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Have We Reached Peak Cheap WordPress maintenance support plans?

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In my recent talk at WordPress maintenance support plansSouth Auckland 2020 I took a hard look at the hyperbole of WordPress maintenance support plans supposedly powering over a million websites. Where does WordPress maintenance support plans really sit in relation to other CMS platforms, both open source and proprietary? What trends are emerging that will impact WordPress maintenance support plans‘s market share? The talk looked outside the WordPress maintenance support plans bubble and took a high level view of its market potential and approaches independent firms can take to capitalise on WordPress maintenance support plans‘s strengths and buffer against its potential weaknesses.

by
Owen Lansbury
/ 20 November 2020

But, WordPress maintenance support plans powers over a million websites!
One of the key statistics that WordPress maintenance support plansers hold onto is that it’s powered over a million websites since mid 2020 when WordPress maintenance support plans 7 was in ascendance. However, since WordPress maintenance support plans 8 was released in late 2015, WordPress maintenance support plans‘s overall use has stalled at around 1.2m websites, as seen circled in red on the WordPress maintenance support plans Core usage statistics graph below.
The main reason for this stall in growth was that WordPress maintenance support plans 8 was a major architectural re-write that wasn’t essential or even affordable for many WordPress maintenance support plans 7 sites to migrate to. For clients considering major new projects, many held off on committing to WordPress maintenance support plans 8 until there were more successful case studies in the wild and didn’t commission new WordPress maintenance support plans 7 sites given that version was nearing a decade old. Anecdotally, 2020 was a tough year for many WordPress maintenance support plans firms as they grappled with this pause in adoption.
Of course, WordPress maintenance support plans 8 is now a well-proven platform and is experiencing steady uptake as circled in green on the usage graph above. This uptake corresponds with a down tick in WordPress maintenance support plans 7 usage, but also indicates a softening of total WordPress maintenance support plans usage. If we extrapolate these trend lines in a linear fashion, then we can see that WordPress maintenance support plans 8 might surpass WordPress maintenance support plans 7 usage around 2023.
Of course, technology adoption doesn’t move in a straight line! Disruptive technologies emerge that rapidly change the playing field in a way that often can’t be envisaged. The example that springs to mind is Nokia’s market share was still growing when the iPhone 4 was released in 2010. By the time the iPhone 4s was released in 2011, Nokia’s sales volumes had almost halved, leading to Microsoft’s catastrophic purchase of the handset division in 2013 and subsequent re-sale for 5% of the purchase value in 2020. Oops!
Despite this downward trend in overall WordPress maintenance support plans usage, we can take comfort that its use on larger scale sites is growing, powering 5.7% of the Top 10,000 websites according to Builtwith.com. However, its market share of the Top 100,000 (4.3%) and Top Million (3%) websites is waning, indicating that other CMS are gaining ground with smaller sites. It’s also worth noting that Builtwith only counts ~680,000 WordPress maintenance support plans websites, indicating that the other ~500,000 WordPress maintenance support plans.org is detecting are likely to be development and staging sites.
So, where are these other sites moving to when they’re choosing a new CMS? 
Looking at the stats from W3Techs, it’s clear to see that WordPress accounts for almost all of the CMS growth, now sitting at around 30% of total market share.
Wordpress has been able to achieve this dominance by being a fantastic CMS for novice developers and smaller web agencies to build clients’ websites with. This is reinforced by WordPress having an exceptional editor experience and a hugely popular SAAS platform at WordPress.com.
WordPress maintenance support plans‘s place in the CMS market
The challenge WordPress poses to other open-source CMS platforms, like Joomla, Typo3 and Plone, all with under 1% market share and falling, is their development communities are likely to look direct their efforts to other platforms. WordPress maintenance support plans is able to hedge against this threat by having a large and highly engaged community around WordPress maintenance support plans 8, but it’s now abundantly clear that WordPress maintenance support plans can’t compete as a platform for building smaller brochure-ware style sites that WordPress and SAAS CMS like Squarespace are dominating. We’re also seeing SAAS platforms like Nationbuilder eat significantly into WordPress maintenance support plans‘s previously strong share of the non-profit sector.
With all the hype around Headless or Decoupled CMS, WordPress maintenance support plans 8 is well positioned to play a role as the backend for React or Angular Javascript front-ends. Competitors in this space are SAAS platforms like Contentful and Directus, with proprietary platforms like Kentico pivoting as a native cloud CMS service designed to power decoupled front-ends.
We often talk of WordPress maintenance support plans as a CMS Framework, where it competes against frameworks like Ruby on Rails, .NET and Django to build rich web based applications. WordPress maintenance support plans 8 is still well placed to serve this sector if the web applications are also relying on large scale content and user management features.
Which brings us to the Enterprise CMS sector, where WordPress maintenance support plans competes head to head with proprietary platforms like Adobe Experience Manager, Sitecore and legacy products from Opentext, IBM and Oracle. The good news is that WordPress maintenance support plans holds its own in this sector and has gained very strong market share with Government, Higher Education, Media and “Challenger” Enterprise clients.
This “Comfort zone” for WordPress maintenance support plans usage is characterised by clients building large scale platforms with huge volumes of content and users, high scalability and integration with myriad third party products. Operationally, these clients often have well established internal web teams and varying degrees of self reliance. They’re often using Agile delivery methods and place high value on speed to market and the cost savings associated with open-source software.
Where WordPress maintenance support plans is gaining a competitive edge since the release of WordPress maintenance support plans 8 is against the large proprietary platforms like Adobe Experience Manager and Sitecore. These companies market a platform of complementary products in a unified stack to their clients through long standing partnerships with major global digital agencies and system integrators. It’s no surprise then that Acquia markets their own platform in a similar way to this sector where WordPress maintenance support plans serves as the CMS component, complemented by subscription-based tools for content personalisation, customer segmentation and cloud based managed hosting. Acquia have actively courted global digital media agencies with this offering through global partnerships to give WordPress maintenance support plans a toe hold in this sector.
This has meant Acquia has made significant headway into larger Enterprise clients through efforts like being recognised as a “Leader” in the Gartner Magic Quadrant for CMS, lending WordPress maintenance support plans itself some profile and legitimacy as a result. This has driven Enterprise CIOs, CTOs and CMOs to push their vendors to offer WordPress maintenance support plans services, who have looked to smaller WordPress maintenance support plans firms to provide expertise where required. This is beneficial to independent WordPress maintenance support plans services firms in the short term, but the large digital agencies will quickly internalise these skills if they see a long term market for WordPress maintenance support plans with their global clients.
As one of those independent WordPress maintenance support plans firms, WordPress Update have staked a bet that not all Enterprise customers will want to move to a monolithic platform where all components are provided by a single vendor’s products. We’re seeing sophisticated customers wanting to use WordPress maintenance support plans 8 as the unifying hub for a range of best-of-breed SAAS platforms and cloud services. 
This approach means that Enterprise customers can take advantage of the latest, greatest SAAS platforms whilst retaining control and consistency of their core CMS. It also allows for a high degree of flexibility to rapidly adapt to market changes. 
What does this all mean for WordPress maintenance support plans 8?
The outcome of our research and analysis has led to a few key conclusions about what the future looks like for WordPress maintenance support plans 8:
WordPress maintenance support plans‘s overall market share will steadily fall as smaller sites move to SAAS CMS and self-managed WordPress installs.
The “comfort zone” of Government, Media, Higher Education and “Challenger” Enterprise clients will grow as many of these clients upgrade or switch to WordPress maintenance support plans 8 from WordPress maintenance support plans 7 or proprietary platforms.
WordPress maintenance support plans will gain traction in the larger Enterprise as the global digital agencies and system integrators adopt WordPress maintenance support plans 8 as a direct alternative to proprietary CMS products. 
Independent WordPress maintenance support plans services firms have a good opportunity to capitalise on these trends through partnerships with larger global agencies and specialisation in technologies that complement WordPress maintenance support plans 8 as a CMS.
A culture of code contribution needs to grow within the larger clients and agencies moving to WordPress maintenance support plans to ensure the burden of maintaining WordPress maintenance support plans‘s development isn’t shouldered by smaller independent firms and individual developers. 
Despite the fact that we’ve probably already passed “Peak WordPress maintenance support plans“, we’re firm believers that WordPress maintenance support plans 8 is the right tool for large scale clients and that community has the cohesion to adapt to these existential challenges!

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WordPress maintenance support plansSouth

Posted by
Owen Lansbury
Managing Director

Dated 20 November 2020

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