diff --git a/website/pages/intro/getting-started/provisioning.mdx b/website/pages/intro/getting-started/provisioning.mdx
index 2adf11cbe..fb5010487 100644
--- a/website/pages/intro/getting-started/provisioning.mdx
+++ b/website/pages/intro/getting-started/provisioning.mdx
@@ -23,8 +23,25 @@ so that the guest machine can be repeatably created and ready-to-use.
## Installing Apache
We will just setup [Apache](http://httpd.apache.org/) for our basic project,
-and we will do so using a shell script. Create the following shell script
-and save it as `bootstrap.sh` in the same directory as your Vagrantfile:
+and we will do so using a shell script. First, we need to add some html content
+which will be served by the Apache webserver. This will act as our DocumentRoot
+folder. To do this create a subdirectory named `html` in the project root
+directory. In the `html` directory create a html file named `index.html`.
+For example:
+
+```html
+
+
+
+ Getting started with Vagrant!
+
+
+```
+
+The script below will symlink our shared folder `/vagrant` so that apache serves
+the `html` folder when accessing the root page locally. Now, create the
+following shell script and save it as `bootstrap.sh` in the same directory as
+your Vagrantfile:
```bash
#!/usr/bin/env bash
@@ -52,28 +69,14 @@ The "provision" line is new, and tells Vagrant to use the `shell` provisioner
to setup the machine, with the `bootstrap.sh` file. The file path is relative
to the location of the project root (where the Vagrantfile is).
-We also need to add some html content which will be served by the Apache webserver.
-To do this create a subdirectory named `html` in the project root directory.
-In the `html` directory create a html file named `index.html`.
-For example:
-
-```html
-
-
-
- Getting started with Vagrant!
-
-
-```
-
## Provision!
After everything is configured, just run `vagrant up` to create your
machine and Vagrant will automatically provision it. You should see
the output from the shell script appear in your terminal. If the guest
machine is already running from a previous step, run `vagrant reload --provision`,
-which will quickly restart your virtual machine, skipping the initial
-import step. The provision flag on the reload command instructs Vagrant to
+which will quickly restart your virtual machine, skipping the initial import
+step. The provision flag on the reload command instructs Vagrant to
run the provisioners, since usually Vagrant will only do this on the first
`vagrant up`.