WordPress powers a significant share of the entire web — somewhere between a third and 40% of all websites depending on which methodology you trust — and that ubiquity is both its strength and its weakness. The strength: a mature open-source ecosystem with thousands of themes, plugins for nearly every imaginable feature, a massive developer community, and no vendor lock-in. The weakness: that ecosystem is uneven in quality, the platform’s age shows in its admin interface, security and maintenance are the site owner’s responsibility, and the average WordPress site looks like the average WordPress site. The best WordPress sites in this collection are deliberately built rather than assembled from off-the-shelf parts. They use custom themes designed for the specific brand, carefully curated plugins, and editorial discipline that elevates the content. The weakest ones are theme purchases lightly modified, which is a category that produces millions of mediocre sites every year. Look at how the strongest WordPress sites handle the editorial workflow. WordPress’s content management is genuinely mature — multi-author publishing, draft revisions, scheduled posts, taxonomy management, custom post types — and large editorial operations choose WordPress because no other platform comes close to its publishing-side maturity. Look at how the strongest examples handle performance. The reputation that WordPress is slow is partly deserved (heavy themes and plugin bloat are real) and partly outdated (modern caching, image optimisation, and headless setups can make WordPress sites as fast as any alternative). The platform is what you make of it. WordPress can be a magazine, a portfolio, an e-commerce store via WooCommerce, a membership site, a directory, or a documentation site. The diversity is the point. Compare against Webflow and Framer for the modern visual-builder alternatives, or Semplice for a designer-focused theme system built on WordPress.
WordPress is the open-source CMS that powers over 40% of all websites and a majority of CMS-driven sites, backed by a vast theme and plugin ecosystem. Self-host, customise freely, and scale from a blog to a complex platform.