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Five reasons to use WordPress as your hosting platform

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We have referred to WordPress as a hosting platform because that’s how many people think of it. It’s a content management system (or CMS), so it’s designed to be installed within a web hosting plan. Preferably a faster one!

People use WordPress (WP) for many different valid reasons as hosting platform; a few of which we’ll cover in this article to clarify why you should be using it too.

1.     WordPress is used by 41% of the web

Approximately 41% of internet websites rely on WP as their CMS of choice. As a result, it’s continually updated, receives new features, and patches for security issues too.

It’s not a CMS that will die off and stop being updated. That’s one less headache compared to trying newer options that may not be around a year from now, necessitating switching the site to an entirely different CMS. That’s one headache you don’t need.

2.     Combined with effective web hosting, it’s fast!

WordPress is about as fast as your hosting is.

When using a hosting plan that’s designed for WordPress – like the one from ionos.ca – it gets the opportunity to perform at its best.

Sluggish hosting that offers minimal RAM, slow platter-based hard drives, and uninspiring internet backbone connections do your site no favors. No CMS can overcome such impediments out of the gate.

Better hosting doesn’t cost appreciably more than slower ones; it’s one area where being frugal doesn’t pay.

3.     It’s highly expandable

WordPress is highly extendable. The basic default installation works fine out of the box. However, it’s designed to be customizable too.

When using WordPress themes, the look and feel of the site change instantly. Premium themes and freemium ones allow web developers to afford to maintain and update their designs. Plug-ins also extend the functionality of WP to allow for e-commerce solutions, security features, social media, and more.

4.     Plenty of free tutorials to learn how to use it

Unlike a smaller CMS that’s not popular enough for content creators to support it, WP has many free YouTube video series and tutorials teaching you everything needed.

Whether you want to learn how to create a new page or post, update the menu, or add a cookie notification, there’s a video that will run through it. Also, the community of users is massive, so getting help from other WP users is easy too. There are plenty of Facebook groups, Reddit subreddits, and forums to ask meaningful questions and get the right answers back.

5.     It removes the complication from Web Hosting

Web hosting is inherently confusing for newbies. It’s a difficult hurdle to overcome at first.

When using WordPress, it’s installed quickly using automated tools. So, a new user is up and running in seconds. They can then log into their site’s WP backend and get started.

There’s no need to learn to use a cPanel set up at the host, an FTP upload/download file manager, or other complications. Once learned, WP is immediately familiar too, so differences between hosting backend setups become a no-brainer too. WP makes it simpler.

People familiar with WP are not surprised its grabbed 40% of the CMS market. However, for others coming from alternative content management systems or having previously hand-coded their sites, there will be a shallow learning curve. Just don’t hinder WP by using a slow hosting platform because it won’t do your site any favours.

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