SlideShare a Scribd company logo
Step-by-Step:
Setting up a
WordPress.com Site
But FIRST…
We’re going to talk about the difference
between WordPress.com and WordPress.org.
Yes, Virginia, there is a difference.
WordPress.com
● Sites are hosted by WordPress. This
arrangement is like Blogger, Wix,
Weebly, Webs, and many, many
others
● Free: You can upgrade to a Premium
plan
● Themes: Lots of free themes, but you
can purchase themes for a modest
one time fee
● Domain name: If you own a domain
name already
(www.yourdomain.com) - you can
attach it to the WordPress.com site
for a modest yearly fee.
● This is a self-install hosted elsewhere
- like with GoDaddy, Blue Host, Host
Gator and dozens of other hosting
services.
● Not Free: There are monthly or
annual fees associated with these
hosting services.
● Themes: Lots of free themes available
through WordPress. There are
themes you can purchase as well.
● Domain name: You must have (or
purchase) your own domain name.
WordPress.org
There are pros and cons to each set-up
WordPress.com
Pros: A lot of the work is done for you
● No backend maintenance required
● WordPress.com does backups
● Free
● Can add-on extras
Cons: A lot of the work is done for you
● Cannot use outside plug-ins
● Themes can have limited
functionality
● Limited Monetization (i.e., having
ads on your site)
WordPress.org
Pros: More control over your site
● Use whatever WP themes you’d like
● Can customize themes and CSS
● Can use whatever plugins you’d like
● Monetize whenever you’d like
Cons: More of the burden falls on you
● Must do WP updates
● Must do your own maintenance:
backups, spam control, etc.
● Cost $$
So, which one do I choose?
It depends on what you want to do.
WHAT?!!
That’s not meant to be misleading
Ask yourself: What’s the site for?
● Is this a personal blog?
● Are you developing a site for your bricks and mortar business? For your non-profit?
● Are you showcasing materials, like a portfolio of photography or artwork?
● Are you selling products from your site?
● If you are selling products, are they digital only or things like t-shirts?
● Are you only planning on one site or more than one?
● How much experience do you have already with website creation and maintenance?
I know, this Meetup is
about setting up a
WordPress.com site, right?
Yes, but how the questions are
answered will help fill out the picture
regarding the template you should
select and the type of services you
may need.
This isn’t important right now, but it
might be down the road. Keep it in
the back of your mind.
You’ll be relieved to know you can always upgrade
from Free or migrate your site from WordPress.com to
WordPress.org.
On to the meat of the
evening.
We’re doing WordPress.com Free tonight, so
we’ll walk through the steps.
Step 1: Go to WordPress.com and select ‘Create a Site’. Type in a site address.
Step 2
I can’t stress this enough:
Write everything
down!
Site address
Email
Username
Password
It will save you oodles of
time (assuming you
remember where you put
the piece of paper with all
the info!)
Step 3
Look carefully!
You do NOT have to select
a custom address.
Step 4:
Select a FREE
theme.
Step 5
That was easy, wasn’t it?
Now it gets a little more tricky - at least to my mind. WordPress
presents the user with “Reader”, a plain vanilla place to add content:
post and pages.
I hate it. This is a personal thing I realize, but it feels very limiting. I
much prefer working with the Administrative Dashboard; it gives
more detail and options, but can be overwhelming to to new user.
Note:
Pages are static. The
content on these pages
shouldn’t change much.
Maybe it’s an About or
Mission page for your site,
or Directions.
Posts are not static - this is
where you’d put content
that changes frequently but
doesn’t go away. So for
example, if you’re writing a
blog you’d create a new
post for each blogged item.
Reader
Administrative Dashboard
Either way, you add content
Pages: Static
Pages can be ‘Parent’ pages or ‘Child’ pages. Parent pages are at the top
of the navigation hierarchy and Child pages are under them. So if you
have an ‘About’ page and a ‘Directions’ page under it, About is the
Parent and Directions is the child. Pages do not have categories or
tags.
Posts: Changing
Posts have Categories and Tags. See note to the right.
Posts represent changing content. So if you are writing a daily diary
blog cataloging daily emotions, for example, you would write a blog
post every day and attach it to a category - Happy, Ecstatic, Sad, In
Love - whatever. You, and your blog visitors, would find your different
types of blog posts by its category, in this case different emotions.
Note:
Categories for posts help
people find items you’ve
posted. It’s kind of like a
table of contents. You
shouldn’t have too many
categories - just main
topics or broad areas.
Tags for posts are kind of
like an index in a book and
you can add as many of
those as you like.
Images
Images illustrate your content in either Pages or Posts. Images can be added where you type in your
content through “Add Image”. These are usually uploaded from your computer and added to the post
or page as a featured image or embedded into the content.
Images can be a powerful tool and some templates are really driven by images. Photographers, for
example, will select a portfolio style template that helps display their visual content better.
Templates
You may not love the template you first selected or you may
find that it doesn’t really suit your purposes.
YOU CAN ALWAYS CHANGE IT.
Don’t get too caught up in the template hamster wheel.
There are lots of other free templates to choose from.
So, play with it a little!
● Add some posts, pages and images.
● Seek out and change the theme to see if
something works better.
● Add some widgets! (We haven’t talked about
this yet, but we will…)
Widgets
Widgets are the little add-ons that make your site more interesting. Widgets
can be in a sidebar (right or left), in the footer, or in the header. Much of where
these go depends on the theme selected.
WordPress.com gives you a pre-selected bunch of widgets - you can’t add any
news ones. (Nor can you add any plug-ins. What you see is what you get.)
That’s probably enough for
tonight and will give you lots
to think about and work on.
Do you want a Part II
next month?

More Related Content

PPTX
Blogging presentation
PDF
World domination by blog
PPTX
Weebly Online Module
PPTX
Weebly online module
PDF
GUIDE TO BECOMING FAMOUS ON CLUB PENGUIN
PPTX
Build A Website and Get Your Feet Wet In Affiliate Marketing
PPTX
Take Control of Your Site w/ WordPress
PDF
A Simple Way to Customize Your Site
Blogging presentation
World domination by blog
Weebly Online Module
Weebly online module
GUIDE TO BECOMING FAMOUS ON CLUB PENGUIN
Build A Website and Get Your Feet Wet In Affiliate Marketing
Take Control of Your Site w/ WordPress
A Simple Way to Customize Your Site

What's hot (18)

PPTX
Successful Website Design
PDF
Wc miami 2013 beginner's workshop
PPTX
Eval. questions 5 7
PPTX
Presentation on how to make your own website
ODP
Blogging Basics and Tips
PPTX
PPTX
6. What have you learnt about technologies from the process of constructing t...
PDF
Weebly
PPTX
NJ-REA Jobology Presentation
PPTX
700 posts – 1 menu, organizing a large info site with taxonomies and facets
PPT
Blogging For Beginners
PPTX
How To Talk Content - A Guide for WordPress Developers
PPTX
About educational powerpoints
PPT
About educational powerpoints
PDF
How To Promote Your Website Eloqua-Style
DOCX
Question 6- evaluation
PDF
Copy therichblog
PPTX
How to Make Your Blog Standout from the Crowd (iBlog8 Presentation)
Successful Website Design
Wc miami 2013 beginner's workshop
Eval. questions 5 7
Presentation on how to make your own website
Blogging Basics and Tips
6. What have you learnt about technologies from the process of constructing t...
Weebly
NJ-REA Jobology Presentation
700 posts – 1 menu, organizing a large info site with taxonomies and facets
Blogging For Beginners
How To Talk Content - A Guide for WordPress Developers
About educational powerpoints
About educational powerpoints
How To Promote Your Website Eloqua-Style
Question 6- evaluation
Copy therichblog
How to Make Your Blog Standout from the Crowd (iBlog8 Presentation)
Ad

Viewers also liked (6)

PPT
Philosophy of early childhood education 4
PPTX
Virus and antivirus
PPT
Philosophy of early childhood education 3
PPTX
Types of Virus & Anti-virus
PPTX
presentation on computer virus
PPTX
ANTIVIRUS AND VIRUS Powerpoint presentation
Philosophy of early childhood education 4
Virus and antivirus
Philosophy of early childhood education 3
Types of Virus & Anti-virus
presentation on computer virus
ANTIVIRUS AND VIRUS Powerpoint presentation
Ad

Similar to Step by-step how to set up a WordPress.com site (20)

PDF
The Way To Style A Blog Upon Blogger
PDF
WordPress
PPTX
WordPress 101
PDF
Wordpress Setup Guide
PDF
Intro.to.weebly r3-rapid aimfire global
PPTX
Word press training
PPTX
Intro to weebly
PDF
Complete word press tutorial
PPT
Blogging 201: From Blank Slate to Blog in Under an Hour
PPTX
MEA 2014 - Intro to weebly
PDF
Start a successful blogging
PDF
Word press and blogger installation and optimization guide
PDF
How to Start a WordPress Blog easily (from A to Z)
PPT
Easy Website Creation with Weebly
PPTX
Customizing WordPress Themes
PPTX
Getting started author blogging
DOCX
Wordpress the-tutorial
PPTX
BCES Staff Weebly Training
PPTX
Blogging For Teachers
The Way To Style A Blog Upon Blogger
WordPress
WordPress 101
Wordpress Setup Guide
Intro.to.weebly r3-rapid aimfire global
Word press training
Intro to weebly
Complete word press tutorial
Blogging 201: From Blank Slate to Blog in Under an Hour
MEA 2014 - Intro to weebly
Start a successful blogging
Word press and blogger installation and optimization guide
How to Start a WordPress Blog easily (from A to Z)
Easy Website Creation with Weebly
Customizing WordPress Themes
Getting started author blogging
Wordpress the-tutorial
BCES Staff Weebly Training
Blogging For Teachers

Recently uploaded (20)

PPT
Teaching material agriculture food technology
PPTX
Detection-First SIEM: Rule Types, Dashboards, and Threat-Informed Strategy
PDF
Peak of Data & AI Encore- AI for Metadata and Smarter Workflows
PDF
Blue Purple Modern Animated Computer Science Presentation.pdf.pdf
PDF
7 ChatGPT Prompts to Help You Define Your Ideal Customer Profile.pdf
PDF
TokAI - TikTok AI Agent : The First AI Application That Analyzes 10,000+ Vira...
PDF
The Rise and Fall of 3GPP – Time for a Sabbatical?
PPTX
VMware vSphere Foundation How to Sell Presentation-Ver1.4-2-14-2024.pptx
PDF
Approach and Philosophy of On baking technology
PDF
Unlocking AI with Model Context Protocol (MCP)
PDF
NewMind AI Monthly Chronicles - July 2025
PDF
Build a system with the filesystem maintained by OSTree @ COSCUP 2025
PPT
“AI and Expert System Decision Support & Business Intelligence Systems”
DOCX
The AUB Centre for AI in Media Proposal.docx
PPTX
MYSQL Presentation for SQL database connectivity
PDF
Building Integrated photovoltaic BIPV_UPV.pdf
PPTX
Cloud computing and distributed systems.
PDF
Modernizing your data center with Dell and AMD
PDF
Encapsulation_ Review paper, used for researhc scholars
PDF
Encapsulation theory and applications.pdf
Teaching material agriculture food technology
Detection-First SIEM: Rule Types, Dashboards, and Threat-Informed Strategy
Peak of Data & AI Encore- AI for Metadata and Smarter Workflows
Blue Purple Modern Animated Computer Science Presentation.pdf.pdf
7 ChatGPT Prompts to Help You Define Your Ideal Customer Profile.pdf
TokAI - TikTok AI Agent : The First AI Application That Analyzes 10,000+ Vira...
The Rise and Fall of 3GPP – Time for a Sabbatical?
VMware vSphere Foundation How to Sell Presentation-Ver1.4-2-14-2024.pptx
Approach and Philosophy of On baking technology
Unlocking AI with Model Context Protocol (MCP)
NewMind AI Monthly Chronicles - July 2025
Build a system with the filesystem maintained by OSTree @ COSCUP 2025
“AI and Expert System Decision Support & Business Intelligence Systems”
The AUB Centre for AI in Media Proposal.docx
MYSQL Presentation for SQL database connectivity
Building Integrated photovoltaic BIPV_UPV.pdf
Cloud computing and distributed systems.
Modernizing your data center with Dell and AMD
Encapsulation_ Review paper, used for researhc scholars
Encapsulation theory and applications.pdf

Step by-step how to set up a WordPress.com site

  • 2. But FIRST… We’re going to talk about the difference between WordPress.com and WordPress.org. Yes, Virginia, there is a difference.
  • 3. WordPress.com ● Sites are hosted by WordPress. This arrangement is like Blogger, Wix, Weebly, Webs, and many, many others ● Free: You can upgrade to a Premium plan ● Themes: Lots of free themes, but you can purchase themes for a modest one time fee ● Domain name: If you own a domain name already (www.yourdomain.com) - you can attach it to the WordPress.com site for a modest yearly fee. ● This is a self-install hosted elsewhere - like with GoDaddy, Blue Host, Host Gator and dozens of other hosting services. ● Not Free: There are monthly or annual fees associated with these hosting services. ● Themes: Lots of free themes available through WordPress. There are themes you can purchase as well. ● Domain name: You must have (or purchase) your own domain name. WordPress.org
  • 4. There are pros and cons to each set-up WordPress.com Pros: A lot of the work is done for you ● No backend maintenance required ● WordPress.com does backups ● Free ● Can add-on extras Cons: A lot of the work is done for you ● Cannot use outside plug-ins ● Themes can have limited functionality ● Limited Monetization (i.e., having ads on your site) WordPress.org Pros: More control over your site ● Use whatever WP themes you’d like ● Can customize themes and CSS ● Can use whatever plugins you’d like ● Monetize whenever you’d like Cons: More of the burden falls on you ● Must do WP updates ● Must do your own maintenance: backups, spam control, etc. ● Cost $$
  • 5. So, which one do I choose? It depends on what you want to do.
  • 7. That’s not meant to be misleading Ask yourself: What’s the site for? ● Is this a personal blog? ● Are you developing a site for your bricks and mortar business? For your non-profit? ● Are you showcasing materials, like a portfolio of photography or artwork? ● Are you selling products from your site? ● If you are selling products, are they digital only or things like t-shirts? ● Are you only planning on one site or more than one? ● How much experience do you have already with website creation and maintenance?
  • 8. I know, this Meetup is about setting up a WordPress.com site, right?
  • 9. Yes, but how the questions are answered will help fill out the picture regarding the template you should select and the type of services you may need.
  • 10. This isn’t important right now, but it might be down the road. Keep it in the back of your mind. You’ll be relieved to know you can always upgrade from Free or migrate your site from WordPress.com to WordPress.org.
  • 11. On to the meat of the evening.
  • 12. We’re doing WordPress.com Free tonight, so we’ll walk through the steps. Step 1: Go to WordPress.com and select ‘Create a Site’. Type in a site address.
  • 13. Step 2 I can’t stress this enough: Write everything down! Site address Email Username Password It will save you oodles of time (assuming you remember where you put the piece of paper with all the info!)
  • 14. Step 3 Look carefully! You do NOT have to select a custom address.
  • 15. Step 4: Select a FREE theme.
  • 17. That was easy, wasn’t it? Now it gets a little more tricky - at least to my mind. WordPress presents the user with “Reader”, a plain vanilla place to add content: post and pages. I hate it. This is a personal thing I realize, but it feels very limiting. I much prefer working with the Administrative Dashboard; it gives more detail and options, but can be overwhelming to to new user. Note: Pages are static. The content on these pages shouldn’t change much. Maybe it’s an About or Mission page for your site, or Directions. Posts are not static - this is where you’d put content that changes frequently but doesn’t go away. So for example, if you’re writing a blog you’d create a new post for each blogged item.
  • 20. Either way, you add content Pages: Static Pages can be ‘Parent’ pages or ‘Child’ pages. Parent pages are at the top of the navigation hierarchy and Child pages are under them. So if you have an ‘About’ page and a ‘Directions’ page under it, About is the Parent and Directions is the child. Pages do not have categories or tags. Posts: Changing Posts have Categories and Tags. See note to the right. Posts represent changing content. So if you are writing a daily diary blog cataloging daily emotions, for example, you would write a blog post every day and attach it to a category - Happy, Ecstatic, Sad, In Love - whatever. You, and your blog visitors, would find your different types of blog posts by its category, in this case different emotions. Note: Categories for posts help people find items you’ve posted. It’s kind of like a table of contents. You shouldn’t have too many categories - just main topics or broad areas. Tags for posts are kind of like an index in a book and you can add as many of those as you like.
  • 21. Images Images illustrate your content in either Pages or Posts. Images can be added where you type in your content through “Add Image”. These are usually uploaded from your computer and added to the post or page as a featured image or embedded into the content. Images can be a powerful tool and some templates are really driven by images. Photographers, for example, will select a portfolio style template that helps display their visual content better.
  • 22. Templates You may not love the template you first selected or you may find that it doesn’t really suit your purposes. YOU CAN ALWAYS CHANGE IT. Don’t get too caught up in the template hamster wheel. There are lots of other free templates to choose from.
  • 23. So, play with it a little! ● Add some posts, pages and images. ● Seek out and change the theme to see if something works better. ● Add some widgets! (We haven’t talked about this yet, but we will…)
  • 24. Widgets Widgets are the little add-ons that make your site more interesting. Widgets can be in a sidebar (right or left), in the footer, or in the header. Much of where these go depends on the theme selected. WordPress.com gives you a pre-selected bunch of widgets - you can’t add any news ones. (Nor can you add any plug-ins. What you see is what you get.)
  • 25. That’s probably enough for tonight and will give you lots to think about and work on.
  • 26. Do you want a Part II next month?