Launch without extra complexity
MyReady helps you get a site or blog in shape quickly: write clear pages, publish your first articles, add images, and avoid getting lost in settings. Below are two entry points into the workspace: the editor and the file manager. Both open in the browser after you sign in with the admin password you set in deployment settings.
Editor and files
Editor is the main place for content work. Here you create and edit pages and posts visually, fill in titles and search descriptions, switch languages, mark content as draft or publish it, upload images, and use the AI assistant when needed for rewrites, title ideas, FAQ drafts, and more. Site settings such as languages, time zone, and integrations are also available there. After you save, the site rebuilds automatically, so visitors see the latest version.
Files gives direct access to the Hugo project folder on the server: folder tree, file upload and download, archives, and backups. Use it when it is easier to work like in a file explorer, restore a full backup, or quickly place a large file into
static/. Everyday page and article editing is usually easier in the editor; the file manager is for lower-level access to the site structure.

How to run a site or blog on MyReady
Start with the essentials: clean up the home page, menu, and contacts, then gradually add useful content to the blog. At the beginning, you do not need to fill in everything at once. What matters more is that the site already answers the basic visitor questions: who you are, how you can help, and what to do next. The easiest way to work is through the editor: there you can update pages, move extra content to draft, publish new material, and edit copy without extra complexity. If you want to get comfortable faster, start with these materials: Quick start for how the editor works, AI assistant for help with text, translation, and images, and Element examples for ready-made HTML snippets and blocks.
WARNING
What to do on day one
- Review the home page: is it clear from the first screen who you are, who the site is for, and what problem it solves?
- Update the menu: keep only the sections that visitors truly need right now.
- Clean up contacts: add a working email, messengers, links, and remove all placeholders.
- Review the FAQ and utility pages: keep what is useful and move the rest to draft.
- Publish 1-2 strong pieces: a few materials based on real customer questions are better than a lot of formal filler.
Visitors, page structure, and search growth
Three blocks below use the same pattern: a short label and a sentence — clarity for visitors, a sensible page skeleton, and content aimed at search.
What a visitor should understand immediately
- Value and role — who you are and exactly how you can help.
- Audience — who your product, service, or project is for.
- Next step — what to do next: write to you, submit a request, open the right section, or read an important page.
- Quick answers — where to find answers to common questions without waiting.
- Contact — how to reach you without friction.
A simple structure that is easy to start with
- Home — states the core offer, the benefit, and the next step.
- About / Company — explains why visitors can trust you.
- Services / Solutions / Directions — shows what exactly you offer.
- FAQ — covers typical questions before contact.
- Blog — answers real audience questions and helps bring search traffic.
- Contacts — gives a simple way to reach you.
If you want the site to grow from search
- Audience questions — write for specific questions, not “content for its own sake.”
- Titles for search — use phrasing a real person might type into a search box.
- Value in examples — lists, instructions, answers, and cases.
- Freshness — refresh important pages so information does not go stale.
- People first — usefulness for readers before formal SEO tactics.
Quick start
This article is the main reference for how a document works in MyReady and which blocks are available in the editor. The rest of the starter texts on the site can be edited, moved to draft, or deleted once the example has done its job.
© MyReady
AI assistant in MyReady
This material is for people who want to use an AI model together with the MyReady editor, not as a “magic button,” but as a tool with understandable rules, from API setup to translating entire pages into another language.
© MyReady
Ready HTML snippets
This document does not repeat the editor’s standard blocks. It only collects ready-made snippets for the “Raw HTML” block: when you need custom formatting and the built-in blocks are not enough.
© MyReady