Getting Started

Updated 13 July 2026

This guide walks you through every step of installing and setting up Woo Warehouse – from downloading the plugin file all the way to your warehouse team seeing live orders on the board. Even if you have never installed a WordPress plugin before, this guide explains everything in plain, simple language.

Before you begin: Woo Warehouse requires WooCommerce to be installed and active on your WordPress site. If you do not have WooCommerce yet, install it first from WordPress Admin → Plugins → Add New and search for “WooCommerce.”

Complete Setup Guide – 9 Steps

Follow each step in order. Do not skip any step – each one prepares the next.

1. Download the Latest Version of Woo Warehouse

Go to the Webbycrown website or the marketplace where you purchased the plugin. Log in to your account and find your purchased downloads. Download the plugin as a ZIP file – it will look like woo_warehouse.zip or similar. Do not unzip or extract the file. WordPress needs it in ZIP format for the next step.

Always download the latest version to get the newest features, bug fixes, and compatibility with the latest WooCommerce. If you already have an older version installed, the upload in Step 3 will update it automatically.
2. Log in to Your WordPress Admin Dashboard

Open your web browser and go to your WordPress login page. This is usually at  yourwebsite.com/wp-admin. Enter your WordPress administrator username and password. You must be an Administrator – lower-level accounts (like Editor or Author) do not have permission to install plugins.

Once logged in, you will see the WordPress dashboard – the main control panel for your website. The left side has a menu of all the sections. You are ready to install the plugin.

3. Upload and Install the Plugin

In the WordPress left menu, go to Plugins → Add New Plugin. At the top of the page, you will see a button that says “Upload Plugin” – click it. A file selection area will appear. Click “Choose File” (or “Browse”) and select the woo_warehouse.zip file you downloaded in Step 1. Then click “Install Now.”

WordPress will upload the file and install the plugin. You will see a progress screen with text saying “Installing Plugin…” followed by a success message. This usually takes 5 to 15 seconds. Do not close the browser tab while it is running.

If you see an error like “The package could not be installed. The theme is missing…”  – this usually means you uploaded the wrong file or the ZIP file is corrupted. Re-download the plugin ZIP file and try again.
4. Activate the Plugin

After WordPress finishes installing the plugin, you will see a screen with two options:“Activate Plugin”and “Return to Plugin Installer.” Click “Activate Plugin.”

Alternatively, if you are on the main Plugins list page (Plugins → All Plugins), find “Woo Warehouse” in the list and click the “Activate” link that appears below its name.

When the plugin activates successfully, you will be taken back to the Plugins list page and you should see a notice confirming activation. In the left-hand WordPress menu, a new item called “Warehouse” will now appear – this is the plugin’s admin area.

When Woo Warehouse activates for the first time, it automatically creates your default workflow statuses (Pending Pick, Picking, Picked, Packing, Ready to Ship, Shipped, Complete) and default shipping carriers (USPS, UPS, FedEx, DHL). You do not need to set these up manually.
5. Verify WooCommerce is Active (Required)

Woo Warehouse works on top of WooCommerce. It cannot function without WooCommerce being installed and active on the same website. To check: go to Plugins → All Plugins and look for “WooCommerce” in the list. The plugin name should show in bold text with a blue “Active” indicator, and you should see a “Deactivate” link below it (meaning it is already active).

If WooCommerce is not in your list at all, go to Plugins → Add New, search for “WooCommerce,” install it, and activate it. Then come back to this step.

If WooCommerce is inactive, Woo Warehouse will show an admin notice at the top of your WordPress pages saying it requires WooCommerce. The plugin will not work until WooCommerce is activated.

6. Open the Warehouse Settings and Find Your Portal URL

Now that the plugin is active, go to Warehouse → Settings in the WordPress left menu. This is the plugin’s configuration page.

At the top of the Settings page, you will see the “Portal URLs” section. This shows three important web addresses:

Copy the Login URL and save it somewhere easy to find – you will share it with your warehouse team in the next steps.

The default portal URL is based on your website address. For example, if your website is myshop.com, your portal might be at myshop.com/warehouse/login. You can change the URL slug later at Settings → Permalinks

7. Create Warehouse Staff User Accounts

Your warehouse team needs individual WordPress user accounts with the correct role to access the portal. Each person – picker, packer, manager – needs their own account. Here is how to create them:

Do not give warehouse staff the “Administrator” role – that gives full access to your entire WordPress website and WooCommerce store, which is a security risk. The Warehouse Staff and Warehouse Manager roles give exactly the right amount of access and nothing more.

8. Share the Portal Login URL with Your Team

Now that your staff accounts are created, send each team member:

Staff access the portal through the Login URL – not through the regular WordPress admin login at /wp-admin. The warehouse portal is a separate, clean interface built for use on a warehouse floor or on a tablet. It does not show any WordPress menus or admin tools.

The portal works well on tablets. Many warehouses mount a tablet near the packing station so staff can view and update orders without going to a desktop computer. The portal is mobile-responsive and designed for use on a 10-inch screen.
9. Test the Portal – Confirm Everything is Working

Before going live with your team, test the portal yourself:

If no orders appear on the board when you first set up the portal, this is normal – the board shows active WooCommerce orders(those with a “Processing” or “On Hold” status). If your store has no recent orders, the board will be empty. You can add demo orders for testing at Warehouse → Settings → Demo Orders

Setup Complete – What to Do Next

Your Woo Warehouse portal is now fully set up. Here is a quick summary of what was automatically created when the plugin activated:

Recommended Next Steps

After the basic setup, do these things next