companies or brands, use one storefront per brand. Each storefront can have its own company details, invoice settings, payment methods, colors, logo, and custom domain.