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WordPress.com is used by more than a third of all websites worldwide, including ones for both multinational corporations and niche hobbyists. It has the necessary features to build a customized website but also has a steep learning curve to master all its options.
If you don't already have a website for your business, there's no time like the present to create one. Building a business website can expand your market, increase your customer base, and grow your revenue.
What's not to like, right? Still, setting up a website can be a daunting task.
WordPress.com is one of the most popular website builders. We'll go over its features and pricing below to help you decide if it's the best choice for your small business website.
WordPress.com launched in 2005 as an invitation-only blogging platform for individual users. Subsequent versions and upgrades transformed it into a full-fledged content management system (CMS) and e-commerce platform that's used by companies like CNN, Sony, and Fortune.com.
WordPress is the world's most popular CMS, used by 35% of websites worldwide. Joomla, which is used by 2.6% of websites, is the closest competition among WordPress alternatives.
WordPress.com has maintained a wide user base even as it has grown. It has an enterprise plan that begins at over $20,000 per year, but it still offers a "forever free" plan for basic WordPress.com sites.
The Ascent's WordPress CMS review noted that the WordPress website builder doesn't require coding skills, but you can customize its code with upper-tier plans. Many free and paid website themes are available, and WordPress.com sites are mobile device–responsive.
WordPress also has a dedicated user community that's convinced it's the best CMS software.
Your WordPress site has two different yet fully functional admin dashboards. You can use the classic WordPress dashboard located at your website or a newer one at WordPress.com.
The classic WordPress dashboard at your website has a left-hand menu to access different site content: posts, pages, media library, comments, and links. You can also access other tools and any plugins, which, as shown in the screenshot below, include Events, PublishPress, and Ninja Forms.
The rest of the page consists of content blocks you can rearrange or delete, such as quick stats, recent activity, and a quick draft tool for new posts.
The classic WordPress admin dashboard is a page within your website; that is, its web address begins with your website domain name. For example, the Waco Insider's dashboard URL in the screenshot above is https://wacoinsider.com/wp-admin/.
A parallel admin dashboard for your website, introduced several years ago with an updated design, is located at WordPress.com. Its left-hand menu and content blocks contain much of the same information as the classic dashboard, but it's organized differently and includes options in a right-hand menu to manage your site.
You cannot go directly from the classic dashboard to this one. The "WP Admin" option in the lower left-hand corner of the Wordpress.com dashboard does link back to your site's classic dashboard.
This admin dashboard is a page at WordPress.com, not your website. The Waco Insider admin dashboard URL in the screenshot above, for example, is https://wordpress.com/home/wacoinsider.com.
WordPress.com provides over 350 free website themes with its free plan, and over 7,000 more themes are available for free and to buy with its paid plans.
Sort themes by the newest, most popular, or free versus paid. You can also filter them by purpose or type of business, different features, and various page layout schemes.
Browsing all the website themes, even if you know you'll use a free one, can be productive. See how different businesses structure their websites and identify design elements you might incorporate into your own site.
Creating posts and pages uses the same drag-and-drop block editor. Each time you hit "Enter," a new content block is created. You can then choose from multiple types of content blocks -- paragraphs, lists, quotes, photos -- or combine photos and text into a single block. You can also group a sequence of blocks together.
You can also save a post or page as a template. If you're creating multiple product pages, for example, this will be a timesaver. Templates also help with formatting consistency across your website, which aids visitors' ease of reading.
All WordPress.com plans include website performance analytics. The statistics dashboard displays the number of page views and visitors by day, week, month, and year and the links and search engine terms visitors used to reach your site.
The "View more stats" button in the screenshot above directs you away from your site to access additional information at another statistics dashboard at WordPress.com.
Much of WordPress.com is well-designed and easy to use, which accounts for its place among the best CMS software. When you first sign up for a website plan, a simple process walks you through choosing a domain name, title for your site, and other information.
You can easily create posts and pages in the block editor, access the media library to embed content, and see your latest site stats.
The biggest usability issue is the two parallel interfaces: one within your website and the other at WordPress.com. Both interfaces have the same functionality, but their design and organization are different enough to create confusion when moving between them, which you are prompted to do on occasion.
One example is the layout of the left-hand navigation menu in the classic dashboard used at your website versus the newer one at WordPress.com.
The menu options are almost the same -- almost! -- but are arranged a little differently. The same is true when comparing the stats at your site versus WordPress.com and using the post and page editors at both sites. Everything is 90% the same but is still different enough to make things confusing.
Having two interfaces does not on its own create critical errors, but website management will be more cumbersome because you must be familiar with their differences.
WordPress.com plans include:
WordPress has a plan to meet your needs whether you run one of the most well-known companies in the world or want to post funny pictures of cats.
Customer service is contingent on your plan, but WordPress.com offers no telephone support. The free plan includes no customer service, but the WordPress website does provide documentation, tutorials, and user forums that anyone can access.
All paid plans come with email support, which you can expect a response from within 24 hours under normal circumstances. The Personal and Premium plans provide live chat support 24 hours a day, Monday through Friday. Business and eCommerce plans have 24/7 live chat.
The Business and eCommerce plans include two free half-hour sessions where you can share your screen and talk by voice online with a customer service rep. These sessions can be purchased if you don't have these plans or want additional ones.
WordPress.com has additional benefits to aid website marketing and management, including built-in SEO tools, plug-ins, and a mobile app.
SEO helps push your site, posts, and pages up search engine results by adding "meta data." This behind-the-scenes information is used by search engines to determine a site's relevance in search results.
WordPress.com has four built-in SEO tools:
You may offer the best products and services and have a great website, but without SEO optimization, you won't reach the widest possible target market.
You must have at least the WordPress.com Business plan to use plug-ins. This is well worth the expense because you will have over 55,000 plug-ins to choose from. Many are free, but others require a one-time purchase or an ongoing subscription.
WordPress has plug-ins to customize your site's appearance and functionality in any way you want. Need a sales and marketing funnel? Take a look at the CartFlows funnel builder plug-in.
Want to integrate an email marketing campaign into your website? Mailchimp has multiple plug-ins to help you do that.
You can check your site's latest stats, create new posts and pages, and manage reader comments with the WordPress.com mobile app. You can also switch between multiple sites and go to the classic admin dashboards.
The app is available in iOS and Android versions for use on smartphones, tablets, and other digital devices.
WordPress.com can work for you because it has the features to support websites built for anything from niche topics to global brands. It is not the easiest software to learn, so setting up your website will not be a one-and-done activity.
You must schedule time to become familiar with its idiosyncrasies, and more time after that to maximize the benefits of its capabilities.
Free Plan | Highly Customizable | Fast Page Loads | SEO Ready | |
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WordPress.com | ||||
Joomla | ||||
Magnolia | ||||
Squarespace | ||||
Wix |
WordPress.com is used by a wide range of people, from individuals who want to promote their hobbies or pets, to Fortune 500 companies, including Facebook, Microsoft, and The Walt Disney Company. WordPress.com's use by a variety of customers means you can start small and scale up as needed.
WordPress.com has a "forever free" plan, but it lacks the features, such as a custom domain name, e-commerce capabilities, and the use of plug-ins, needed by most small businesses. The WordPress.com plug-in library lets you customize the appearance and operation of your website, but to access it, you must sign up for at least the business plan ($300/year).
You'll have no direct customer service with the free plan, and WordPress.com does not offer any telephone support. It does provide comprehensive online documentation and tutorials and has an extensive user community to answer questions via online forums.
The Business and eCommerce plans come with 24/7 live chat, email support, and two free half-hour sessions with a WordPress.com customer service rep to help set up your site.
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