by LouisLazaris on 4/1/25, 8:10 PM with 47 comments
My questions are:
* When you register a domain with them, is the domain legally yours?
* Are there any SEO penalties for using these apps to build websites? Does anyone own a website or client site hosted on Squarespace or similar that’s ranking high on Google?
I can see the benefit for developers but I’m wondering about the benefits for clients.
by solardev on 4/2/25, 4:19 AM
The benefit for clients is that they can pay you once, for a few hours, to help them set it up (if they even need that)... and then they basically don't need you anymore. I've "lost" several happy clients this way, but I'd rather they just use that service than waste their money on a developer they don't really need. It's very easy to use, reliable, and cheap. And they have a single vendor to go for any sort of support they might need for their website.
In contrast to many of the over-engineered Next.js or Gatsby sites I've seen, Wix is far, FAR easier to maintain and I get pretty much zero complaints about it after initial setup. All the other stacks I've ever made for clients, whether they were in Next, React, Angular, vanilla HTML, Wordpress, Drupal, Joomla, other CMSes... all became a maintenance headache after 2-3 years, and usually obsolete, unusable, and completely rewritten within 4-5. Not so with the Wix sites; they just keep going year after year and the client never worries about it again, logging in to post an occasional update every week or so but otherwise letting it do its thing.
I wouldn't choose to use it for a personal project anything more advanced than a personal blog or a very simple marketing site. But it's fine for what it is, and the web is better off for having services like this for regular people to choose from. Not everything needs a super-heavy JS frontend.
by jayturley on 4/1/25, 8:27 PM
There are no real SEO penalties, but as with any web property, you have to do the work to get all the SEO working as you want.
As far as benefits for developers, give me an open source tool any day that I can improve on, extend, or mess up with sketchy coding. These tools are meant for consumers to build their own sites for the most part. They represent the initial commodification of "get a website". They are more difficult and/or expensive to extend than a tool like WordPress, Laravel, Hugo, etc. And they are walled gardens, which means they are difficult to migrate away from.
by CM30 on 4/3/25, 6:59 PM
https://support.wix.com/en/article/transferring-your-wix-dom...
https://support.squarespace.com/hc/en-us/articles/205812338-...
As far as I know, their SEO is fine, though they'll usually do worse in things like page speed than a site built from the ground up. I don't recall any sites my previous employers built with said services struggling to rank in Google.
As for whether they'd be recommended? Well to be honest, I'd say only for small companies and individuals who need the most basic of websites and don't fancy paying very much for it. For a client in that situation, you may as well just throw together a quick site on one of these services, change a few images and colours and call it a day. At least then they won't keep coming to you for web hosting help or updates.
by jareds on 4/5/25, 2:40 AM
by debacle on 4/2/25, 2:52 PM
Wix is overly complicated bloat, and you are better off just using WordPress if you need the bells and whistles or Squarespace if you don't.
by pedalpete on 4/5/25, 1:18 AM
It was fairly inexpensive, squarespace doesn't "own" your domain.
We ended up going to webflow which, though a bit complicated to set-up, is much more flexible and you "design" your own site.
I'm a former webdev, both of these platforms are probably better than handrolling these days.
by dave2299 on 4/5/25, 1:56 AM
by Fine-Palp-528 on 4/2/25, 7:01 AM
by colkassad on 4/5/25, 1:05 AM
by kjellsbells on 4/5/25, 2:31 AM
The biggest issue: I've learned that SQS really doesnt like people trying to go their own way, even if technically it is supported.
For example:
- you can embed your own JS scripts...but it's clunky, and debugging is not fun, because you are fighting with objects wrapped in squarespace's own object model.
- you will have a far, far more pleasant time using their payment systems, appointment tracking systems, etc than trying to integrate your own choice of third party. Thats great if they already do what you want, less so if not. So you def want to look at all the ancillary services like those that your client might need and confirm that they can live with what SQS offers.
- Finally, I no longer work on this site, but I do not remember seeing any versioning, source file backup, etc. They do have a staging system though. So you might want to consider how to preserve your client's site in case of screwups.
by temp0826 on 4/5/25, 2:03 AM
It's gotta be a game changer for non-tech folks. You could really easily run a small business out of the features available.
by spacechild1 on 4/5/25, 12:35 AM
My other favorite is MongoDB which in German literally means RetardDB. (Sorry for the slur, but that's what it is.)
by Leprowix on 4/5/25, 3:11 AM
No more panicked clients email late in the evening no more headaches in that sense…
Their new version Wix Studio offers even more flexibility and you can even go headless if you wanted! They offer alot to devs that takes the time to understand Velo code (JS)
I may sound biased at this point but Vevo has 10m monthly users and their website is built using Wix…
Only downside for the moment is performance in terms of loading times/general performance and i think thats mostly related to their native CDN thats offered by default… this becomes more apparent when browsing Wix sites on mobile
by runjake on 4/2/25, 3:07 PM
by solardev on 4/5/25, 3:44 PM
I know HN has a "second-chance pool" (https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26998308), but I didn't know it would artificially change the timestamps too...
by datadrivenangel on 4/3/25, 5:23 PM
by Leprowix on 4/5/25, 3:18 AM
I was even able to configure that when orders are placed on the website they would get a phone call with a automated voice telling them an order #xxx has been placed all with no code whatsoever and this was integrated by default!
by mediumsmart on 4/5/25, 5:47 AM
by tcdent on 4/4/25, 11:46 PM
"Ehh I don't really do that kind of software..."
If I was to give this guy a simple marketing site, that he can take to go host on his own, that I can hopefully vibe-code into existence, what should I use?
I mean, I know how to do this stuff, but handing him a node package seems wrong.
by anon7000 on 4/5/25, 5:35 AM
by brianbest101 on 4/5/25, 3:36 AM