by jeanniesarah on 10/2/20, 4:18 PM with 8 comments
by davismwfl on 10/2/20, 4:58 PM
Even for developers, if they value their time and are starting a business it is smart to stick the marketing site on Wordpress. It means they can easily hand off tasks on it for lower costs and they can focus their energy on the important parts of the business that will differentiate them. Picking a less common CMS system won't differentiate the product or team, instead it usually just causes more headaches that are avoidable.
My general advice for anyone starting a company and wanting to stand up a basic site is to use wordpress. Build content on it, use it for what it is good at. And use your dev resources in areas that will make the business successful, which is not recreating the wheel.
To me it is the same as if you are starting a e-commerce business you are smart to use shopify, bigcommerce, volusion etc versus building a custom site to handle it. Even better to start with wordpress and woocommerce over some CMS + building & integrating your own commerce platform.
With anything there are exceptions, but just my 2 cents.
by codegeek on 10/2/20, 9:55 PM
2nd, WordPress comes with a huge community and theme/plugin ecosystem. Yes, thats where WP can get bad too but if you don't abuse the themes/plugins, you can achieve quite a lot with WP without a lot of extra work.
As a professional though who provides websites to clients who then want to manage the content themselves, WordPress is the best CMS by far. Yes it can have issues with performance and security compared to say JamStack but again, if you know what you are doing and don't abuse WP, you will do fine. I cannot tell clients to use JamStack so that gets ruled out for any CMS needs for which WordPress is really really popular for.
If we want to kill WordPress (they came , they tried, they failed), we have to figure out a way to create the same ecosystem, CMS capabilities that WordPress created.
by stephen82 on 10/2/20, 8:19 PM
It really depends how you use it, WordPress that is.
If your website needs to expand at areas where a vanilla version of WP would not suffice, with custom implementation either via functions.php in your theme or via plugin(s) you can achieve such thing, but with a coming price I'm afraid; bloated database with countless meta data.
Now, don't get me wrong.
If you are experienced with WordPress development, you could implement any solution you want in such way that each one of them would use their own tables and could solve your problem(s).
The thing is, if you need to spend so much time in customization and theme / plugin tweaking, then in my humble, yet naive opinion I would suggest to go with a framework than with WordPress for the sake of sanity; it's a lot easier and way cleaner to achieve the same task in shorter amount of time and effort.
Just...just trust me on that!
I have been doing this with WordPress and WooCommerce for a while now and I know the headaches I face every single time I have to come up with a solution for a customer.
by SkyLinx on 10/4/20, 9:46 AM
For this reason I built DynaBlogger (https://www.dynablogger.com) as a fully managed (hosting, backups, updates etc are taken care of do you can focus on content) alternative to WordPress which is simple, to the point and focused on blogging and at the same time much more affordable than Ghost, which is perhaps the most similar product available.
Simple but not too limited like other options in the market, DynaBlogger has all the features one really needs for publishing content baked in. No plugins on purpose - most WordPress plugins are poorly coded and introduce vulnerabilities or performance issues, and I didn't want that.
It has a free plan, so it would be awesome if you could give it a try. I'm looking forward to any feedback
by frompdx on 10/2/20, 7:55 PM
by bzalasky on 10/3/20, 3:11 AM
by marcuswebb on 10/4/20, 8:29 AM
by b0ner_t0ner on 10/4/20, 2:33 AM
Your introversion can be changed, it's just a mindset.