Check Key Elements Right After Activation
What you saw in the screenshots now becomes real. This is the time to check if the interface is truly as clear as advertised — or if the screenshots masked a confusing experience. Once the plugins are activated, certain indicators are instantly revealing:
✅ New menu entries created: a well-designed plugin integrates into existing menus (Settings, Tools… ), not at the top of the main sidebar.
✅ Aggressive ads or notices: if a plugin floods the admin with banners pushing for the pro version or immediately asks for a review, that’s a red flag.
✅ General usability: are the texts clear? Are the options understandable? Does the plugin seem designed for non-technical users?
✅ Personal data requirements: some plugins demand an email address or force you to sign up for a third-party service — even just to try it. This is usually a dealbreaker for WPDistrib inclusion.
These early visual and functional clues let you spot poorly designed or overly intrusive plugins without diving deeper.
Measure Performance and Detect Potential Conflicts
Once the plugins are installed, it’s essential to check their real impact on your test site. This step reveals plugins that slow down WordPress, cause errors, or clash with others.
👉 Code Profiler (⚠ does not work on TasteWP.com)
- Measures page load times across the site.
- Highlights plugins that significantly slow down either the frontend or admin area.
- Best used on a local installation or dedicated test hosting.
👉 Query Monitor
- Detects invisible PHP errors, slow queries, and excessive API calls.
- Pinpoints the source of technical conflicts, bugs, or unusual server behavior.
👉 FreeSoul Deactivate Plugins
- Lets you disable plugins only on certain pages or content types.
- Provides a technical compatibility report (WordPress version, PHP version, plugin maintenance status).
- Helps detect plugins that inject global scripts unnecessarily.
⚠ If a plugin visibly slows down the site, causes recurring errors, or conflicts with others, it should be discarded immediately. There’s no need to proceed with its configuration.

Build a Ranked List of Promising Plugins
The goal of this phase is to come out with a ranked shortlist — without going into full testing yet.
👉 Each plugin can be assigned one of three statuses:
- Worth deeper testing (clear, promising, stable behavior),
- To watch (interesting but questionable in terms of tech or UX),
- Ruled out (ads, limitations, slowness, conflicts, or frustration right away).
This ranking helps determine exactly which plugin to move forward with in the next phase — and in what order to continue testing.
🌀 A Quick, Smart Filtering Process That Saves Time
Testing a plugin doesn’t mean fully configuring it.
This first phase filters out a large number of plugins with minimal effort.
This is where WPDistrib’s productivity principle shines: only configure plugins once they’ve proven their value.
This method can be reused for any WordPress project to reduce risk, save time, and make confident technical choices from the start.

