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WordPress

A semantic personal publishing platform with a focus on aesthetics, web standards, and usability.
98.5K
40.4K
+ 1
2.1K

What is WordPress?

The core software is built by hundreds of community volunteers, and when you’re ready for more there are thousands of plugins and themes available to transform your site into almost anything you can imagine. Over 60 million people have chosen WordPress to power the place on the web they call “home” — we’d love you to join the family.
WordPress is a tool in the Self-Hosted Blogging / CMS category of a tech stack.
WordPress is an open source tool with 20.1K GitHub stars and 12.8K GitHub forks. Here’s a link to WordPress's open source repository on GitHub

Who uses WordPress?

Companies
50823 companies reportedly use WordPress in their tech stacks, including LinkedIn, CRED, and Accenture.

Developers
46472 developers on StackShare have stated that they use WordPress.

WordPress Integrations

WooCommerce, Zendesk, Mailgun, AddThis, and Gatsby are some of the popular tools that integrate with WordPress. Here's a list of all 301 tools that integrate with WordPress.
Pros of WordPress
416
Customizable
367
Easy to manage
354
Plugins & themes
259
Non-tech colleagues can update website content
247
Really powerful
145
Rapid website development
78
Best documentation
51
Codex
44
Product feature set
35
Custom/internal social network
18
Open source
8
Great for all types of websites
7
Huge install and user base
5
I like it like I like a kick in the groin
5
It's simple and easy to use by any novice
5
Perfect example of user collaboration
5
Open Source Community
5
Most websites make use of it
5
Best
4
API-based CMS
4
Community
3
Easy To use
2
<a href="https://secure.wphackedhel">Easy Beginner</a>
Decisions about WordPress

Here are some stack decisions, common use cases and reviews by companies and developers who chose WordPress in their tech stack.

Richard Robbins
Owner at TheTechnologyVault.com · | 5 upvotes · 1.1K views

I used BigCommerce for several years to host a few of my online stores, including * SweatshirtStation.com * RobbinsAthletics.com * OnlineSafetyDepot.com

However, I switched all of them to a WordPress with WooCommerce setup after I found that BigCommerce became cost prohibitive, especially for companies that don't have huge margins.

BigCommerce DOES have everything you'd need for running a store and doing it efficiently, including: * Easy to Use Templates * Highly Customizable Designs * Solid Product Management Tools * A Large Third-Party App Marketplace * Built-in SEO Tools

However, as you scale your business, those features become increasingly expensive to use, and your BigCommerce bill can get into the thousands of dollars per month when your revenue starts growing into the $50k+ per month range.

As I compared the cost of using WooCommerce to BigCommerce when scaling up a business, I found that the cost was much less using WooCommerce.

WooCommerce v BigCommerce Feature Comparison As you can see from the list below comparing WooCommerce features with BigCommerce, BigCommerce wins most of the feature competitions. However, for ecommerce businesses that grow large enough that they can handle taking care of their IT infrastructure, it becomes much cheaper for them to use WooCommerce.

  • Hosting & Security | WooCommerce: Self-hosted, requires security setup | BigCommerce: Fully hosted, built-in SSL & PCI compliance | Advantage: BigCommerce

  • Ease of Use | WooCommerce: More technical, requires setup & maintenance | BigCommerce:Easier to use with built-in features | Advantage: BigCommerce

  • Customization & Design | WooCommerce: Highly customizable with themes & plugins | BigCommerce:Customizable with drag-and-drop builder & themes | Advantage: WooCommerce

  • SEO & Marketing | WooCommerce: Strong SEO tools, but depends on plugins | BigCommerce:Built-in SEO & marketing tools | Advantage: BigCommerce

  • Multi-Channel Selling | WooCommerce: Requires additional plugins for multi-channel | BigCommerce:Built-in multi-channel selling (Amazon, eBay, Facebook, etc.) | Advantage: BigCommerce

  • Payment Options | WooCommerce: Supports many gateways but may require extra fees | BigCommerce:No transaction fees, supports 65+ gateways | Advantage: BigCommerce

  • Product Management | WooCommerce: Flexible product options, dependent on extensions | BigCommerce:Comprehensive built-in product management | Advantage: BigCommerce

  • Scalability | WooCommerce: Scalability depends on hosting & plugins | BigCommerce:Scales easily with enterprise-grade performance | Advantage: BigCommerce

  • Abandoned Cart Recovery | WooCommerce: Requires a plugin (paid feature) | BigCommerce:Built-in abandoned cart recovery | Advantage: BigCommerce

  • Analytics & Reporting | Basic reports; needs plugins for advanced analytics | BigCommerce:Advanced built-in reporting & analytics | Advantage: BigCommerce

  • Third-Party Integrations | WooCommerce:Large plugin ecosystem, but needs management | BigCommerce:Built-in integrations with major platforms | Tie (Both have large marketplaces)

  • B2B Features | WooCommerce:Limited built-in, needs third-party solutions | BigCommerce:Robust built-in B2B tools | Advantage: BigCommerce

  • Cost Considerations | WooCommerce:Free core software but requires hosting, security, and plugins | BigCommerce:Monthly subscription but includes hosting & security | Advantage: WooCommerce (More control over costs)

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Needs advice
on
ElementorElementorHTML5HTML5
and
WordPressWordPress

hello guys, I need your help. I created a website, I've been using Elementor forever, but yesterday I bought a template after I made the purchase I knew I made a mistake, cause the template was in HTML, can anyone please show me how to put this HTML template in my WordPress so it will be the face of my website, thank you in advance.

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David Yap
CEO at Zensite Pte. Ltd. · | 8 upvotes · 12.3K views
Needs advice
on
WebflowWebflow
and
WordPressWordPress

Hey, ive been developing my website on Webflow for more than 4 years now and constantly having issue with the Eliminate render-blocking resources issue on mobile in PSI. What can I do to resolve this as it is the only red item in optimizing the site. We didnt had this issue on WordPress earlier.

For reference: Here's my website, Zensite

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Herman Menor
Java Software Engineer · | 9 upvotes · 68.3K views
Needs advice
on
Next.jsNext.jsSvelteSvelte
and
WordPressWordPress

I have an existing personal website (https://hmenorjr.github.io) which is more of a splash/landing page only. I'm thinking of rebuilding it into a portfolio with a blog/article area. My go-to is WordPress now, because I've created a website for a small agency in the Philippines and exported it into HTML, CSS, and JavaScript. You can check it here: https://hmenorjr.github.io/phoutsource.

I need advice if I should do the same. Build it with WordPress (using LocalWP) and export it as HTML, CSS, and JavaSrcript again, or build it manually with either Next.js or Svelte.

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Needs advice
on
DreamHostDreamHost
and
Google DomainsGoogle Domains

which is BETTER? I get unlimited sites effectively (minus the fees for domains themselves)... I am a google-phile, but I also want my current site to maintain google email....not pay 7.20/usr/mo extra. DreamHost is relatively expensive after about a year or two. i dont know enough yet about Google Domains and what it comes with. Dreamhost gives you direct SQL access, unlimited emails, WordPress sites, etc.

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Needs advice
on
ContentfulContentfulDirectusDirectus
and
StrapiStrapi

Hi, I went through a comprehensive analysis - of headless/api content management systems - essentially to store content "bits" and publish them where needed (website, 3rd party sites, social media, etc.). I had considered many other solutions but ultimately chose Directus. I believe that was a good choice.

I had strongly considered Contentful, Strapi, Sanity, and hygraph. Hygraph came in #2 and contentful #3.

Ultimately I liked directus for:

(1) time in business

(2) open source

(3) integration with n8n and Pipedream

(4) pricing

(5) extensibility

Thoughts? Was this a good choice? We have many WordPress sites we're not (at least now) looking to replace with Directus, but instead to push to.

I'd love some feedback.

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WordPress's Features

  • Flexibility
  • Publishing Tools
  • User Management
  • Media Management
  • Full Standards Compliance
  • Easy Theme System
  • Extend with Plugins
  • Built-in Comments
  • Search Engine Optimized
  • Multilingual
  • Easy Installation and Upgrades
  • Importers
  • Own Your Data

WordPress Alternatives & Comparisons

What are some alternatives to WordPress?
Shopify
Shopify powers tens of thousands of online retailers including General Electric, Amnesty International, CrossFit, Tesla Motors, Encyclopaedia Britannica, Foo Fighters, GitHub, and more. Our platform allows users to easily and quickly create their own online store without all the technical work involved in developing their own website, or the huge expense of having someone else build it. Shopify lets merchants manage all aspects of their shops: uploading products, changing the design, accepting credit card orders, and viewing their incoming orders and completed transactions.
Joomla!
Joomla is a simple and powerful web server application and it requires a server with PHP and either MySQL, PostgreSQL, or SQL Server to run it.
Wix
Creating your stunning website for free is easier than ever. No tech skills needed. Just pick a template, change anything you want, add your images, videos, text and more to get online instantly.
Squarespace
Whether you need simple pages, sophisticated galleries, a professional blog, or want to sell online, it all comes standard with your Squarespace website. Squarespace starts you with beautiful designs right out of the box — each handcrafted by our award-winning design team to make your content stand out.
Drupal
Drupal is an open source content management platform powering millions of websites and applications. It’s built, used, and supported by an active and diverse community of people around the world.
See all alternatives

WordPress's Followers
40387 developers follow WordPress to keep up with related blogs and decisions.