Squarespace User Management — Contributors & Permissions | OpsBlu Docs

Squarespace User Management — Contributors & Permissions

Invite, manage, and remove Squarespace contributors with Owner, Admin, Editor, and Store Manager role assignments.

Squarespace allows multiple people to access and manage a website through its contributor permission system. Understanding roles, permissions, and how to manage contributors is essential for team collaboration and site security.


What is a Contributor?

A contributor is anyone with access to your Squarespace site's admin panel beyond the site owner. Contributors can have different permission levels depending on their role.

Key Concepts

  • Owner: The person who created the site or billing account (only one owner per site)
  • Administrator: Full access to site except billing and ownership transfer
  • Contributors: Various permission levels for specific tasks
  • Billing Access: Separate permission for managing billing information

Why Use Contributors?

Common Use Cases

  1. Agency or Developer Access:

    • Web designer needs to build/edit site
    • Developer implementing tracking or custom code
    • Temporary access for specific projects
  2. Team Collaboration:

    • Marketing team managing blog posts
    • Social media manager updating content
    • E-commerce manager handling products
  3. Content Editors:

    • Writers creating blog posts
    • Product managers updating inventory
    • Customer service updating FAQ pages
  4. Analyst Access:

    • Analytics team viewing data
    • Read-only access for reporting
    • Limited editing capabilities

Squarespace Permission System

Permission Levels

Squarespace offers granular permission controls:

Permission Level Description Typical Use
Owner Full access including ownership transfer Site owner only
Administrator Full access except billing and ownership Trusted team members, agencies
Website Editor Can edit pages, not settings Content managers
Store Manager Manages products, orders, customers E-commerce team
Blog Editor Creates and edits blog posts Writers, content team
Commenter Can leave comments only Limited access
Reporting View analytics only Data analysts
Scheduling Manage appointments (if enabled) Service businesses

See Roles and Permissions for detailed breakdown.


Access Control Best Practices

1. Principle of Least Privilege

Give contributors only the access they need:

  • Blog writer? Blog Editor, not Administrator
  • Viewing analytics? Reporting, not Website Editor
  • Product manager? Store Manager, not full Administrator

2. Regular Access Reviews

  • Review contributors quarterly
  • Remove inactive users immediately
  • Update permissions when roles change
  • Audit who has Administrator access

3. Use Specific Permissions

Instead of:

  • Making everyone an Administrator

Do:

  • Assign specific role permissions
  • Grant temporary access when needed
  • Revoke when project complete

4. Separate Billing Access

  • Keep billing separate from site access
  • Only trusted team members need billing access
  • Use different permission for financial data

Managing the Contributor Lifecycle

Adding Contributors

  1. Determine Required Access:

    • What does this person need to do?
    • For how long?
    • What should they NOT be able to access?
  2. Send Invitation:

    • Get contributor's email
    • Choose appropriate permission level
    • Set expectations for access duration
  3. Verify Access:

    • Confirm they received invitation
    • Test that permissions are correct
    • Document who has what access

See Adding and Removing Users for step-by-step instructions.

Updating Permissions

When contributor roles change:

  1. Review current permissions
  2. Adjust to new role requirements
  3. Notify contributor of changes
  4. Document the update

Removing Contributors

When access is no longer needed:

  1. Remove contributor immediately
  2. Don't wait for "someday"
  3. Document removal and reason
  4. Verify removal completed

Squarespace Account Types

Individual Site Access

  • Access to specific Squarespace site only
  • Most common for contributors
  • Tied to the specific website

Squarespace Account Access

Contributors may have:

  • Personal Squarespace account (their own sites)
  • Access to your site as contributor
  • These are separate

Important: Removing contributor from your site doesn't delete their Squarespace account.


Common Scenarios

Scenario 1: Hiring a Web Designer

Initial Setup:

  1. Designer needs Administrator access to build site
  2. Add as Administrator
  3. Set expectations for timeline

After Launch:

  1. Reduce to Website Editor (if ongoing content support)
  2. Or remove completely if one-time project
  3. Keep contact for future emergency access

Scenario 2: Content Team

Setup:

  1. Writers: Blog Editor permissions
  2. Editors: Website Editor permissions
  3. Marketing lead: Administrator permissions

Ongoing:

  • Review quarterly
  • Adjust as team members change
  • Remove when people leave company

Scenario 3: Analytics Agency

Setup:

  1. Analyst needs to implement tracking: Temporary Administrator
  2. After setup: Reduce to Reporting (read-only analytics)
  3. Or provide GA4 access directly (not Squarespace access)

Alternative:

  • Share GA4 property access instead
  • No Squarespace contributor needed
  • More secure, limited access

Scenario 4: E-commerce Manager

Setup:

  1. Store Manager permissions
  2. Can manage products, orders, inventory
  3. Cannot change site design or billing

Benefits:

  • Focused access for role
  • Can't accidentally break site design
  • Appropriate for employee role

Security Considerations

Protect Your Site

  1. Don't Share Owner Login:

    • Never give out owner credentials
    • Always use contributor system
    • One compromised account = whole site at risk
  2. Use Strong Passwords:

  3. Monitor Contributor Activity:

    • Review site activity logs
    • Notice unusual changes
    • Investigate unexpected modifications
  4. Remove Access Promptly:

    • When employee leaves
    • When contract ends
    • When project completes
    • When relationship ends

What Contributors Can Access

All contributors can potentially:

  • See custom code in Code Injection
  • View integrations and API keys
  • Access customer data (if Store Manager)
  • See analytics data
  • Export certain data

Protect sensitive data:

  • Don't store passwords in Code Injection comments
  • Use environment variables for API keys when possible
  • Limit Store Manager access to those who need it
  • Regularly audit who has access to what

Squarespace Plan Requirements

Business and Commerce Plans

  • Unlimited contributors
  • All permission levels available
  • Full control over access

Personal Plans

  • Limited to 2 contributors
  • Basic permission levels
  • May not have all granular permissions

If you need more contributors:

  • Upgrade to Business plan
  • Or remove inactive contributors to make room

Communication Best Practices

When Adding Contributors

Send them:

  • Welcome email with access details
  • Overview of what they can/can't do
  • Timeline for their access
  • Contact person for questions
  • Documentation or training materials

When Changing Permissions

Notify contributor:

  • What's changing and why
  • New scope of access
  • Effective date
  • Who to contact with questions

When Removing Access

Professional communication:

  • Thank them for their work
  • Explain access is no longer needed
  • Provide alternative contact method if ongoing relationship
  • Document the change

Troubleshooting Common Issues

Issue: Contributor Can't Log In

Possible Causes:

  • Invitation not accepted
  • Wrong email used
  • Password reset needed
  • Account not activated

Solutions:

  1. Resend invitation
  2. Verify correct email address
  3. Check spam/junk folder
  4. Try password reset

Issue: Contributor Can't Access Specific Feature

Cause: Insufficient permissions

Solution:

  1. Review their permission level
  2. Upgrade permissions if appropriate
  3. Or explain what they can/can't do

Issue: Too Many Contributors (Personal Plan)

Solutions:

  1. Remove inactive contributors
  2. Upgrade to Business plan
  3. Use alternative access methods (share screenshots, GA4 access)

Issue: Contributor Made Unwanted Changes

Solutions:

  1. Use site version history to restore
  2. Review and update their permissions
  3. Consider removing access if serious
  4. Implement change approval process

Documentation & Record Keeping

What to Document

Keep a record of:

  • Who has access (name, email, role)
  • Permission level
  • Date added
  • Date removed (if applicable)
  • Purpose of access
  • Project or reason for access

Sample Contributor Log

Name Email Permission Added Removed Purpose
Jane Designer jane@agency.com Administrator 2024-01-15 2024-03-01 Site redesign
John Analyst john@analytics.co Reporting 2024-02-01 - Monthly reporting
Sarah Writer sarah@company.com Blog Editor 2024-01-10 - Content creation

Migration and Handoff

Transferring Ownership

When selling site or changing ownership:

  1. Prepare for Transfer:

    • Document all contributors
    • Export important data
    • Note all integrations and custom code
  2. Transfer Process:

    • Squarespace has specific transfer process
    • Follow their documentation
    • Verify transfer completed
  3. After Transfer:

    • New owner controls all contributor access
    • You may lose access
    • Plan accordingly

Agency to Client Handoff

  1. Before Handoff:

    • Document your access level
    • Create handoff documentation
    • Train client on contributor management
  2. During Handoff:

    • Client should be owner
    • Your access reduced or removed
    • Create new contributor account for ongoing support if needed
  3. After Handoff:

    • Maintain emergency access if contracted
    • Or remove access completely
    • Document the arrangement


Additional Resources