Wordpress, image taken from: http://www.mangoorange.com/2008/09/16/7-requirements-when-designing-wordpress-theme/Six days ago I’ve switched from Plone to WordPress, again. I want to take my blog and web site into a new direction so I wrote a bunch of  drafts. But something unexpected happened. It already got a new life and I only published one new post (which wasn’t very popular either).

Analytics says that in the last 7 days I was already 31% better than the previous 7 days. And I’ve been running WordPress for less than 6 days. Furthermore, I’ve had rather large downtimes, about 24hs, as I moved things around, installed plug ins and wrestled with Apache. So, all in all, the improvement was rather large.

My  hyphothesis is that WordPress presents the information in a much better way, both for humans and computers. For computers I mean that it’s more easily indexed, it pings other aggregators and who knows what else. You could say it’s very SEOed.

For people it’s easier to use and more familiar. People are used to looking at blogs that look like that. I  don’t think this is to say that WordPress is better than Plone, I still believe that Plone is the best CMS out there, but the skins and design and the way the information is presented in list and topics should be improved to be more like WordPress and/or Mediawiki.

The really important lesson is that when you are making your own web site, maybe your own product with your own functionality, the presentation should be something familiar to the users. A good example would be Hunch, which you could say it’s a carbon copy of FlickrExcept that it doesn’t have anything to do with pictures or images! They made an interface that looks familiar for most users, so they can learn what Hunch does without being scared right away.

Reviewed by Daniel Magliola. Thank you!

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