If you’re like most people, you probably dream of owning your own website. But if you can’t build one, there are still ways to own your own website without any coding or design skills. In this second part of the article, we’ll discuss how to set up a basic website on your own and how to customize it to your needs. First, create a new account on a web hosting company and choose a domain name that’s appropriate for your business or organization. You can also use an online service like Namecheap to find domain names that are available for purchase. Once you’ve chosen a domain name and created an account with the hosting company, it’s time to start building your website! To begin, head over to the web hosting company’s website and sign in with your account. From here, you’ll be able to select the type of site you want to build: static or dynamic. Static sites are websites that don’t change often (like Facebook), while dynamic sites are websites that change based on user activity (like Google Maps). If you’re just starting out, choose static sites; later on, when you have more experience and want more control over your site’s look and feel, you can move onto dynamic sites. Once you’ve selected the type of site you want to build, click on the “build” button at the top left corner of the page. This will take you into a new page where you’ll be able to enter all of the information needed for creating your site: domain name, hostname (the IP address of your computer), content type (text/html or image/gif), language code (en-US or en-GB), and security settings (including whether or not anyone can access your site from outside of your network). Once these settings are complete, click on “submit” and wait for the building process to finish! Once the building process is complete, check back at the web hosting


Last week we talked about how to buy and start a simple website using WordPress. Today, we’ll start customizing our WordPress site and get you off on the right foot to having a great quality, feature rich website.

We’ll take a quick walk through the menus of WordPress and help to make it easier on a first time user, as well as showing you how to start your new site off with a theme and an easily updatable, customized navigation. It can be intimidating to start a new WordPress site, but stick with us—part two of “How to Own Your Own Website” is coming right up.

What’s In A Basic WordPress Install?

You should be able to find the “back end” of your new WordPress site by visiting your new domain and adding /wp-admin to the end of it. You should get a page that looks quite similar to this one where you can log in and fiddle around with your new page.

This is the dashboard. It has a lot of very useful information, including updates and suggestions for new content to start writing, new plugins to add, or settings that you can tweak. Let’s start by taking a look at the options on this page.

 

You can also find updates to your software on this dashboard. This will keep WordPress updated to the newest version as well as updating any Plugins, themes, or other software that you install into your WordPress site.

By default, WordPress can contact the major blog directories and search engines so that your page can show up as a relevant result. You may want to look under Settings > Privacy and set this to “Ask search engines not to index this site” until you’re happy with your page and ready to get it out there. Or just put it out there incomplete—it probably won’t matter much.

Many of the menus have child pages with lots and lots of options. The first two you should familiarize yourself with are Posts and Pages, depending on how you want to use WordPress. If you want to create a blog, “Posts” is probably going to be a place you’re going to spend a lot of time. But if you’re going to make static pages… you guessed it, “Pages” it is.

Customizing A WordPress Install by Changing Themes

WordPress uses sets of style sheets and designs called “Themes” to customize the layout. This can be a great way for non-designers and non-technical people to make their site look better without a lot of effort, and can give mid-range designers a place to start customizing. And advanced WP users can make their own themes, either to sell or to give away as free software.

You can find this menu by navigating to Appearance > Themes.

Installing new themes is a snap. You can simply download new ones through WordPress by switching to the “Install Themes” tab.

You’ll find tons of categories you can pick from to find a theme, including color and column layout. Today, we’re going to pick these options, because we want to be able to customize our background, colors, header, and menus of our site.

WordPress brings you a large list of themes that fit the criteria you picked.

One of the coolest features is that you can preview a theme before you install it. We’ll be using this one for our demonstration. It’s called Picolight.

Click install and then click through to download and install the files into your WordPress backend.

Even after all the files are downloaded and put in place, you still have to “Activate” it to tell WordPress to use the theme.

You’ll also find a lot of options, once your theme is installed and activated. Let’s take a look at those now.

Customizing Your Main Navigation

Menus are likely the first thing you should begin customizing. Most newer WordPress themes support “custom menus” which can be edited here. But to start customizing a menu, you have do a few other tweaks first.

Find Pages > Add New Page and start creating all the pages you want in your menu. You can also delete any pages you don’t want to show up on your site here as well.

When you finish your pages, click the publish button to put them out into the world.

 

Continue making pages until you’ve gotten enough to populate your menu, or you’re tired of making them.

Your next step is to find “Reading Settings” under Settings > Reading Settings. Here you can change the “home” page of your site to a static page and not the default blog frontpage (if that’s what floats your boat). You can also set your blog frontpage to any existing static page. Hit “Save Changes” when you’re done with those settings.

(Author’s Note: I mistakenly used the “Sample Page” as the static front page, later changing its name to “Home.” You can also do this, but I foolishly didn’t show how to do it by going back to “Pages” and renaming the Sample Page.)

Return to Menus by navigating to Appearance > Menus. You can type directly into “Menu Name” to create a menu. Any name is fine, just remember what it was later.

 

Check pages you want and click “Add to Menu.”

The topmost page will appear first in the navigation and the bottommost will appear last. You can click and drag them around to reorder them.

You also have the option of adding external links and internal Categories to your menus as well, all pretty handy additions.

Find “Save Menu” at the bottom right of the page to finalize the changes.

Then simply find the “Locations” section of the same menus page. Picolight only supports one menu by default, so we simply select our menu (we named it “Main Header” earlier) and select save.

And when we check our frontpage, we find that our new menu is installed and waiting to be navigated. This menu updates from this backend—if you wish to add or remove pages, there’s no need to edit 50 html files.

More To Come In Part 3

There’s still plenty more to dig through in WordPress. If you’re feeling adventurous, rummage through your install and find out what works for you and what isn’t easy and obvious. We’ll be back with part three before you know it.

How to Own Your Own Website (Even If You Can’t Build One)

Part 1: Hosting and Installing  | Part 2: Themes and Menus

Part 3: Customization, Widgets and Plugins

So, how did we do? Do you feel more confused, or less? Or are you a fabled “web master,” with lots of tips for newbies for their first “real” web page? Tell us what you think in the comments, or send your questions on to ericgoodnight@howtogeek.com. Your questions about WordPress and making basic web pages may be included as a part of the next articles in this series.

Image Credit: Cat in the Box by admiller, Creative Commons.