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Enterprise Multi-Site
One CodebaseUnlimited LocationsTrue Data Isolation

多站点网站平台

一个代码库。无限位置。零许可费。

$540
Annual Platform Cost
Supabase + Vercel
100x
Faster Than PHP
Static HTML on CDN
0
Plugin Vulnerabilities
No plugins. No PHP.
6-24mo
Migration ROI
vs. Sitecore/AEM/WP
What Is a Multi-Site Website Platform?

A multi-site platform runs multiple location-specific websites from a single codebase and deployment. Forget maintaining 50 separate WordPress installs or wrestling with Multisite table prefixes. One Next.js app dynamically renders each location's content through /locations/[slug] routes. Supabase Row Level Security handles true data isolation — each location sees only its own content — while shared brand elements like logos, colors, and layouts stay locked in code.

50 WordPress installs means 50 plugin updates, 50 potential breakpoints, and $10-30K/year in maintenance One missed update becomes a security breach across your entire brand.
WordPress Multisite uses table prefixes for separation — cosmetic, not real isolation A compromised site can access every location's data through those shared database tables.
Every location page looks slightly different because local managers override brand guidelines That inconsistency erodes patient, customer, or guest trust and tanks conversion rates.
Sitecore costs $40-200K/year in licensing alone Adobe AEM runs $250-500K/year. You're paying enterprise licensing fees for what amounts to templated content delivery.
PHP renders every page on every request Multiply that across 50-500 locations under load. Page speed drops below 3 seconds, Core Web Vitals fail, and local search rankings crater.
Your IT team spends 80% of their time maintaining websites instead of improving them Developer hours burn on infrastructure instead of features that actually drive revenue per location.
Supabase Row Level Security
True per-location data isolation at the database level. Each location's admin sees only its own content — not table prefixes, not cosmetic separation. Real PostgreSQL policies.
Brand Enforcement in Code
Logos, colors, fonts, and layouts are locked in the codebase. Location managers can edit hours, photos, and promotions — nothing else. Brand consistency is architectural, not aspirational.
Static HTML on Global CDN
Every location page pre-renders to static HTML and deploys to Vercel's edge network. No PHP, no server rendering, no database queries at runtime. Sub-second load times, worldwide.
Centralized Admin Dashboard
One dashboard shows every location's content freshness, traffic, leads, and performance scores. Stale content gets flagged automatically. You'll know which locations are underperforming before they tell you.
Programmatic Local SEO
Dynamic /locations/[city-state] routes generate unique, schema-marked pages for every location. One domain builds authority instead of 50 subdomains splitting it.
Zero-Downtime Deployments
A git push updates every location simultaneously via Vercel's atomic deployments. No rolling updates, no plugin conflicts, no "one-click update that breaks everything" moments.
Dynamic Location Routing
One Next.js app serves /locations/[slug] for every location — 10 or 1,000 — from a single deployment on Vercel.
Per-Location Content Editing
Location managers update hours, staff bios, photos, promotions, and local events through a scoped admin interface that can't touch brand elements.
Automated 301 Redirect Mapping
Every URL from your old WordPress sites maps to new routes with automated redirect generation and Google Search Console verification.
Multi-Location Schema Markup
LocalBusiness structured data auto-generates per location with correct NAP, hours, geo-coordinates, and service areas for Google Business Profile alignment.
Performance Monitoring Per Location
Real-time Lighthouse scores, Core Web Vitals, and uptime tracking for every location — all surfaced in your centralized dashboard.
Role-Based Access Control
Corporate admins see everything. Regional managers see their territory. Location managers see their site. Enforced at the database layer, not the UI layer.
01
Architecture & Audit
We audit your current setup — WordPress Multisite, separate installs, Sitecore, whatever you're running. We map every URL, every content type, every integration. You get an architecture document showing exactly how your locations translate to the new system.
Weeks 1-2
02
Design System & Dashboard
We build the shared design system that enforces your brand across every location. Then we build the admin dashboard where corporate and location managers will live. You approve both before we write a line of application code.
Weeks 3-5
03
Development & Data Migration
Next.js application, Supabase database with RLS policies, Vercel deployment pipeline. Content migrates from your existing sites into the new schema. Every location gets its data, every redirect gets mapped.
Weeks 6-10
04
QA, SEO Validation & Launch
Every location page gets tested for performance, accessibility, schema markup, and redirect accuracy. Google Search Console configured per location. We launch with zero-downtime DNS cutover.
Weeks 11-12
05
Monitoring & Optimization
30 days of post-launch monitoring: crawl error resolution, redirect chain cleanup, Core Web Vitals tracking, and location manager training. We don't hand off until every location is indexed and performing.
Weeks 13-16
Next.jsSupabaseVercelRow Level SecurityTypeScriptTailwind CSS

FAQ

How does this differ from WordPress Multisite?

WordPress Multisite uses table prefixes in a shared database — cosmetic separation, not real isolation. A compromised plugin can reach every site's data. Our platform uses Supabase Row Level Security, which enforces isolation at the PostgreSQL policy level. Each location physically can't query another location's data, regardless of application-layer bugs. Add static HTML delivery versus PHP per-request rendering and you get 100x faster page loads with near-zero attack surface.

Can location managers edit their own content without breaking the brand?

Yes. The admin interface scopes each location manager to editable fields only: hours, staff bios, photos, promotions, and local events. Brand elements — logo, colors, typography, page layout — are enforced in the codebase. There's no toggle to override them, no setting to change them. A location manager in Topeka literally cannot make their page look different from corporate standards.

How much does this cost compared to Sitecore or Adobe AEM?

Sitecore licensing runs $40-200K per year. Adobe AEM runs $250-500K per year. That's licensing alone — before development, hosting, or maintenance. Our platform's infrastructure costs roughly $540 per year (Supabase $300 + Vercel $240) regardless of location count. The build is a one-time fixed fee starting at $40K for 5-10 locations. Migration ROI typically hits within 6-24 months.

What happens to our SEO when we migrate from separate sites?

Every URL from your existing sites gets a 301 redirect mapped to the new route structure. We configure Google Search Console per location, submit updated sitemaps, and monitor crawl errors for 30 days post-launch. Because all locations live under one domain, you consolidate link equity instead of diluting it across 50 subdomains. Most clients see improved local rankings within 60-90 days of migration.

How do you handle 200+ locations without performance degradation?

Every location page is statically generated at build time and cached on Vercel's global CDN. No database queries at runtime, no server rendering, no connection pooling bottlenecks. Whether you have 10 locations or 1,000, each visitor gets a pre-built HTML file from the nearest edge node. Build times scale with incremental static regeneration — only changed pages rebuild, not the entire site.

Can we add new locations without developer involvement?

Yes. Adding a location means creating a new row in the Supabase database with that location's details — address, hours, staff, photos. The dynamic /locations/[slug] route picks it up automatically. A corporate admin can do this from the dashboard. No code changes, no deployments, no developer tickets. The new location page goes live within minutes of content entry and an ISR cache refresh.

Multi-Site Platforms from $40,000
Fixed-fee. Scales by location count. 30-day post-launch monitoring included.
See all packages →
Next.js DevelopmentCore Web Vitals OptimizationWordPress to Next.js MigrationCore Web Vitals & Jamstack Guide

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