Website launch checklist: your complete 2026 guideWebsite launch checklist: your complete 2026 guideWebsite launch checklist: your complete 2026 guideWebsite launch checklist: your complete 2026 guide
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Woman reviewing ecommerce user journey maps at kitchen table
What is the ecommerce user journey? A practical guide
July 1, 2026
Woman planning website launch sitemap


TL;DR:

  • A website launch checklist includes essential pre- and post-launch steps to avoid costly errors. Proper planning of SEO, security, and technical setup from the start ensures smooth deployment and ongoing growth. Regular monitoring and updates after launch help maintain performance and improve rankings.

A website launch checklist is a structured set of critical pre- and post-launch steps that every business must complete to deploy a new site without costly errors. SEO and content checks alone account for over 33% of the total launch checklist due to their long-term impact on organic traffic. The five areas that matter most are SEO and metadata, performance and speed, security, analytics and tracking, and accessibility. Miss any one of them and you risk broken forms, missing redirects, and a sitemap that search engines never find. This guide covers every step of your website launch to-do list, from the first planning session to the weeks after go-live.

1. What are the key pre-launch website checklist steps you must not miss?

A successful website launch is defined by strategy established long before development starts, with clear goals and audience guiding every build decision. Before a single page goes live, you need to confirm the fundamentals are in place.

Team reviewing website launch checklist

Define your goals and audience first

Start by writing down what the site must achieve. Is it generating leads, selling products, or building brand credibility? Your answers shape every technical and design decision that follows. Without this clarity, you end up with a site that looks good but converts nobody.

Map your sitemap and URL structure

Draw out your full site structure before the build begins. Decide on your URL naming conventions and stick to them. Changing URLs after launch without 301 redirects causes 404 errors and destroys the link equity you have built. This is one of the most damaging oversights we see in redesign projects.

Set up hosting, domain, and CMS correctly

Choose a hosting plan that matches your expected traffic from day one. Configure your domain name system (DNS) records carefully, as errors here can take 24–48 hours to propagate. Your content management system (CMS) should be installed, updated, and secured before any content goes in.

Configure robots.txt and sitemap.xml

Misconfigured robots.txt and an unsubmitted sitemap are two of the most common reasons a new site fails to appear in search results. Set your robots.txt to allow crawling of all public pages, and generate a sitemap.xml that lists every URL you want indexed.

Prepare SEO basics: metadata and headings

Every page needs a unique title tag and meta description before launch. Title tags should be 50–60 characters. Meta descriptions should be 150–160 characters and written to encourage clicks. Check that every page has one H1 tag and a logical heading hierarchy beneath it.

Write content with user intent in mind

Content written for search engines alone fails readers. Write for the person who will land on the page, answer their question directly, and then guide them to the next step. Keyword alignment matters, but so does clarity and brand voice.

Verify mobile responsiveness and accessibility

Mobile-first design and testing at real breakpoints is a non-negotiable pre-launch step. Test on actual devices, not just browser simulators. Check colour contrast ratios, alt text on images, and keyboard navigation to meet WCAG 2.1 accessibility standards.

Set up analytics and tracking from day one

Install Google Analytics 4 and Google Tag Manager before launch. Configure conversion goals so you capture real data from the first visitor. Without this, your first weeks of traffic data are lost forever.

Pro Tip: Create a shared pre-launch spreadsheet with every checklist item assigned to a named person and a due date. Unassigned tasks do not get done.

2. How to perform essential technical and security checks before launch

Launching without thorough testing risks critical errors on day one, including broken forms, failed payments, and a poor user experience that drives visitors away immediately. Technical checks are not optional; they are the difference between a smooth launch and a week of firefighting.

What to test before you go live

Run through every functional element of the site:

  • Forms: Submit every contact, enquiry, and sign-up form and confirm the data arrives correctly.
  • Links: Check all internal and external links for broken destinations. Tools like Screaming Frog identify these quickly.
  • Buttons and calls to action: Click every button on every page, including on mobile.
  • E-commerce flows: If you sell online, complete a full test purchase from product page to confirmation email.
  • Cross-browser compatibility: Test in Chrome, Firefox, Safari, and Edge at minimum.

Speed and Core Web Vitals

Core Web Vitals optimisation improves speed and performance, which is both a Google ranking factor and a direct driver of visitor retention. Use Google PageSpeed Insights and Google Search Console to measure Largest Contentful Paint (LCP), Interaction to Next Paint (INP), and Cumulative Layout Shift (CLS). Address any failing scores before launch, not after. A slow site loses visitors before they read a single word. For a deeper look at the business case, the speed optimisation guide from Done covers the numbers in detail.

HTTPS and SSL certificates

Every page must load over HTTPS. An invalid or missing SSL certificate triggers browser warnings that destroy visitor trust instantly. Verify your certificate is installed, valid, and covers all subdomains you plan to use.

301 redirects for redesigned URLs

If you are relaunching an existing site, map every old URL to its new equivalent and implement 301 redirects. Missing redirects generate 404 errors and cause an immediate loss of SEO link equity. This step alone has saved several of our clients from significant ranking drops post-launch.

Backups and security patches

Confirm that automated daily backups are configured and stored off-server. Apply all CMS and plugin updates before launch. Outdated software is the most common entry point for security breaches.

Privacy compliance and cookie consent

Under GDPR, your cookie consent banner must appear before any non-essential tracking scripts fire. Verify that your privacy policy is accurate, up to date, and linked from the footer of every page.

Pro Tip: Run a full technical audit using Screaming Frog or a similar crawl tool the day before launch. Export the report and fix every error flagged as critical before you flip the switch.

3. Which SEO and content checks have the greatest impact on launch success?

SEO and content checks account for over a third of the total pre-launch workload because their effects compound over months and years. Getting them right at launch is far cheaper than fixing them six months later when rankings have already suffered.

Metadata, headings, and structured data

The table below shows the most impactful SEO checks, what each one does, and the consequence of skipping it.

SEO check What it does Cost of skipping
Unique title tags on every page Tells search engines what each page covers Duplicate titles cause keyword cannibalisation
Meta descriptions on every page Improves click-through rate from search results Generic snippets reduce organic traffic
Single H1 per page Establishes the primary topic clearly Confused crawlers and weaker rankings
Structured data (schema markup) Enables rich results in Google Search Missed visibility for reviews, FAQs, products
Canonical tags Prevents duplicate content penalties Diluted page authority across similar URLs

Sitemap submission and Search Console setup

Submit your sitemap.xml to Google Search Console on launch day. Proper indexing setup is a vital pre-launch step to confirm organic visibility. Monitor the Coverage report in Search Console during the first week to catch any crawl errors quickly.

Content quality and brand voice

Every page must reflect your brand voice consistently. AI tools accelerate content creation, but human review remains the only way to catch errors in brand voice and factual accuracy. Read every page aloud before launch. If a sentence sounds wrong, it is wrong.

Redirects and link authority

Every 301 redirect you implement preserves the link authority that pointing domains have built up over time. Skipping redirects on a redesign is the equivalent of throwing away years of SEO work. Map old URLs to new ones in a spreadsheet, implement the redirects in your CMS or server configuration, and test every one before launch.

For a detailed breakdown of SEO best practices that apply specifically to SMBs, Done has a dedicated guide covering metadata, internal linking, and keyword strategy.

4. What post-launch steps keep your website performing and growing?

Website launch is a process, not a one-time event. The work that happens in the weeks after go-live determines whether your site builds momentum or stagnates. Post-launch maintenance is where most SMBs underinvest, and it shows in their traffic data within three months.

Daily and weekly monitoring tasks

  • Analytics review: Check Google Analytics 4 daily for the first two weeks. Look for unexpected traffic drops, high bounce rates on key pages, and conversion goal completions.
  • Uptime monitoring: Use an uptime monitoring service to alert you immediately if the site goes down.
  • Search Console: Check for new crawl errors, manual actions, or indexing issues every week.
  • Form and conversion testing: Retest all forms and purchase flows weekly for the first month.

User feedback and usability testing

Gather real feedback from actual visitors as early as possible. Install a simple on-page feedback widget or run a short user test with five people from your target audience. Real users find problems that internal teams miss every time.

Security updates and backups

Apply CMS and plugin updates within 48 hours of release. Confirm that your backup system is running and test a restore at least once per quarter. A backup you have never tested is a backup you cannot trust.

SEO and content refinement

Use Search Console data to identify which pages are ranking on page two for relevant queries. Update those pages with additional depth, better headings, and stronger internal links. This is the fastest way to move from position 11 to position 5 without building new content from scratch.

Digital marketing and social media

Launch your digital marketing activity on the same day as the site. Announce the launch across your social media channels, send an email to your existing contacts, and consider a small paid search campaign to drive early traffic. Early traffic signals matter to Google. For practical post-launch growth tactics, the digital marketing tips guide from Done covers the essentials for businesses starting from a small base.

Compliance and accessibility maintenance

GDPR requirements and accessibility standards evolve. Review your privacy policy and cookie consent setup at least twice per year. Check WCAG compliance whenever you add new page templates or content types.

5. How to prioritise your checklist items based on project size and goals

Not every business needs to complete every item on a full website launch checklist before going live. The right approach depends on your budget, technical capability, and what the site must achieve in its first 90 days.

1. Separate must-haves from nice-to-haves

Must-have items are those where failure causes direct harm: broken forms lose leads, missing SSL certificates trigger browser warnings, absent analytics means you fly blind. Nice-to-have items, such as schema markup on every page or a live chat widget, add value but do not break the site if delayed.

2. Map checklist items to your primary user journeys

Identify the two or three paths a visitor is most likely to take. A contact form submission, a product purchase, or a brochure download. Test those journeys completely before anything else. Secondary pages and edge cases can follow.

3. Account for budget and technical capability honestly

A small business with a limited budget cannot do everything at once. Prioritise the items that protect revenue and SEO first. Defer cosmetic improvements and advanced integrations to a phase two list. A phased launch is far better than a delayed one.

4. Consider a phased launch over a big-bang approach

A phased launch releases core pages first, then adds sections progressively. This reduces risk, allows real user data to inform decisions, and keeps the project moving. The essential steps for a design checklist from Done outlines how to structure a phased approach effectively.

5. Know when to outsource

Technical tasks such as server configuration, redirect mapping, and structured data implementation have a high cost of error. If your team lacks the expertise, outsourcing these specific items is cheaper than fixing the consequences. Marketing tasks such as SEO copywriting and campaign setup also benefit from specialist input.

6. Use AI tools with human oversight

AI tools can accelerate content drafting, image optimisation, and SEO audits. However, human oversight prevents generic content and catches functional errors that automated tools miss. Use AI to speed up the process, not to replace the final review.

7. Treat the checklist as an ongoing process

A website launch checklist does not end on launch day. Build a quarterly review cycle into your calendar. Revisit your checklist every three months and add new items as your site grows, your audience changes, and platform updates arrive.

Key takeaways

A complete website launch checklist covers pre-launch planning, technical testing, SEO setup, security, and post-launch monitoring, with each area directly affecting your site’s performance, rankings, and visitor trust.

Point Details
Plan before you build Define goals and site structure before development starts to avoid costly late changes.
Redirects protect rankings Implement 301 redirects for every changed URL to preserve link equity and prevent 404 errors.
SEO setup at launch Configure metadata, sitemap, and Search Console on day one, not as an afterthought.
Post-launch is ongoing Monitor analytics, apply updates, and refine content weekly for the first 90 days.
Prioritise by impact Focus on items that protect revenue and SEO first; defer cosmetic improvements to phase two.

What I have learned from 350+ website launches

The single most common mistake I see from SMBs is treating the checklist as a last-minute tick-box exercise. By the time a client comes to us saying “we launch next week, can you check everything is fine?”, the structural decisions that are hardest to fix are already locked in. Planning the checklist before the build starts, not after, is what separates a smooth launch from a painful one.

The two items that get missed most often are 301 redirects and analytics configuration. Redirects are invisible when they work and catastrophic when they do not. I have seen businesses lose significant organic traffic overnight because a redesign changed 200 URLs and nobody mapped the old ones. Analytics is the other gap. Without conversion tracking set up correctly from day one, you lose weeks of data that you can never recover.

On the subject of AI tools: we use them in our own workflow at Done, and they genuinely speed up audits, content drafts, and technical checks. But they do not replace the human who reads every page, clicks every button, and asks “does this actually make sense to a real visitor?” That final review is where the real quality control happens.

One thing specific to Luxembourg and the broader European market is GDPR compliance. Cookie consent is not a formality here. Regulators are active, and a misconfigured consent banner can create real legal exposure. Build compliance into your checklist from the start, not as a final item before launch.

The honest truth about website launches is that no site is ever truly finished. The best ones are built with the expectation of continuous improvement. Launch with what works, measure what happens, and iterate from there.

— Thomas

Your website launch, handled properly from day one

Launching a website without a structured plan is the fastest way to spend twice the budget fixing problems that a proper checklist would have prevented. Done has supported over 350 web projects since 2014, covering everything from initial planning and web development to SEO, GDPR compliance, and post-launch growth.

https://done.lu

Whether you are building from scratch or relaunching an existing site, Done works with SMBs across Luxembourg and Europe to make sure every technical, SEO, and marketing requirement is covered before go-live. The result is a site that performs from day one and continues to improve over time. Get in touch with the Done team to discuss your launch plan.

FAQ

What is a website launch checklist?

A website launch checklist is a structured list of technical, SEO, content, and security tasks that must be completed before and after a new site goes live. It prevents costly errors such as broken forms, missing redirects, and untracked conversions.

How long before launch should I start the checklist?

Start your pre-launch checklist at least four weeks before the planned go-live date. Complex sites with e-commerce functionality or large content migrations may need eight weeks or more.

What is the most commonly missed item on a launch checklist?

301 redirects for changed URLs are the most frequently missed item, particularly on redesign projects. Missing redirects cause 404 errors and an immediate loss of SEO rankings.

Do I need to submit my sitemap to Google after launch?

Yes. Submit your sitemap.xml to Google Search Console on launch day. Without submission, Google may take weeks to discover and index your pages, delaying organic traffic.

How soon after launch should I review performance?

Review your analytics daily for the first two weeks after launch. Check Google Search Console for crawl errors weekly. The first 30 days of data are the most important for identifying and fixing issues before they compound.

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  • How to build a responsive website that grows your business
  • Step by step e-commerce setup: your 2026 guide
  • Web design trends 2026: what you need to know
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  • Woman planning website launch sitemap
    Website launch checklist: your complete 2026 guide
    July 2, 2026
  • Woman reviewing ecommerce user journey maps at kitchen table
    What is the ecommerce user journey? A practical guide
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