
If I got a nickel for every time I had a potential client request Wordpress for their CMS (content management system) or blogging solution, I might have already retired.
Or not, but you get the illustration. It happens a lot.
Before I get into my anti-Wordpress spill, let me make a few things perfectly clear:
- Wordpress is awesome.
I have used Wordpress in the past, and think that it's a wonderful solution for a blogging platform, and even some informational websites. - I will never pull someone away from Wordpress who is having wonderful results from the platform.
Wordpress is a wonderful solutions for many types of websites. Obviously. - This is based on my experience with my clients and contacts who have attempted to use Wordpress for their online shop and related blog.
If you've been using it effectively, I'm by no means telling you you're wrong, just that you're rare from where I'm standing.
With that said, I would like to outline a few very key reasons why online business owners with an ecommerce component to their online presence should steer clear of Wordpress.
1. There are other solutions.
Many people suggest Wordpress simply because it's the only CMS they're aware of, or because someone they know uses it well.
That's all good and cheery, but just because it's the only one you know of doesn't make it the only fish in the sea. Likewise, just because a friend uses it advantageously does not mean it's going to be the solution for you.
Do some research, folks.
2. It's a blogging platform.
It's true. The basis of Wordpress functionality is in blogging. It's a wonderful blogging platform. That's what it was built to do.
With this said, it is not an ecommerce platform. Just because you can get a widget that lets you add products to your site does not mean that it should be done. Who built that widget? Who will you go to if you find a bug in how it works? The teenager in his basement who produced it?
Also, what about security. Wordpress sites get hacked on a regular basis. The security requirements for a blogging CMS are a lot different from those required for real ecommerce options. Don't put yourself, and your customers, in that kind of jeopardy.
3. Blogging can, and should, be done elsewhere.
Ok, so you've committed to a fancy-pants ecommerce CMS. Wonderful! Now can you get a Wordpress blog?
I guess. If you want to lose your SEO (search engine optimization) advantages of even having a blog.
When you have your shop and blog on the same hosting account, when they're deeply entwined on the same host, then the SEO that you get from constantly updating a blog with relative content automatically boosts the optimization of your shop.
If you have a shop on one host, and your blog off somewhere else, then you lose that direct connection between your blog and your shop. All that blogging has no SEO effect on your shop.
If your ecommerce host allows for you to have a blog on their server, even if it's not Wordpress, do yourself a favor and go with the host's blogging platform. It may be a bit of a learning curve to learn a new way of blogging (really, none of them are that different), but you'll reap the SEO benefits.
(This does not count for ecommerce hosts that allow you to load a Wordpress blog straight onto the site's server. There are some ecommerce options that allow this, so if leaving Wordpress for blogging is not a topic up for discussion, then find a host that allows this. It just takes a little research.)
4. We know you're using wordpress, and we know it's free
Wordpress sites have a look about them. Unless you get a heavily customized template, many people know you're using Wordpress.
And it's not just me, the web designer, who can tell. I recently had a potential client (who's in the music business) tell me he didn't want his site to look like a Wordpress site. He wanted something more upscale.
I know Wordpress is cheap. Free even. You're paying - what? - $5/month for hosting. If you're business is going well, don't you think it's time to invest a bit more into your business? Into your image? Into how effectively you manage your online business?
Conclusion
So, before getting your heart set on Wordpress out of familiarity or a not-knowing-of-anything-else, do yourself a favor and do some research on the available platforms, and weigh what is important to you and your creative online shop. You might just find that there is a better solution out there for you altogether.
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