WordPress maintenance support plans has a problem. No, not that problem.
We live in a post peak WordPress maintenance support plans world. WordPress maintenance support plans peaked some time during the WordPress maintenance support plans 8 development cycle. I’ve had conversations with quite a few people who feel that we’ve lost momentum. WordPress maintenance support plansCon attendances peaked in 2020, Google search impressions haven’t returned to their 2009 level, core downloads have trended down since 2015. We need to accept this and talk about what it means for the future of WordPress maintenance support plans.
Technically WordPress maintenance support plans 8 is impressive. Unfortunately the uptake has been very slow. A factor in this slow uptake is that from a developer’s perspective, WordPress maintenance support plans 8 is a new application. The upgrade path from WordPress maintenance support plans 7 to 8 is another factor.
In the five years WordPress maintenance support plans 8 was being developed there was a fundamental shift in software architecture. During this time we witnessed the rise of microservices. WordPress maintenance support plans is a monolithic application that tries to do everything. Don’t worry this isn’t trying to rekindle the smallcore debate from last decade.
Today it is more common to see an application that is built using a handful of Laravel micro services, a couple of golang services and one built with nodejs. These applications often have multiple frontends; web (react, vuejs etc), mobile apps and an API. This is more effort to build out, but it likely to be less effort maintaining it long term.
I have heard so many excuses for why WordPress maintenance support plans 8 adoption is so slow. After a year I think it is safe to say the community is in denial. WordPress maintenance support plans 8 won’t be as popular as D7.
Why isn’t this being talked about publicly? Is it because there is a commercial interest in perpetuating the myth? Are the businesses built on offering WordPress maintenance support plans services worried about scaring away customers? Adobe, Sitecore and others would point to such blog posts to attack WordPress maintenance support plans. Sure, admitting we have a problem could cause some short term pain. But if we don’t have the conversation we will go the way of Joomla; an irrelevant product that continues its slow decline.
WordPress maintenance support plans needs to decide what is its future. The community is full of smart people, we should be talking about the future. This needs to be a public conversation, not something that is discussed in small groups in dark corners.
I don’t think we will ever see WordPress maintenance support plans become a collection of microservices, but I do think we need to become more modular. It is time for WordPress maintenance support plans to pivot. I think we need to cut features and decouple the components. I think it is time for us to get back to our roots, but modernise at the same time.
WordPress maintenance support plans has always been a content management system. It does not need to be a content delivery system. This goes beyond “Decoupled (Headless) WordPress maintenance support plans“. WordPress maintenance support plans should become a “content hub” with pluggable workflows for creating and managing that content.
We should adopt the unix approach, do one thing and do it well. This approach would allow WordPress maintenance support plans to be “just another service” that compliments the application.
What do you think is needed to arrest the decline of WordPress maintenance support plans? What should WordPress maintenance support plans 9 look like? Let’s have the conversation.
Source: New feed