Page settings & Page SEO
The Edit Page settings give you full control over how each page on your website behaves, who can access it, and how it appears in search engines and on social media.
This is where structure, visibility, SEO, and user experience come together.
Understanding these settings helps you:
- Build a clear and logical website structure
- Improve search engine visibility
- Control access to content
- Optimize how pages are shared and discovered
How to access Page Settings & Page SEO
You can open Edit Page in multiple ways, depending on your workflow:
- Web Studio → Website Settings → Page SEO
- Web Studio → Pages → click the cog icon on a specific page → Show settings
- When creating a New Page, you can configure these settings immediately during setup
All paths lead to the same Edit Page panel, so you can update settings whenever needed.
Page Info
The Page Info tab controls the structure, access, and internal organization of the page.

Page Name (internal)
The Page Name is used internally inside the editor and page list.
Key things to know:
- This name is mainly for you and your team
- It helps keep your website organized
- It does not directly affect SEO
Best practices:
- Keep names short and descriptive
- Use clear labels like Home, About, Pricing, Contact, Course Overview
- Avoid duplicates to prevent confusion
💡 Tip: If your site grows large, consistent naming makes navigation much easier.
Page URL
The Page URL defines the address visitors see in the browser and what search engines index.
Why this matters:
- URLs are part of SEO
- Clean URLs improve trust and readability
- They help users understand where they are
Recommended URL structure:
- Use lowercase letters
- Separate words with hyphens (
-) - Keep URLs short and meaningful
- Avoid special characters, numbers, or filler words
Good examples:
/about/pricing/online-course/member-dashboard
Avoid:
/About_Us_2024/page?id=384/new-page-final-v2
💡 Tip: Once a page is live and indexed, avoid changing the URL unless necessary.
Add to Group
Pages can be placed into groups for internal organization.
What groups are for:
- Organizing pages in the editor
- Structuring larger websites
- Improving clarity for admins
Examples of groups:
- Pages
- Landing Pages
- Legal
- Campaigns
⚠️ Groups do not affect SEO or page visibility — they are purely organizational.
Page Access
The Page Access setting controls who can view the page.
You can control who can access each page based on your needs:
Public → Use for pages that should be visible to everyone, such as your homepage, public content pages, or sales pages.
Password Protected → Ideal when you want to share specific content with a limited group or individual.
When selected, you set a password and share it with the people you want to give access to.
- Common examples:
- Private resources
- Draft content
Temporary access for clients or partners
Members Only → Best for gated content that should only be available to logged-in members.
When selected, you choose one or more member groups that are allowed to access the page.
- Members can get access by:
- Purchasing a product or subscription linked to a member group
- Being manually assigned to a member group by an admin
- Common examples:
- Courses and learning portals
- Membership content
- Exclusive resources for paying members
- Common examples:
💡 Tip:
Page access controls visibility, but indexing is managed separately via sitemap settings.
Alternative Header
You can enable Use the alternative header for this page to display a different header layout than the standard header. Once enabled, the alternative header can be edited directly on the page. Any changes made to the alternative header will automatically apply to all other pages where the alternative header is enabled.
When to use it:
- Landing pages
- Sales funnels
- Campaign pages
- Pages without main navigation
This allows you to tailor the user experience without affecting the rest of the site.
SEO Info
The SEO Info tab controls how your page appears in search engines and when shared externally.

Page Title
The Page Title appears:
- In search engine results
- In the browser tab
SEO best practices:
- 50–60 characters
- Include the primary keywords of the page
- Add your brand name when relevant
💡 Why it matters
The page title is one of the strongest on-page SEO signals.
Meta Description
The Meta Description is shown below the title in search results.
Best practices:
- 140–160 characters
- Clear and benefit-focused
- Encourages users to click
💡 Note
Meta descriptions don’t directly affect rankings, but they strongly influence click-through rates when the page is shared on social media.
Add to Sitemap
When Add to sitemap is enabled, the page is included in your site’s sitemap.
Include in sitemap:
- Homepage
- About page
- Public landing pages
- Blog or content pages
Exclude from sitemap:
- Login pages
- Thank-you pages
- Members-only content
- Temporary or internal pages
💡 Best practice
Only include pages you want search engines to index.
Share Image
The Share Image is used when the page is shared on social platforms like Facebook or LinkedIn.
Best practices:
- Recommended size: 1200 × 630 px
- Use strong visuals and minimal text
- Set unique images for important pages, use a backup set in the Web Studio > Website Settings > General Settings > Social sharing image
💡 Why it matters
- Improves click-through on social media
- Ensures your brand looks professional
- Prevents random images from being selected
SEO & Page structure recommendations
To get the most out of Page Settings:
- Use clear internal page names
- Create short, readable URLs
- Write unique titles and meta descriptions for each important page
- Include only valuable pages in the sitemap
- Customize share images for key content
A well-structured page setup helps both search engines and visitors understand your website — leading to better visibility, engagement, and results.