WordPress and WooCommerce support
Updates, template fixes, checkout cleanup, plugin-safe changes, page edits, forms, redirects, and launch support.
Monthly technical support
Bluegrass Media support blocks give businesses a steady technical lane for fixes, improvements, landing pages, WordPress, WooCommerce, LearnDash, forms, tracking, integrations, and small system work.
The best fit is a business with recurring technical needs, not a one-off question that should be handled as a review or rescue sprint.
Updates, template fixes, checkout cleanup, plugin-safe changes, page edits, forms, redirects, and launch support.
Course structure changes, enrollment flow checks, Stripe/payment support, student access issues, and admin handoff help.
Offer pages, CTA cleanup, proof updates, FAQ sections, form paths, analytics checks, and campaign-readiness work.
Small dashboard changes, API fixes, workflow cleanup, reporting tweaks, tracking issues, and technical investigation tasks.
Final scope depends on the stack, access, request volume, urgency, and how much technical ownership the business needs.
Small sites that need a steady lane for updates, form checks, landing-page edits, and minor fixes.
Businesses with active campaigns, WooCommerce or LearnDash work, recurring landing pages, and regular technical requests.
Teams with custom portals, dashboards, integrations, data workflows, app handoffs, or deeper technical ownership needs.
Support should make the business easier to operate, not create a pile of unclear requests.
Clear expectations matter as much as technical skill when support is ongoing.
No. Support blocks reserve capacity and priority, but each block still has scope boundaries. Larger builds are quoted separately.
Yes. Bluegrass can support owners, agencies, and internal teams as long as ownership, approvals, access, and communication paths are clear.
Bluegrass can help with practical hosting, backup, plugin, and security basics, but formal security monitoring or compliance services should be scoped separately.
A rescue sprint or quick technical review may be a better first step. Monthly support is best when the work will continue over time.