We don’t follow the usual playbook. At BlogLogistics, we’re your behind-the-scenes partner focusing on supporting your business – not on scaling at all costs or selling more than you need. We’re here to simplify, support, and build something that works for you. Helping your businesses show up online with confidence and clarity.

Who We Are
We’re a Canadian company that’s built from the ground up to serve one group: small business owners who want their websites to work for them – not against them. From personal experience, we understand the real-life pressures of running a business, and we know that tech headaches, clunky templates, and unreliable hosting are the last things you need on your plate.
That’s why we do things differently.
What We Do
We specialize in custom WordPress website design and fully managed WordPress hosting – with one goal in mind: helping small businesses look professional online without the hassle.
Instead of one-size-fits-all templates or cookie-cutter solutions, we design websites that reflect you. Your business. Your values. Your audience.
And once your site is live, we don’t just wish you luck and disappear. Our managed hosting means we keep your website secure, fast, and up-to-date – so you can get back to running your business, not worrying about plugins or security patches.
Why We Do It
We started BlogLogistics because we saw too many small businesses struggling with websites that didn’t represent them, didn’t perform, or didn’t even work properly. Either they were stuck with DIY builders that limited what they could do, or they were dealing with faceless hosting providers that offered no real support.
We knew there had to be a better way. So we built it.
Our Approach
We blend tech with human insight – bringing in elements of behavioural science to design websites that not only look good but also perform. That means helping visitors make decisions faster, building trust through design, and focusing every page on helping your business grow.
We believe in:
- Clarity over complexity – clear communication and transparent pricing.
- Partnership over transactions – we want to see your business succeed.
- Performance over guesswork – your website should do something, not just sit there.
- No pressure, no upsells – Unlike many providers, we don’t use pushy sales tactics or upselling. We simply recommend what fits your business – nothing more, nothing less.
Let’s Keep It Simple
If you’re tired of wrestling with your website – or worse, ignoring it because it’s just too overwhelming – we’re here to help.
Let’s make your online presence one less thing to worry about.
The Story Behind BlogLogistics
Snowflakes drifted by the small top-floor window of the heritage rental loft, a quiet space for Roger Wheatley’s solitude, one January morning in Toronto, Ontario. The brick-and-frame studio – tucked in a quiet cozy neighbourhood in the city’s Rosedale area – creaked as the furnace kicked in. Roger had just returned from a whirlwind stretch through Copenhagen, Singapore, and Melbourne – cities he’d visited for much the same reason he was staring at his whiteboard now: Small businesses everywhere needed a digital home they could truly rely on.
That thought eventually became the spark for BlogLogistics, a proudly Canadian business with a distinctly global passport.
Chapter 1: The Lake-Ontario Launchpad
Roger’s first clients were neighbours – a yoga instructor who wanted a calming online space, and a contractor eager to showcase cedar-deck builds with the polish of an art portfolio. They were as different as cedar and maple, yet both shared the same pain: their “big-box” hosting plans were sluggish and support tickets vanished into limbo. Roger rented a modest rack in a downtown Toronto data centre, configured each server by hand, and squeezed every watt of performance from the hardware. Word spread along the Gardiner, across the Don Valley, and out to the 905: these servers fly.
Chapter 2: The Maple-Leaf Promise
When BlogLogistics’ client list crossed its fiftieth website, Roger opted against champagne. Instead, he ran diagnostics. If any CPU core so much as blinked, he would spin up a fresh node. Clients noticed – especially design agencies from Halifax to Nanaimo that needed hosting they could recommend without an asterisk.
Roger coined an internal mantra:
“No rental cars on a racetrack.”
Translation? BlogLogistics would never cram strangers onto overcrowded servers and hope for the best. Every site would get hand-tuned PHP workers, isolated memory pools, and caching tailored to its workload. Human-managed, never algorithm-abandoned.
Chapter 3: A Quilt of Industries
The roster blossomed:
- Behavioural-health clinicians offering therapy from Iqaluit to Kelowna.
- Legal practices navigating case law in both French and English.
- Authors launching first books that lit up indie-bookshop shelves across Canada.
- Non-profits tackling everything from learning disabilities to newcomers arriving here in Canada.
And yes, more contractors – because when one deck installer’s gallery loads in 0.4 seconds, every carpenter in town suddenly wants pages that snap open just as fast.
Chapter 4: Kangaroos on the Dashboard
The first Australian client arrived via a 2 a.m. email (which, for Roger, was conveniently lunchtime in Buenos Aires during an Argentinian research trek). She was a music therapist near Melbourne who needed donations to process in micro-seconds before donors scrolled away. Roger deployed edge caching through Sydney, halved latency, and tucked a tiny kangaroo emoji beside the site-health indicator on his dashboard – a reminder that BlogLogistics’ maple-leaf roots now stretched under the Pacific.
Today, that dashboard glows with other dots from Kuala Lumpur, Düsseldorf, and Montréal, yet every midnight software patches still start in Toronto – Roger sipping dark roast, after the suburbs, now home, have settled into the night-time hush.
Chapter 5: Cherry Blossoms in the Browser Canvas
The email came to BlogLogistics at dawn in Markham, dusk in Kyoto. Roger rubbed his eyes as a Kyoto‐based artisan reached out from a centuries-old townhouse, where she crafted washi-paper lanterns that now sold worldwide through her online store. In the photo she attached, spring’s first sakura petals drifted past the open shōji behind her; every petal reminded me of the changing landscape of website design. She wanted a separate “…international of feeling…” website, and wanted it fast.
Roger spun up a node in a Tokyo rack, and in 133 minutes had designed and launched her website. Then tuned latency to slice milliseconds, and deployed edge caching so lantern textures loaded crisp, even on Osaka subway Wi-Fi. By the time the city’s evening izakayas clattered shut, the store’s checkout times had mostly dropped below a couple of seconds, and visitor times had increased by 2.68 minutes.
As a quiet flourish, Roger planted a tiny cherry-blossom emoji next to the new origin-health metric on his dashboard a pink reminder that BlogLogistics’ maple roots now stretched beneath the the land of the rising sun as well.
The next morning, sales notifications bloomed on the artisan’s phone like a virtual hanami. She sent a single message of thanks:
“Designing as tea steeps
Pages pour out pure and clear
Quiet grace online.”
Roger grinned, poured another dark roast, and logged one more story of a Canadian carrying craft across the world.
Chapter 6: The Quiet Differentiator
Ask any client why they stay and the answers vary – some mention the fast responses and quick turnaround, others rave about being provided with clear jargon-free communication, or about the “above-and-beyond support”. Yet one concept returns again and again:
“He’s got me covered”
That’s woven into each help-desk article, each line of code, each graphic image created by Roger no matter where he is in the world (the red maple-leaf stamp is your hint). It’s the conviction that technology is most Canadian when it is neighbourly.
Epilogue: Tracks Ahead
In Rouge Park last fall, Roger joined a call from a trailhead picnic table. A non-profit in Auckland was planning a 24-hour charity livestream and needed bullet-proof hosting for a donation website. Roger smiled, promised the roll-out diagram by the time he finished hiking, and signed off. The call caught a lone maple leaf landing on his laptop lid – a little crimson seal on BlogLogistics’ next chapter.
Because whether the journey arcs over Queen Street, the Rhine, or the Great Barrier Reef, every kilometre leads back to the same Canadian idea born on that snowy Toronto morning: Give small businesses a digital home as dependable as a Canadian winter, and as welcoming as its first spring thaw.