WPShake runs an agent on every site you manage. It handles the daily maintenance, blocks the risky update, and tells you about the one site that needs you today. Built for stores, agencies, enterprises, and anyone running more sites than they can watch.
Maybe it's your own portfolio of projects. Maybe it's eighty client sites across five hosts. Maybe it's a store doing real revenue, or a regulated fleet under a compliance team. The maintenance is the same grind every time: updates that might break something, a PHP version quietly going end of life, a backup nobody has tested, a checkout that fails at 3 am while everyone's asleep.
WPShake puts an agent on each site. It does the boring, daily, late-night work: detect, triage, fix within your rules, verify, report. It only pings a human when a human is actually needed. Not another checklist for you to run. An agent that runs the upkeep itself.
You still get a dashboard, and a good one. But the dashboard is where you go to look. The agent is what gets the work done.
You're not paying for an interface. You're paying for the decisions: what to update and what to hold, what to roll back and what to keep. The safety net underneath. The cross-host visibility that one site's tools can't give you. The dashboard is included.
Your own portfolio, a pile of side projects, the family of sites you somehow ended up maintaining. The agent keeps every one updated, backed up, and out of trouble without you logging in.
See pricing →One view across every host. The agent runs the work overnight, writes the monthly client report, and flags the one site that actually needs your eyes today.
For agencies →The agent walks your store from add-to-cart to checkout on a schedule, watches every gateway response, and blocks the update that would break the payment path.
For stores →Fleet-wide version floor. SSO, RBAC, change approval, audit export. Baseline policy across hundreds of properties, with the controls a compliance team will sign off on.
For multi-property →Live in the private alpha today. Anything still landing before public launch is marked Planned.
Patterns we see on real WooCommerce and multi-property fleets, and what the agent actually does about them.
A widely-used gateway plugin shipped a 5.7.0 patch that broke webhook signature verification. The agent blocked the upgrade on every site that hadn't yet shipped it, and reverted the ones that had.
Eight years of legacy hosting decisions left fourteen of eighty sites running an end-of-life PHP. One fleet baseline policy. One approval. Two hours.
A subtle tokenisation regression. No errors in logs, no failed pings, just renewals silently dropping. Modelled correctly, the drop was loud.
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