Already running WooCommerce? Run Asteris for WooCommerce alongside Asteris for WordPress.

Two products. Same team out of Sydney. Same engineering bar. Designed from day one to run on the same site without stepping on each other.

How they fit together

Five modules are truly shared across both plugins — same codebase, same UX, no duplication of data:

  1. SEO + AI — one module rendering across content pages and product/category pages
  2. Analytics + Pixels — one GA4 setup, one GTM container, one consent flow
  3. Links (planned) — internal link manager that knows about both posts and products
  4. AI library — the model interface that powers AI features in both plugins
  5. Activity Log + Site Health — one log capturing activity from both content and store

When both plugins are installed, the shared modules detect each other and run once. You don’t pay twice and you don’t get conflicting settings.

Cross-product setup

Install order doesn’t matter. Each plugin checks for the other on activation and switches the shared modules to co-existence mode automatically. The dashboard widget on each plugin shows the other’s status.

If you uninstall one plugin, the shared modules stay attached to whichever plugin remains, with full functionality.

Pricing

There’s no bundle discount at launch (we’re holding the launch price low enough that adding a bundle would mean cutting our own margin further). Two separate subscriptions, two separate licences.

Both plugins follow the same pricing model — launch lock for life of subscription, 500-subscriber Founder cap, $149/$349/$549 launch tiers. If you’re a Founder on one and not the other, you can claim Founder status on the second by purchasing during its launch window.

Who runs both

Most people who run a content site + WooCommerce store on the same install: blog/magazine sites with a store annex, course sites that sell the course via WC, services businesses that also sell digital products. The split between “content” and “commerce” usually isn’t 100/0 — both plugins are designed for sites where it’s 70/30 or 30/70.

If your site is 95%+ commerce — every page is a product, cart, or checkout — Asteris for WooCommerce alone is enough. If your site has no store at all, Asteris for WordPress alone is enough.

See also