Manage Website Pages
Overview
A page is a distinct URL and content container within your website, such as a homepage, services, about us, portfolio, or contact us. Modules are the content building blocks placed within pages. A website can have multiple pages, and each page can contain multiple modules.
Before creating a multi-page website, list the questions your visitors most frequently ask. For most brands, the homepage answers "Who are you?", the services page answers "What do you offer?", and the contact page answers "What's the next step?"
Access Page Management
Open "Pages" at the top of the editor. The panel has three tabs:
- Standard Pages: Manage pages like services, about, or events, excluding the homepage.
- Legal Pages: Edit platform-provided terms and privacy-related pages.
- Blog Pages: Edit the layout for your blog homepage, and archive pages for categories, tags, and authors.
What is the Homepage?
The homepage is the first page visitors see when they enter your main website URL. Kanorio creates a homepage when you build your site, and it's fixed at the top of the page list.
You can edit the homepage's content and SEO, but it cannot be deleted, reordered by drag-and-drop, or changed to a different URL path. This prevents your site from losing its main entry point. If you want to redesign your homepage, keep the homepage itself and adjust its content using modules.
Add a Standard Page
1. Click "Add Page"
In the "Standard Pages" tab, click "Add Page." You can choose between "AI Assist" or "Start from Scratch."
2. Choose Creation Method
Start from Scratch is ideal if you already know the page structure and want to add modules and text yourself. The new page will inherit the header and footer settings from your homepage, ensuring consistent site navigation.
AI Assist is suitable if you only have a theme or goal. Describe your service, target audience, the information you want to include, and the action you want visitors to take, and AI will generate a draft you can further edit.
3. Enter Page Name and URL Path
When adding a blank page, first enter the page title and URL path. The URL path is the part after your main website URL. For example, if your main URL is yourbrand.com, you could use yourbrand.com/services for your services page.
Use short, easy-to-understand, and unique lowercase English paths, such as about, services, or contact. You can still adjust the title and path of standard pages in the page settings after creation; before changing a shared URL, notify relevant visitors or update links.
4. Add Modules
After creation, you'll enter the new page. Start by adding a hero or image/text module that explains the page's theme, then add sections for case studies, FAQs, forms, or buttons as needed. Refer to "Understanding and Using Modules" for instructions.
Edit Page Name, URL, and SEO
In the "Pages" list, click the "SEO" button for a page to simultaneously manage its title, URL path, search title, search description, keywords, and social sharing information.
SEO (Search Engine Optimization) isn't about stuffing keywords. Use natural language to describe the page's actual content, and ensure each page has a unique title and description. For more details, read "Complete SEO Setup."
Order Standard Pages
Within the "Standard Pages" tab, you can drag and drop pages (except the homepage) to reorder them in the list. The homepage is always fixed at the top. This order is for page management; if your header uses custom navigation items, you'll need to adjust the order of those navigation items separately in "Header & Footer."
Hide and Unhide Pages
The eye icon next to a standard page toggles its visibility. When hidden, the page won't appear on your published site; even if someone tries to access the URL directly, they'll see a "page not found" result. This is useful for event pages that are still in preparation or service pages that are temporarily unavailable.
Hiding a page stops public access but is not an account login or permission management feature. Do not place account credentials, private documents, or information meant only for specific individuals on standard website pages; content requiring access control should use services with login and permission features.
Delete a Standard Page
Select "Delete" from the page's more options menu. The homepage cannot be deleted. Before deleting, ensure no header, footer, buttons, ads, or social posts still link to that page.
If you simply want to prevent visitors from seeing it temporarily, hide it instead of deleting it. Do not assume you can restore a deleted page from version history.
Legal Pages
The "Legal Pages" tab provides pre-built terms and privacy-related pages from the platform. You cannot add other legal pages yourself, but you can open existing ones to modify content, toggle their visibility, or revert to the default template if needed.
Legal documents vary based on your services, region, and data processing practices. Kanorio's templates do not constitute legal advice; before using them officially, consult with a professional to ensure they align with your specific business needs.
Blog Pages
The "Blog Pages" tab offers layouts for a fixed blog homepage, as well as archive pages for categories, tags, and authors. You don't need to manually create these URLs, nor can you add, hide, or delete other blog templates here; clicking on an item will prepare the page when needed, allowing you to adjust its appearance and SEO.
Blog post content itself is managed in the blog management area; this tab primarily controls the pages visitors use to browse collections of articles.
Plan and Published Page Limits
Different plans have different limits on the number of pages you can publish. The Free plan currently allows only the homepage to be published. If you add more standard pages, ensure your plan supports multi-page publishing. You can still create and edit drafts, but check the editor's prompts and your plan's benefits before publishing.
Tips
- Prioritize creating your most important three pages first: Homepage, Services, and Contact. Add portfolio or event pages once you have sufficient content.
- Set a single primary goal for each page, such as booking, purchasing, or inquiring, to avoid visitor confusion.
- Before launching an event page, preview it on mobile to check dates, locations, buttons, and forms.
- Before changing a URL path, list all buttons, navigation items, and external links that might be affected.
Frequently Asked Questions
The Free plan currently allows only the homepage to be published. You can create and edit other standard pages, but publishing multiple pages requires a plan that supports multi-page publishing. Please refer to the plan page and editor prompts for details.
The homepage is currently the primary entry point created when you build your site and cannot be swapped with another standard page in the page panel. Edit the modules and content of your existing homepage, or add buttons on the homepage linking to important pages.
No, they should not be used this way. Hidden pages are not publicly visible, and direct access to the URL results in a "page not found" error; however, this is not an account login or permission system. Sensitive data should not be placed on any standard website page.
The current page management panel does not offer a feature for users to duplicate entire pages. If you need a similar page, add a blank page, inherit the necessary site header and footer, and then add the appropriate modules one by one.
Changing a page name usually doesn't change the URL; however, if you change the URL path, old links may no longer direct visitors to the new page. Update all navigation, buttons, and external promotional links, and test them after making changes.