I just put them all in my account. I only share access if they request it. I did have someone, somewhere, ask about me getting hit by a bus. I just make sure my clients have access to their domain, so they can always point their nameservers anywhere they want if I disappear. I'm not trying to keep it from them, it's just that most of my clients don't want to be bothered.
Thanks for this video, it was helpful. I noticed that after getting my site activated on CF, I can no longer edit my functions.php through WordPress. It now says I have to make edits via FTP. Is there some CF settings or DNS settings that will let me edit through WordPress?
All my sites are on Cloudflare and I've never had that happen. Are you sure there's nothing else that's changed? A lot of security plugins will do that.
Isn't it better to have a separate account for every client? If they leave, you cannot hand them their account if you're having all websites under one account.
Tip: Make sure to check your email is entered correctly. We use CF for all our clients, but some have their own CF account due to previous developers or somenother reason. One client has the wrong email address. We wanted to make it more secure and send out invites to those who need access, such as ourselves. We cannot do that without verifying the email address. We are now struggling to change it. It tells us to verify the email first before we can change it!
@@TheAdminBar Thank you. It turns out the solution is, they cannot change the email address. We have to have the client create an email address that matches so it can be confirmed and then changed. So yeah, double-check that email address LOL
@@TheAdminBarI have not met a single client who does not need an email in the domain. What solution can you suggest? Using Cloudflare plus creating an email on the domain.
@@jjes.studioI think a couple top recommendations would be Google Workspace or Microsoft 365 for the client’s domain-based email. Either one will require adding some records in the DNS area of Cloudflare.