WordPress Woes? Check Your Theme!

I got my first shot with WordPress (WP) back in December 2005 when I launched the forerunner to this blog, The Article Writer. At that time, WP was a lot harder to use than it is now as a lot of the features we take for granted such as video embedding, custom characters, and various plugins didn’t exist or were woefully inadequate to handle the job.

A Truly Robust Content Management System

WordPressWP has gotten through the worst of its growing pains, delivering what I find to be a truly robust content management system platform (CMS). Indeed, that is the reason why I have largely abandoned using HTML pages in favor of WP, because WP saves me time and money. Today, I manage ten sites and blogs built on WP, a few of which are more than three years old.

As always, I like to take a good hard look at the various WP themes out there. Most definitely you can purchase some really good ones, but I still prefer to go to the WP Themes Directory to see what has been uploaded. Yes, I’m cheap — why pay for something if you can get it for free?

Professional Themes Are Looking Good, Though Pricey

Seriously, I have considered purchasing a set of professional themes (licensing) to tweak to look the way I like, but I’m satisfied that the themes I’m currently using are doing the job. In the past I would have swapped themes out more frequently, but if I like the look and layout of a theme, I’ll keep it for the long haul.

When it comes to WP themes you can be certain that some of them are problematic. I guess it boils down to this — is the person who made the theme you’re now using a competent blog theme developer or did they port a theme, tweak it to look like their own and release it to the public?

Who Made The Theme And Are They A Pro?

That isn’t always knowable because not every theme’s owner is readily available. Sure, if there is a link to their own site, I recommend you paying them a visit to see what is up. Usually, if they know what they are doing, they’ll have an article on their site about the theme, with installation tips, FAQs, screen shots and a downloadable link. In addition, you’ll find active conversation in the comments section with the theme’s creator sharing tips and advice.

Recently, one of this blog’s readers asked me a question about a WP plugin which led to me sharing a few comments about his blog’s theme. It turns out that his particular theme was doing a few quirky things including pasting lines of text over a photograph when the page was loaded. After things settled down, the text disappeared, but it was an oddity so I told him so.

It turns out that the theme owner is overseas and isn’t open to communication. Yes, I know that themes are free, but having some sort of way to interact with people is important. After all, if you are a theme developer you’re getting a lot of publicity through the link embedded in the footer — at least have some clear instructions on your site to help people out.

Delete It And Move On

When I download a “new” theme, I immediately check it out by activating it. What looks good on the theme directory, doesn’t always look good on my screen. If I hate how it looks, it doesn’t matter how well it has been constructed.

Even if the theme looks good, it still needs to be something I can work with. I have a “mental list” of requirements for every theme including the following must have items: widgets, easy to swap out header photo, clear php coding, sidebars that are easy to adjust if needed, a workable footer and overall ease of use. If I have to tweak the theme excessively to conform to my needs, I quickly delete the theme from my WP-Contents file and move on. I simply do not have the time (or talent) to rework someone else’s debacle.

Examine What Browsers Your Visitors Use

Next, check your theme via different web browsers including Firefox, Chrome, Internet Explorer, Safari, etc. Yes, you can hate Internet Explorer all you want, but chances are more than half of the people who visit your site are still using this unfortunate browser.

You can confirm those numbers via Google Analytics by going to your site’s dashboard, clicking on Visitors Overview ==> Browser Capabilities and then looking under Technical Profile to see the browser breakdown. Right now, Firefox is trumping Internet Explorer by about 47 to 45 percent on this site — woohoo — people are learning!

Lastly, don’t worry about a theme that doesn’t look too great on an 800×600 resolution screen. 1024×768 is the current acceptable default with very few computer screens rendering anything smaller than that.

See Also — WordPress 2.7 & All That Jazz!

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  • By Lillie Ammann, May 14, 2009 @ 10:13 pm

    Matt,
    I’ve been using WordPress as a CMS for about a year and have more than a dozen sites (my own and those of clients) built on WordPress. I purchased a developer package of the Revolution themes and usually use one of the Revolution themes for the sites I create and have been happy with those themes.

    Lillie Ammanns last blog post..Guest Post at Confident Writing

  • By Matt Keegan, May 15, 2009 @ 4:32 am

    I’ve been thinking about doing the same thing, Lillie. Revolution themes are nice looking, easier to use and probably less of a headache than all of the freebie themes out there. Going forward, I may invest in a package and make the move over.

    Matt Keegans last blog post..Chrysler, Jeep, Dodge Dealers Get The Bad News

  • By aumento de mamas, May 21, 2009 @ 6:21 am

    I really think the most important think from those are themes and content. have a great content its the most important think, but people caeres about the looking so in my opinion you need time to choose a great theme and use plugins to improve it. after thinks about the content, but this its harder

  • By Pozycjonowanie, June 22, 2009 @ 4:29 am

    Oh I remember those days – 2005 nobody knew how to use WP and there were no tutorials. Seriously, these days you can find tutorials on literaly every possible concept. Back then it was a lot harder.

Other links to this post

  1. Matt's Musings - MyBlogLog
  2. WordPress Woes? Check Your Theme! : reddit.com
  3. Guest Post at Confident Writing : Lillie Ammann, Writer & Editor
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