Release Notes for June - Improving your online resilience
 

June 2026: Improving your Online Resilience

Hi [FNAME],

In simple terms building resilience into your online operations means your business doesn’t wobble when things get hectic. 

Your website keeps collecting enquiries and sales. Email stays organised, and client's sensitive data isn't compromised by staying in inboxes. 

When something needs attention, you know exactly where the key logins are, and who manages which parts of your system.

This edition pulls those three aspects into focus with short practical tips designed to help you tighten the basics.

Let’s get into it.


Maintaining Website resilience when EOFY distracts

If your website brings in enquiries, bookings, or sales, it needs to stay stable while your attention is elsewhere. This article gives you a clear routine: WordPress updates done properly, 2FA switched on, backups that match the risk of your site (especially ecommerce), and a restore test so you know recovery works.


Find out more.


Email Rules That Keep You Out of Trouble

Email carries invoices, approvals, and client files. This article gives you rules that reduce mistakes and keep things organised: store documents outside inbox threads, stop leaving sensitive attachments sitting in mailboxes, tighten access on shared inboxes, and keep email manageable so it stays a tool you trust.


Find out more.


Quick Check: Stop scrambling when something breaks

This quick check gets you organised around the essentials: who owns your domain, where the DNS dashboard is, who can log into hosting, who controls email admin, and which account owns payments. It also helps you keep support details in one place so you can act quickly when something changes.


Find out more.


[FNAME], thanks for reading this edition of Release Notes.

If you only do one thing after reading this edition, turn on 2FA for the accounts that matter: Your website admin login, your hosting, your domain name registrar, and your payment provider.

If you need a security sanity check, reply with one sentence about your setup and I’ll tell you where the real risk is.

Small changes to your practices can make a big difference to your site security.

Talk soon,

James
Asporea Digital

P.S. If you need help sorting this out, reply to this email. I read every email and I'm always happy to point you in the right direction.