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WordPress Publishes 70M+ Posts a Month. None of Them Get Tracked After That

You click Publish. WordPress confirms the post is live, gives you a link to share, and moves on.

Nothing tracks who is responsible for that post going forward. Nothing tracks whether the information inside it is still accurate next month, next year, or three years from now. WordPress is excellent at the moment of publishing. What happens after that is a gap nobody really talks about.

What WordPress actually tracks after you hit publish

Open Posts > All Posts. The columns you see are title, author, category, tags, and publish date.

That's the complete picture WordPress gives you about any published post. None of those columns tell you whether the post is still accurate. None of them tell you who's responsible for keeping it that way. None of them tell you when it was last checked or when it should be checked again.

According to WordPress.com's own activity data, WordPress users publish roughly 70 million posts a month — more than two million a day. Every one of them enters a platform with zero built-in mechanism to track whether it stays accurate over time.

Why this gap exists

WordPress was built as a publishing platform in 2003. Writing, scheduling, and publishing all work smoothly. What WordPress was never built to do is manage content after it goes live.

WordPress 6.9 added inline editor notes for team collaboration — a genuinely useful update. But it changed nothing about what happens to content after publishing. The gap is exactly where it was before.

Why the common workarounds fail

Most teams eventually notice this problem and try to patch it with external tools. Three attempts come up constantly, and all three break down for a similar reason.

The spreadsheet. Someone builds a tracker with columns for post title, last reviewed, and owner. It works for a few weeks. Then someone updates a post and forgets to update the spreadsheet. The spreadsheet starts reflecting what the team intended to do, not what they actually did.

Project management tools. Trello, Asana, Notion — same fundamental issue. They live outside WordPress, so keeping them in sync with actual content changes requires someone to manually update both places every time. That discipline rarely survives more than a month.

The WordPress "Last Modified" date. This one is worth dwelling on because it looks like a solution but isn't. The Last Modified date updates on any save — fixing a typo, adding a tag, changing a category. A post showing "modified yesterday" could mean someone did a thorough accuracy review, or it could mean someone fixed one spelling mistake. There's no way to tell the difference from the date alone. Teams relying on it as a review signal are working off false confidence.

What this actually looks like in practice

The tutorial nobody touched. A two-year-old post still ranks on page one and gets daily visitors. The tool it explains has been redesigned twice since. The screenshots show interfaces that no longer exist. The steps now cause errors. Nobody flagged it — it just kept ranking and kept sending readers through broken instructions.

The team member who left. A writer published eight posts over six months, then moved to a different job. Their name is still listed as author on all eight. Nobody was assigned responsibility for that content when they left, because WordPress has no mechanism for reassigning it. Six months later, a reader flags an error in one of the posts. Nobody knows who should look at it or when it was last checked.

The statistics post that kept ranking. A post citing industry figures was accurate when published. Three of the original sources have since updated their numbers. The post still ranks and still displays the outdated figures as current. Readers checking the original sources find the discrepancy and lose trust in the site.

Why nobody notices until it's a problem

WordPress gives no warning when a post goes stale — no flag, no alert, nothing in the dashboard. A post untouched for two years looks identical in the All Posts list to one reviewed last week.

The first signs typically come from outside WordPress entirely: a reader email pointing out an error, a slow traffic decline in Search Console, a ranking drop after a Google algorithm update. By the time any of these surface, the problem has usually been compounding for months.

Most readers who land on inaccurate content don't email to complain. They leave, and you never know they were there.

What this actually costs over time

Three things degrade simultaneously, and all three are easy to miss because they happen gradually.

Search rankings. Search engines factor freshness into ranking for queries where recency matters. A page untouched for two years, competing against actively maintained content on the same topic, slides down slowly — easy to miss until the drop is already significant.

Reader trust. A reader who hits an error mid-tutorial, or finds a cited statistic no longer matches the source, doesn't usually come back to give the post a second chance. A widely cited industry survey found that roughly a third of people say outdated content directly damages their trust in a brand. That trust doesn't reset just because the post eventually gets fixed — the reader who left has already left.

Team accountability. Without a named owner and a review date, responsibility for any given post belongs to everyone in theory and no one in practice. When something does go wrong, there's no clear person to fix it and nothing stopping the same gap from opening up in another post a few months later.

What should actually happen after publishing

Four things, none of them complicated:

A review date gets set — distinct from the publish date. Publish date tells you when something went live. Review date tells you when someone should next verify it's still accurate.

An owner gets named — distinct from the author. The author wrote the post. The owner is responsible for keeping it accurate going forward. On a single-person site these are the same person. On any team, they often aren't, and without a named owner, nobody is actually in charge of a published post.

A next action gets specified. "Someone should look at this eventually" isn't a next action. A real one looks like: verify accuracy and set a new review date, update a specific outdated section, archive if no longer relevant, or redirect to a newer version.

An attention queue exists somewhere. There's no native WordPress view showing which posts are due for review this month, which have no owner, or which have never been checked since publishing. Until something is added to provide that view, there's no way to see what needs attention next.

The honest takeaway

None of this is solvable by trying harder at remembering. Spreadsheets and external trackers fail consistently because they live outside the system that actually holds the content — any tracking mechanism not connected directly to WordPress will eventually drift out of sync with reality.

The sites that maintain rankings and reader trust over years are the ones that built a system for exactly this gap — review dates, named ownership, and a visible queue, living inside WordPress rather than in a spreadsheet that quietly falls behind.

Getting started

Fixing this doesn't mean switching platforms or stitching together a bunch of external tools. It just means giving every post a review date, an owner, and a place where overdue posts show up — all inside WordPress, attached to the actual content.

Content Lifecycle Manager is a free WordPress plugin built for exactly this. It adds ownership, review dates, and a Needs Attention queue right into your WordPress dashboard. The free version is on WordPress.org. For email reminders, an activity log, and a dashboard widget, Content Lifecycle Manager Pro adds that on top.

Content Lifecycle Manager is a free WordPress plugin built for exactly this. It adds ownership, review dates, and a Needs Attention queue right into your WordPress dashboard. The free version is available on WordPress.org.

For email reminders, an activity log, and a dashboard widget, Content Lifecycle Manager Pro adds that on top.

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