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WordPress as a CMS to energize mainstreet!
May 16th, 2009 by JP

My company, tipit, focuses on web production work which means we architect, design and build websites and web applications.  Recently we have had some extremely satisfied clients offering wordpress as a turnkey content management solution.  Recent versions are truly powerful and a few custom plugins can mold it into a system to manage whatever type of content you might need to manage for your website.   In fact, this is a great, great tool for small businesses.

In the coming months, we plan to start offering this as our primary solution to help small businesses utilize the power of the Internet to market their companies.  It’s great because there are already plugins available for a variety of social networking / real-time web systems allowing the business to harness its customers as a community.  Scoble hits on this in a recent post. Most businesses – especially small ones – look like their website was built in the mid 90’s.  It’s time for an update and using open source software like wordpress, especially if you base a design on an available theme, the business can get one powerful website w/ the ability to use a multi-tude of web marketing tools for a very reasonable price.

To further emphasize this, noupe has a post about 25 unique uses of wordpress as a CMS.  The flexibility is astounding.  We look forward to being able to energize main street w/ our efforts!


3 Responses  
  • Tony Buckingham writes:
    May 18th, 2009 at 10:59 am

    Do I remember correctly that you guys used to use Drupal, or did I imagine that? If so, any reason why the switch to Wordpress? I've been using Drupal a lot lately at work, and we went through a review of the three major CMS's: drupal, wordpress, joomla . . . finding drupal to be the most customizable.

    There was a cool panel on the debate at SXSW recently. Check it out:

    http://cmsshowdown.com

  • JP writes:
    May 18th, 2009 at 10:31 am

    Yeah, I’ve checked that out. I think it misses a lot of the beauty of WordPress which lies in the large number of plugins to extend the functionality and/or allow you to extend the functionality without modifying the core files, thereby retaining the upgrade path of the core system. I realize that Drupal also has a plugin architecture and that many things can be done using it especially w/ the CCK; however, I feel that you can more quickly build more functional and usable plugins for Wordpress.

    Have a look at Flutter – extremely powerful for managing many types of content.

    In addition, I think WordPress (v 2.7+) has a much, much better admin interface out of the box than any other system. It is very intuitive and usability is great. This same usability is carried through w/ many of the plugins. In addition, things like the all-in-one SEO plugin, google site-map plugin, etc give you extreme search engine optimization with a lot less effort.

    I think it’s very much a case of the right tool for the job – in this case we mostly target WordPress at small to medium sized organizations that need a sophisticated content management system. However, I do think that WordPress is making large strides toward being able to handle a content system of any size.

    Not to mention, this comment system Disqus, which is a great add on and easily available as a WP plugin.

  • Tony Buckingham writes:
    May 18th, 2009 at 12:59 pm

    Do I remember correctly that you guys used to use Drupal, or did I imagine that? If so, any reason why the switch to Wordpress? I've been using Drupal a lot lately at work, and we went through a review of the three major CMS's: drupal, wordpress, joomla . . . finding drupal to be the most customizable.

    There was a cool panel on the debate at SXSW recently. Check it out:

    http://cmsshowdown.com


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