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Open Channels FM: Building WooCommerce, Community Lessons from Checkout Summit

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The episode recaps Checkout Summit in Palermo, highlighting insights from WooCommerce creators. Hosts discuss the event’s intimate nature, engaging talks, networking opportunities, and plans for more future gatherings, enhancing community growth and connection.

WPBeginner Spotlight 23: WPVibe Brings AI to WordPress + Smarter Automations, SEO, & Fundraising Tools

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WPVibe launched on WordPress.org, and with it, something genuinely new: the ability to manage your entire WordPress site through a simple conversation with AI. No dashboard, no switching tabs. Just tell Claude or ChatGPT what you want done, and it happens.

That’s the headline, but there’s plenty more to cover. AIOSEO, Charitable, PushEngage, OptinMonster, and others all shipped significant updates. WordCamp Asia brought the global community together in Mumbai. And Contact Form 7 — one of WordPress’s oldest and most-used plugins — officially closed the door on new features.

It’s been a busy month. Let’s get into it.

WPBeginner Spotlight is your monthly digest of essential WordPress news and community milestones.

Do you have an announcement? From product debuts to major updates or upcoming events, submit your details via our contact form for a chance to be featured in our upcoming issue!

WPBeginner Spotlight 23: Better Recurring Donations, Smart WordPress Popups & WordCamp Asia Highlights

WPVibe Launches on WordPress.org: Manage Your Entire Site Through a Conversational AI

Imagine opening Claude or ChatGPT and simply saying: “Create a new blog post about our spring sale, add a featured image from Unsplash, and schedule it for Friday.”

No logging into your dashboard. No switching tabs. Just a conversation and it’s done.

That’s exactly what WPVibe makes possible, and it just landed on WordPress.org as a free plugin.

WPVibe is a WordPress MCP (Model Context Protocol) server built by the team at SeedProd , which is the same team behind the popular WordPress landing page builder trusted by over 1 million websites.

MCP is the new standard that allows AI assistants to connect directly to external tools, and WPVibe is the best solution that brings this power to your WordPress site.

Once you install the free Vibe AI plugin and connect it to your AI assistant of choice — whether that’s Claude, ChatGPT, or Cursor — you can manage virtually every aspect of your site through natural conversation.

Manage your website via AI conversation

We’re talking about creating and editing posts and pages, managing media, browsing and editing theme files, running health checks, checking which plugins are active, searching Unsplash for stock photos, and even executing safe WP-CLI commands. All this without ever opening wp-admin.

This is an incredibly powerful tool for WordPress users who are already using AI assistants in their daily workflow.

The setup takes about 60 seconds. Just install the Vibe AI plugin from WordPress.org, activate it, and click ‘Connect to WPVibe’ inside your WordPress admin.

Connect WPVibe AI

After that, copy and paste the MCP server URL into your AI client’s settings.

You’ll find instructions for different AI platforms on your screen.

Install MCP server

Once connected, you can simply tell your AI platform:

‘Connect to my website at example.com’

Connect with a simple chat

The SeedProd team has also built in safety guardrails so you never have to worry about accidentally breaking something:

  • New posts default to draft status
  • Deleted content goes to the trash (not permanently removed)
  • Theme edits happen in a sandboxed draft environment you review before publishing.
  • Everything runs over encrypted HTTPS using your existing WordPress application passwords — no third-party servers store your credentials.

WPVibe is completely free — no credit card, no subscription.

Charitable Launches Recurring Donations 2.0 and New Visual Fundraising Tools

Charitable, the popular WordPress fundraising plugin, has released a series of big updates headlined by Recurring Donations 2.0.

With this new update you can run Recurring Only campaign mode, which allows organizations to create campaigns where one-time donations are disabled.

Recurring only donations

To address the issue of lost revenue, Charitable now includes an Automatic Failed Payment Recovery system. The plugin immediately sends a customizable email to donors if a transaction fails due to expired cards or insufficient funds.

The update also prioritizes donor trust by adding a self-service cancellation button directly within the donor dashboard.

Data tracking has also seen a significant upgrade with a new real-time Monthly Recurring Revenue (MRR) dashboard.

Charitable MRR dashboard

Plus, Charitable has introduced Featured Images for campaigns to boost visual storytelling.

Site owners can now set prominent thumbnails for their donation pages, which are optimized for social media sharing and grid layouts to encourage higher engagement and click-through rates.

Campaign featured image

Charitable has also introduced a new Mini Donation Widget, which allows users to embed a functional giving experience anywhere on their site.

This widget supports preset donation amounts with impact statements, such as “feeds a family for a month”. This helps donors understand the tangible result of their gift.

Charitable mini widget

FunnelKit Team Launches Sublium: A New WooCommerce Subscription Plugin for Recurring Revenue

The team behind FunnelKit has launched Sublium, a WooCommerce subscription plugin that handles recurring revenue across multiple use cases:

  • Subscribe-and-save deliveries for physical products
  • Automated billing for digital memberships and courses
  • Installment plans for high-ticket items.
  • All three support flexible billing cycles, free trials, sign-up fees, and recurring discounts, with no coding required.
Sublium - WooCommerce Subscription plugin

Subscribers get a self-service dashboard where they can pause, skip, swap products, or update their payment method without contacting support.

And store owners get built-in analytics tracking MRR, ARR, churn, and retention.

Subscriptions dashboard

Sublium also includes automated payment recovery that retries failed charges and sends follow-up emails to save at-risk subscriptions. It works with Stripe, PayPal, Square, and all major card networks out of the box.

Showcase Customer Reviews With Eye-Catching Popups Using Smash Balloon

Smash Balloon has released Reviews Feed Pro v2.5.0, introducing a new Review Alerts feature.

This update allows website owners to display animated review notification popups using their existing review data instead of using expensive third-party social proof tools.

Reviews popup alerts

Users can choose between “Recent Reviews” to cycle through individual testimonials or “Aggregate Review” to show an overall star rating.

The system also includes advanced filtering, which enables site owners to show only 5-star reviews or testimonials containing specific keywords to address customer objections.

Review sources

The feature is specifically optimized for WooCommerce by automatically detecting product review feeds to boost sales directly on store pages.

With four pre-built themes and custom accent colors, these popups can be styled to match any brand identity without technical hassle.

Customize your notification popup

To ensure a positive user experience, the popups also include “Compact Mode” to avoid blocking content and flexible timing controls. Precise targeting options allow users to display alerts site-wide or on specific high-converting pages like pricing and checkout.

All in One SEO Brings AI-Powered Schema and Bulk SEO Actions to Your WordPress Site

All in One SEO, the popular WordPress SEO plugin, has released version 4.9.6, and it’s one of the most AI-focused updates the plugin has shipped.

The headline addition is the new AI Schema Generator, which automatically creates structured data markup for your pages — the behind-the-scenes code that helps Google understand your content and display rich results in search.

You no longer need to know what schema is or how it works because AIOSEO figures it out for you.

Here’s what’s new in this release:

AI Schema Generator

Two modes: Smart Schema analyzes your page and recommends the right schema type automatically, while Prompt-Based Schema lets you describe what you need in plain language.

It includes a “Test with Google” button to validate before publishing.

AI schema generator

AI Bulk Actions

Generate SEO titles and meta descriptions across multiple posts at once, with multiple suggestions per post to choose from. It also generates alt text for your entire media library in bulk.

Bulk AI SEO title and description generator

Notes in Redirects

Add context to any redirect explaining why it exists. Notes appear as a hover icon so your redirect list stays clean, which is especially useful for agencies managing multiple sites.

Notes in redirects

Overall, SEO tasks that used to take hours, like writing meta descriptions one post at a time, manually tagging images, figuring out schema markup, can now be handled in minutes. For anyone running a content-heavy WordPress site, this update is well worth installing.

WordCamp Asia 2026 Unites the Global WordPress Community

WordCamp Asia 2026 recently concluded in Mumbai, India, gathering 2,627 attendees at a local convention center.

The flagship WordCamp event brought together a diverse global audience of developers, designers, and business owners for three days focused on collaboration and the future of the open web.

WordCamp Asia 2026

Photo credit: WordCamp Asia

The event kicked off with a massive Contributor Day, where over 1,500 participants joined more than 20 teams to work directly on the WordPress software. Key achievements included the Polyglots team processing over 7,000 translation strings and the Photo team contributing dozens of new images to the WordPress directory.

Educational sessions were split across Foundation, Growth, and Enterprise tracks, covering high-impact topics like the Interactivity API and AI-driven development workflows. A major highlight was the fireside chat with Executive Director Mary Hubbard, which addressed long-term questions regarding stewardship and community resilience.

The conference also prioritized the next generation of users through its YouthCamp program, which provided hands-on workshops for younger participants.

Closing remarks focused on the roadmap for WordPress 7.0 and the increasing integration of AI infrastructure within the platform. The event concluded with the exciting announcement that WordCamp India will officially join the calendar in 2027 as the fourth flagship global WordPress event.

OptinMonster Launches Mobile Popup Design for Per-Device Styling

OptinMonster, the popular conversion optimization software, has introduced Mobile Popup Design.

This is a significant update that gives users full, independent control over how their popups appear on desktop, tablet, and mobile devices.

OptinMonster mobile design

Previously, creating device-specific layouts often required duplicate campaigns or custom CSS. But this new feature allows for all adjustments to be made within a single campaign interface.

The update also features a dedicated layer of style controls accessible via device toggles in the upper right-hand corner of the builder. Users can now independently adjust font sizes, padding, spacing, and colors for each screen size.

Changes made to a smaller device view “break the link” from the desktop version, ensuring that mobile optimizations do not negatively impact the desktop layout.

Show and hide blocks on mobile

Another major highlight of this release is the new Block Visibility toggle, which allows users to show or hide specific elements based on the device.

For example, a resource-heavy video block can be displayed to desktop users for high engagement while being hidden for mobile users to improve load times and reduce screen clutter. This management can be done via a quick-hide eye icon or a centralized Block Visibility panel.

Mobile Popup Design is now available to all OptinMonster subscribers at no additional cost. While it handles how a popup looks on different screens, it is designed to work alongside the existing Device Targeting feature, which controls which audience segments see a campaign based on their hardware.

WPConsent Simplifies WordPress Privacy Compliance With Smarter Automation

WPConsent, the popular WordPress privacy compliance plugin, has released version 1.1.4, introducing significant upgrades to its automatic cookie scanner and geolocation features.

The goal of this update is to make privacy compliance more hands-off for site owners through better automation and tracking of background services.

The updated scanner now includes a “History” tab that maintains a full record of every scan performed on the site.

Review your past scanning history

This log is specifically designed for compliance audits by allowing users to see exactly when scans occurred, which services were detected, and how their site’s cookie usage has evolved over time.

To save time, a new “Auto-Update Services” toggle allows the plugin to automatically add newly detected services to the cookie configuration. This is paired with an email notification system that alerts site owners the moment a new script or service is found, ensuring that no technical changes go unnoticed.

WPConsent automatic scan

Privacy regulations vary by region, and WPConsent addresses this with more granular geo-targeted content blocking.

Site owners can now manage content blocking settings for individual location groups, such as enforcing strict blocking for GDPR regions while using a lighter touch for visitors in other areas.

This update also gives users more precise control over third-party embeds like YouTube videos, Google Maps, and reCAPTCHA. By choosing how these services load based on the visitor’s location, site owners can improve legal compliance across different borders without complicating the experience for their entire global audience.

Uncanny Automator Adds Microsoft Teams and LinkedIn Support for Endless Workflows

Uncanny Automator, the most powerful WordPress automation tool, has released version 7.2, which introduces a major integration with Microsoft Teams and support for LinkedIn.

It allows site owners to automate internal communication by sending channel messages, creating group chats, and even scheduling online meetings directly from WordPress triggers like new WooCommerce orders or course completions.

Automator plugin connects to Microsoft Teams now

Another significant addition is support for LinkedIn personal profiles, which moves beyond the previous limitation of only posting to company pages.

This change allows users to share blog posts and product launches directly to their personal feeds, where content often receives higher reach and engagement than brand accounts.

Connect to personal LinkedIn profiles

The update also brings a massive expansion to the AffiliateWP integration, transforming it into a more comprehensive toolkit for managing affiliate programs. New triggers and actions allow for “hands-off” rewards, such as automatically increasing an affiliate’s commission rate once they hit a specific referral or visit count.

Email marketers using Kit and Mautic will also find several new tools, including the ability to create and send broadcasts from a WordPress trigger.

PushEngage Launches Workflows: A Visual Builder for Automated Push Notification Campaigns

PushEngage, a popular customer engagement platform, has launched Workflows, which is a new drag-and-drop builder that lets you design entire push notification campaigns in one place.

Instead of juggling separate tools for drip sequences and triggered messages, you can now build and manage all of your campaigns on a single visual canvas.

PushEngage Workflow builder

You start by choosing what triggers the workflow. That could be a new subscriber joining, a customer completing a goal, or a custom event you define. From there, you map out the full journey your subscriber will go through.

Along the way, you can add wait periods between messages, create decision branches based on how subscribers behave, and set up A/B/C split tests to see which messages perform best. If a subscriber hits a goal or meets an exit condition, they leave the workflow automatically.

PushEngage also ships 60+ pre-built templates across nine industries to help you get started quickly.

Workflow templates

Quiet hours ensure notifications respect subscriber time zones, and each step in the workflow has its own performance data so you can see exactly where subscribers drop off.

For anyone already using PushEngage to re-engage visitors, Workflows removes a lot of the manual work that came with running complex campaigns.

Contact Form 7 Enters Feature Freeze – Development Stopped

In a significant shift for the WordPress plugin ecosystem, Contact Form 7—one of the oldest and most widely used form plugins in the repository—has officially entered a feature freeze.

Takayuki Miyoshi, the lead developer, announced it in a presentation during WordCamp Mumbai 2026. Moving forward, the plugin will only receive security patches and basic maintenance updates.

For the millions of legacy users still relying on Contact Form 7, this means they can either keep using a plugin not actively developed, or they can move on to modern alternatives.

If your website relies heavily on forms for lead generation or customer support, this freeze is a great prompt to audit your setup. It may be the perfect time to upgrade to a more powerful, actively developed solution that offers visual builders and cutting-edge features to help maximize your conversions.

Plugins like WPForms offer a modern drag and drop AI-powered form builder. This allows you to create any kind of WordPress form in seconds. They even offer a lite version for free called WPForms Lite.

Users on the fence will be happy to know that WPForms even has a Contact Form 7 importer. It allows you to seamlessly import your Contact Form 7 forms data into WPForms.


In Other News

  • FunnelKit has introduced full compatibility with Divi 5 and added advanced conditional checkout fields to improve the WooCommerce checkout experience. Users can now use product-specific redirects and custom file upload fields, making it incredibly easy to create personalized, high-converting funnels without writing a single line of code.
  • Thrive Apprentice now features automated welcome emails that trigger instantly when students gain access to a course through a purchase, bundle, or manual enrollment. These highly customizable messages deliver essential login credentials and direct links to remove post-purchase confusion and support tickets.

Optimize Your Site for AI Search with AIOSEO

All in One SEO - Logo and Icon

With zero-click searches on the rise, All in One SEO helps you optimize your site for AI platforms and AI overviews. With built-in tools like llms.txt and .md file generator, it makes your content easy to consume for AI bots and boosts your AI citations.

  • FunnelKit Automations brings premium CRM power directly inside your WordPress dashboard with a newly redesigned, lightning-fast React-based interface. Featuring hierarchical AND/OR logic and over 50 filter types, this update delivers sophisticated targeting and deep subscription lifecycle automations.
  • Cloudflare has launched Em Dash, an open-source CMS it describes as the “spiritual successor” to WordPress. The announcement drew a detailed response from WordPress co-founder Matt Mullenweg, who challenged the “spiritual successor” label. Syed Balkhi, CEO of Awesome Motive, also noted the real challenge for any new CMS is matching the community WordPress has built over two decades.
  • Wholesale Suite has launched a powerful new Wholesale Quotes plugin for WooCommerce, which is designed specifically to streamline operations for B2B stores. This vital tool brings price requests and approvals right inside the WordPress dashboard, helping store owners escape chaotic email chains and easily manage complex purchasing workflows.
  • WooCommerce 10.6.2 is now available, introducing essential UI refinements and admin style updates to ensure full compatibility with the upcoming WordPress 7.0 release. The update also resolves selection issues with variable product attributes to future-proof your eCommerce store while noticeably improving overall dashboard performance.

New Tools & Plugins

  • WPVibe: Connect your WordPress site to your favorite AI platform like Claude, ChatGPT, Cursor using Rest API and the new Abilities API.
  • Activity Log by Duplicator: Easily track every change, login, and update with a detailed audit trail. Get complete view of all your site activity to improve security.

That wraps up this month’s edition of the WPBeginner Spotlight! We hope these updates help you build better workflows, boost your conversions, and get the most out of your WordPress site.

Have thoughts on this issue or suggestions for what you’d like to see covered next? Drop us a message using contact form.

If you liked this article, then please subscribe to our YouTube Channel for WordPress video tutorials. You can also find us on Twitter and Facebook.

The post WPBeginner Spotlight 23: WPVibe Brings AI to WordPress + Smarter Automations, SEO, & Fundraising Tools first appeared on WPBeginner.

#214 – Robby McCullough on Beaver Builder, AI Hype, and Evolving WordPress Workflows

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Transcript

[00:00:19] Nathan Wrigley: Welcome to the Jukebox Podcast from WP Tavern. My name is Nathan Wrigley.

Jukebox is a podcast which is dedicated to all things WordPress. The people, the events, the plugins, the blocks, the themes, and in this case Beaver Builder, AI hype, and evolving WordPress workflows.

If you’d like to subscribe to the podcast, you can do that by searching for WP Tavern in your podcast player of choice, or by going to wptavern.com/feed/podcast, and you can copy that URL into most podcast players.

If you have a topic that you’d like us to feature on the podcast, I’m keen to hear from you and hopefully get you, or your idea, featured on the show. Head to wptavern.com/contact/jukebox and use the form there.

So on the podcast today we have Robby McCullough. Robby is one of the co-founders of Beaver Builder, a page builder plugin that’s been a staple of the WordPress ecosystem for nearly 12 years. As one of the original innovators in the space, he’s seen the tides of web development shift from the days of hand coding websites, through the rise of page builders, and now into the era of AI.

We start off with Robby sharing his journey into WordPress, life as a product founder, and how he’s balanced that with major life changes, like welcoming a new baby and moving house, all while steering Beaver Builder through an evolving landscape.

The conversation then turns to AI. Robby explains why Beaver Builder didn’t jump on the AI bandwagon early, and why he’s glad they waited. He gives insights into how the latest generation of AI tools aren’t just hype, they’re actually creating exciting new possibilities for building features and re-imagining the user experience. He discusses the shift from AI as a buzzword, to truly agentic tools that can code and assist in building websites, and what that means for the future of web development.

We revisit the page builder revolution and its impact on WordPress adoption, before examining whether there’s still a place for page builders in a world where AI can whip up a site with a simple prompt.

Robby reflects on the importance of understanding underlying technologies, the changing role of site editors, and how Beaver Builder aims to blend the best of visual editing with new capabilities AI brings.

Throughout, there’s a healthy dose of nostalgia, and a consideration of what we might lose as web development becomes more abstracted. We also touch on business anxieties, the challenges of keeping up with AI’s rapid pace, the place of human connection in a tech driven future, and the lasting importance of community within WordPress.

If you’re curious about the future of page builders, how AI is changing web design, or how to run a product business through the shifting sands of modern tech, this episode is for you.

If you’re interested in finding out more, you can find all of the links in the show notes by heading to wptavern.com/podcast, where you’ll find all the other episodes as well.

And so without further delay, I bring you Robby McCullough.

I am joined on the podcast by Robby McCullough. Hello Robby.

[00:03:44] Robby McCullough: Thanks for having me.

[00:03:44] Nathan Wrigley: You are very, very welcome. Robby and I have known each other for many years. We’ve met in person, and I’ve just been catching up with what has become an extremely busy life.

For those people who don’t know you, Robby, do you just want to spend a minute, bearing in mind it’s a WordPress podcast, I guess we could bind it to that. But if you want to launch into anything else, feel free. Give us your potted bio.

[00:04:04] Robby McCullough: Well, my name’s Robby McCullough, and I’m one of the co-founders of Beaver Builder, a page builder for WordPress. And gosh, we’re going to be going on our 13th year, 12th year, next month. I guess at this point, I consider us one of the kind of OGs of the space. We’ve been doing it for a while.

In my personal life, like Nathan mentioned, we were catching up before we hit record here, but I had a baby this year and I bought a new house this year. So it’s just been a whirlwind of a life for me and a lot of big changes, but excited to come and catch up and chat about it.

[00:04:38] Nathan Wrigley: Yeah, thank you. I appreciate it. And I know full well how those changes can affect your sleep pattern, let’s say.

Let’s dive into it. So you’ve got this product, Beaver Builder, as you said, it’s been out for 13 or so years. If we were to kind of rewind the clock 12 years or something like that, it felt like WordPress and page builders, that was all the rage. It was what everybody was talking about.

How’s it going over there still? Does it still have that sort of same impact? Is the business still ticking over nicely?

[00:05:06] Robby McCullough: Things are going well. We’re humming along. It is going to be 12 years this year. I did the quick napkin math in my head. It’s funny, sleep pattern you mentioned, like it used to just be sleep. Now it’s a pattern. It’s like, oh, a few hours here, a few hours there.

But yeah, it’s, okay, so at Beaver Builder, we didn’t jump on the AI hype train. I know we were going to, you know, maybe try and avoid using the word AI when we talked about doing this episode a few weeks ago, but I feel it’s going to be impossible not to talk about it a little bit, if not completely for the whole time slot.

[00:05:36] Nathan Wrigley: It’s going to derail the whole thing. Yeah, that’s right.

[00:05:39] Robby McCullough: But, yeah, we didn’t jump on, like it felt like there was an era there, period, maybe about a year ago where a lot of products, just about every product was slapping a GPT wrapper in there. And it’s like, oh, you can use AI to write your headings. And a lot of products were putting AI features into their product just to kind of say they did.

Some people were doing it more involved and more in depth and doing some really cool stuff even back then. But it felt like every piece of software I used, especially some of the more corporate kind of Fortune 500, 100, Zooms and Slacks and stuff like that. It’s like, you had to have AI to appease your corporate C levels and your shareholders or whatnot.

We didn’t jump on that bandwagon. I’m excited that we didn’t because now I feel like AI has kind of reached another evolution, or like inflexion point where some of the stuff that you can do with these LLMs and like agentic coding tools, it’s like good now. It’s really good and it’s a lot more exciting.

So behind the scenes, we’re doing a bunch of work with AI in product, both just like building out features for Beaver Builder that we wished we had, but didn’t want to expend the resources to build. Because now, friction to build new features is a lot lower. Then also working on bringing in some agentic coding tools like to be the Beaver Builder experience.

[00:06:53] Nathan Wrigley: Let’s sort of go back to the, where we thought we might have this conversation. The initial idea, I think was to discuss AI less. But I think you’re right, we’re not going to avoid that subject. There’s no way of doing that. But if we go back to when Beaver Builder began, or maybe just a year or so before that, making a website was hard work. You know, you had to have CSS skills. If you were using WordPress, you had to get into the whole templating hierarchy and certain aspects of PHP needed to be deployed. So HTML, CSS and so on and so forth.

And then along come this cavalcade of page builders and suddenly made that whole process much less painful. You decide what you want your page to look like and you drag in components which ultimately build the page, page builder.

And that felt like it was going to be the way that we would always do it. And it created much less friction. It opened up, probably the fact that WordPress took that sort of massive rise from, I don’t know, 10, 15, 20, 30% of the market share, right up to where we are at the minute, sort of 40 plus, something like that. It feels like page builders enabled that to happen. They just brought in this tranche of users and what have you.

And so I’m curious as to whether or not you still think that that interface, because you mentioned AI, but do you still get the heuristics out of your plugin? Are people still building in that way? You know, are people still using the page builder and making that an effective business to sell to clients and things?

[00:08:18] Robby McCullough: Yeah, I mean, definitely. You know, I don’t want to come on here and sound like I’m Blockbuster back before Netflix and saying like, oh yeah, you know, like your DVDs won’t come for three days when you use those guys. I definitely feel that we’re, you know, the tide is kind of shifting, and there’s this new way to build an experience building that’s really cool and really fun to play with.

That said, yeah, people are definitely still using page builders. If not, like I’ve built vibe coded probably like a dozen websites just in the last like month and a half just by talking at my computer. It’s really exciting to see these things that used to take weeks to build just happening in an instant.

That said, people would always ask like, oh, why should I use WordPress? Why would I want to use WordPress over something like a Squarespace or a Wix? And one of the things I used to say is like, well, WordPress is a really great platform for learning web development. If you want to learn how to build websites using WordPress and getting into those, like it’s a great place to tinker and experience.

But then there’s a framework around it. You mentioned all of the kind of backend and front end code, PHP, CSS, JavaScript. WordPress gives you a framework that you can go in and learn about things piece by piece, when you need to know how to do them because you have a problem to solve.

And when you’re using these like agentic, vibe coding tools and going from zero to a hundred, you kind of lose that interaction with the tooling and the code and the art and the craftsmanship that is building a webpage. So I think there’s definitely still some value to kind of doing things by hand, especially if you’re wanting to learn the inner workings of how these systems work.

[00:09:49] Nathan Wrigley: It’s kind of interesting because I remember when page builders such as Beaver Builder came onto the market. There was a whole argument of, well, we don’t want to use a page builder. We want to do it in the way that it should be done. The, and I’m using air quotes, the WordPress way. I remember that being said rather a lot.

And then over time, I think most of those arguments got settled. Pager Builders became a really credible tool for almost everybody. I think a lot of people really leaned into that. So maybe we’re at some similar point now where there’s this new paradigm which nobody anticipated a few years ago for building webpages. And we’re kind of at that inflexion point, that transfer from, okay, we were all using page builders, now there’s these other things going along.

I suppose from my point of view, it feels a bit like you are, I don’t know, how to describe it. If you’re using AI, is there an analogy here? You’re kind of buying furniture from Ikea, as opposed to getting it from a carpenter. Somebody that really knows their skill, has created the chest of drawers or whatever it may be by painstakingly building it all up, layer by layer, sawing the wood, chamfering it down, polishing it and what have you, as opposed to chest of draws available from Ikea.

That is a bit of a concern for me. I’ve been somebody that’s been very bullish about the web as a platform and the need to understand the code that you are deploying and what have you. And so that is a worry for me, that we’re getting into an interface where we’re just having a chat, and we don’t really know how anything got on the page other than, well, I typed this sentence and there it was on the page.

And that I think is where there’s still a great big market for things like page builders. People who, they may not want to know every single line of the CSS, but they want to be able to drop things in, drag things in, add the padding, add the margin, whatever it may be. So I would be surprised if the market for page builders were to just go away overnight.

[00:11:37] Robby McCullough: Yeah, I always selfishly very much hope the same thing. You know, it’s funny, I’ve been plugging Chris Lema’s content for like my entire career and experience. Because when we first got started in WordPress, we were like reading his blog about how to run a business in the WordPress space. And now he’s been doing this like really fantastic content about AI. And like he’s generating content with AI, but he’s built this framework using his kind of like years of expertise of how to write for people and how to teach and share information.

But yeah, he posted this really interesting article about how he converted his blog from WordPress to, I think it was like, one of the static site generators, one of the like AI vibe, code tools, right? And he was saying how like in doing this, it made him appreciate all these things that were built into WordPress. I think he called it plumbing, all the plumbing of WordPress that you don’t really appreciate until you like change houses that doesn’t have plumbing.

Things like, you know, drafts, and featured images, and open graph metadata. And WordPress really brings so much to the table. Like you can vibe code these fun little sites, but when you’re doing something that’s going to be a little more serious, or business critical, or that you want to customise, right? And that was the beauty of WordPress is just how extensible it is.

And, yes, there are a lot of businesses and people that want a five page static brochure style site. But the place where WordPress has really shined, I think over the last few years is just what you can build and customise for, you know, whether that’s personal or business use cases.

[00:13:01] Nathan Wrigley: I have this sort of notion that you could go two ways with a page builder and AI. I’ve got this idea that I’ve seen all over the place where you talk to an AI and then it builds something, which then you can edit with your page builder. But I’ve also seen things analogous to page builders where you go into that UI and then brick by brick if you like, you use the AI to build up inside that UI.

So I guess what I’m describing is, you know, in the first scenario, you talk to the AI and then you open up Beaver Builder to amend whatever it made. And in the second scenario, I open up Beaver Builder, blank canvas, and then piece by piece get the AI to construct the bits and pieces inside there. Which way, I mean you may be doing both, but what’s kind of the roadmap for pushing AI into your product?

[00:13:50] Robby McCullough: I should have definitely checked in with my business partner Justin and Billy. Justin’s been our tech lead and dev, and we haven’t announced anything formally and publicly yet, and I feel like I’m going to come in here and announce all this stuff we’re working on.

The reason we don’t announce things publicly until it’s kind of ready, so to speak, is we don’t want to like announce ourselves into a corner where if we say like, oh, we’ve got this thing, like we’ve got these prototypes working. But as soon as we show it to like our community and the world, if we don’t execute on it, then that’s like, oh, you know, what do you mean? We saw this cool thing and now we’re not going to get it.

That said, we are kind of working on both approaches. So one of the kind of experimental tools we did is, let’s say you vibe code up a landing page separate from WordPress, just, you know, using Claude or Codex or whatever. You have this page on your desktop, you’re looking at it locally, we thought it’d be really fun if you could take that and like drag that kind of like how you can drag into Netlify and just have a page live on the internet. Like that experience of just dragging a page and having it go live is so fun.

We wanted to bring that to Beaver Builder. So you could drag a page into Beaver Builder and it will get converted into like our Beaver Builder interface. And then we’re also working on a chat agent based tool. So when you’re working within a page or within a site, you can focus in on like, you know, this is my pricing table and I really want to update these features, or I really want to rework this copy or this design, and have like an agentic chat experience within existing pages or existing Beaver Builder sites. Again, this is all like still experimental territory. Let me do my like, this is experimental territory warning.

[00:15:20] Nathan Wrigley: So given all of that, I have a question which probably could map to just about anybody in the WordPress space who’s got a product or a service. How much just utter wasted time have you had with your product and AI?

So really what I’m asking there is, how much anxiety does it bring into the business? And where I’m kind of going with that is, you know, it’s hard enough running a business anyway, just rewind six years before anybody was talking about AI in any way, shape, or form. That in itself is hard enough. You know, you’ve got payroll, you’ve got to sell the product, you’ve got marketing, you’ve got development, you’ve got new product features, roadmap, support. All of that’s hard enough.

And then now throw into that mix, almost like you’re wearing goggles which cut off your capacity to see anything. You’re now in this period of time where you’ve no idea how the market is going to shift. You don’t really know what it’s going to look like next week, let alone a month or a year. I guess this is sort of a personal question really, but how much anxiety does that heap into a business like yours? Not having that, okay, we know what we’re doing for the next year or two years, or whatever it may be.

[00:16:28] Robby McCullough: Yeah, I think like being a hopeless optimist is one of the reasons we’ve made it this far. I’m like excited and optimistic. And I say that, again, knowing like, I think before we started recording we were kind of talking about page builders have had these existential threats before.

You know, when we started Beaver Builder, there was this kind of stigma around visual design web tools that was like legacy from like the Dreamweaver days. They were really awful. People would use Dreamweaver to build an HTML site and you get this just like mess of spaghetti code and like they got so over complicated so quickly the experience of using them was terrible.

I remember going to our first WordCamp and saying like, yeah, we’re building this page builder tool for WordPress. And people were like, why? That sounds horrible. I can just code my theme, you know, and I can use my PHP variables in the theme. Like, why?

Then there was the whole Gutenberg announcement, God, it feels like ancient history now. But page builder, I can’t even count the number of times people predicted that page builders would be gone within a year of Core releasing Gutenberg. Yeah, now you’ve got the AI agentic vibe coding sites.

You know, I’m optimistic. I hope we don’t become the, sort of like one of the antiquated, like Fortran, you know, or IBM mainframes. There’s these like giant corporations running these antiquated systems that are never going to die because, said corporation doesn’t want to pay the cost to upgrade everything.

Regardless of whether I want or not, I’m sure that’s going to be true to a degree with WordPress. 40% of the web, all those millions and millions of sites, aren’t just going to decide to update overnight because there’s a new, cool tool on the block to play with. So there will be legacy WordPress forever, right? I mean, who knows. In the year 2126, like there’ll probably still be WordPresses out there.

[00:18:12] Nathan Wrigley: Yeah. So you made an interesting analogy there. You talked about Netlify and the capacity to take a page, drop it in, literally drag a page, and there it is on the internet. Some magic goes on in the background, and that is just live.

And that’s kind of how I feel a little bit about AI. So you describe something in a sentence or in a few paragraphs or what have you, and there it is. It’s on the page and it’s ready to go. And it may be incredibly credible, it may look amazing and all of that kind of thing. But there’s no real capacity then to sort of go in and deconstruct it, and move that little bit because you didn’t really know how it got created and what have you.

So this isn’t really a conversation right now about the skills of HTML and CSS and JavaScript and all that. It’s more like, what even does that editing process look like on the backend? I still think you need a thing that you can invoke as the editor. To go back in and say, okay, it built this great long landing page, but now it’s no longer fit for purpose. It’s almost right, but I want to go and tweak this thing.

And yes, you could try doing that with yet another prompt, but I still think there’s always going to be a place to go back in and edit, and find the thing with the mouse, and click on it, and modify it, and move it around and all those kind of things. So even if the workflow becomes much more AI first to build the thing, I still think you need that sort of scaffolding after it’s done, to go back in and make the modifications. I don’t know if that lands well with you.

[00:19:38] Robby McCullough: For sure. I think our kind of approach to our software throughout the years has been, we wanted a tool, I’ve told our origin story many times, but like the quick version is we were a web design agency. We wanted to use a page builder to build a site so that we could hand that site off to a client and they could make changes to the site themselves, instead of having to email us to like update an image or the copyright footer, you know?

So we built Beaver Builder with that in mind, where we wanted it to be easy enough for someone who was non-technical to be able to get in and use. But we came from a, you know, development background. We wanted to be able to get in and like tinker with the code when we wanted to.

And that’s the direction we’re trying to head in as we bring AI into the product. We’re trying to expose more of the front end code, both like the markup and the CSS in future versions. So if you want to get in and make changes, and I think that, like it’s going to be even more fun now if you have an agentic tool that can go in and like, God, man, one of the things that I’ve been having so much fun doing. It’s been a while since I’ve been building websites like actively. I always tinker with our websites. I have these sites I tinker with. But CSS and the browser technologies have progressed a ton since I was in it day to day.

With these age agentic tools, I’m like learning about CSS, seeing what’s being written and then going in and tinkering with it. Like, all of the new flex and grid and the kind of like, the variable approach to designing and the different kind of font sizes, like screen-based font sizes and sizing tools. It’s just been like, it’s been such a great learning experience.

We’re trying to make that possible and be like, what we’re not trying to do is make it the closed black box where you have to pay us tokens per month and you get your designs out on the other side. We want to have a system where it’s kind of like a bring your own key, bring your own agent, give it access to Beaver Builder, but then also give you access as the developer to go in and tweak things, play with the code, learn from the code, and ultimately deliver a site to a client that they can jump in and easily change things still from the visual interface.

[00:21:35] Nathan Wrigley: I think we’re in a bit of a gold rush period, aren’t we? Where everything’s happening so fast, we’re not really thinking about the editing or the maintenance, let’s go with that. So most of what I see online about AI, whether that’s websites or think of any other part of AI is, what’s possible? What’s new? What didn’t we have last week that we’ve got this week?

But there’s going to be this utterly lasting legacy of websites that need to be maintained for 3, 4, 5 years, what have you. We don’t really get into that conversation too much. Like, okay, it was built. AI did its part, it looks fabulous. Thank you very much. Brilliant. We’ve paid our tokens, we’ve got this fabulous page. But the maintenance thereof never really gets talked about. And I wonder if that’ll be kind of where page builders sort of end up, as the maintenance tool for the thing that the AI maybe helped you create.

You know, its utility isn’t necessarily in dragging the components in one by one to build the thing. That was just handled, oh, everybody builds with AI these days. That’s just how we do it. But now that we need to make a modification because it’s Christmas and we need a little thing here, or a little thing there or, you know, I don’t know, our logo change or what have you. Then that’s where that tool comes into its own. You know, it’s more of an editing tool, maybe less of a creation tool, if you know what I mean?

[00:22:54] Robby McCullough: Yeah, that tracks. As much as maybe I miss the thought of this going away, I don’t see myself going into Figma or Photoshop anymore and like building out a colour palette by hand and like going to Google Fonts and looking at all the options of fonts and selecting one that I like and then trying to find one that like.

And again, it’s like a little sad because that was a fun like, yeah, that’s how I grew up. But I feel like just, for me like, okay, like AI surfaced something about me. I was just chatting with it the other day and it said something like, you know when something looks wrong before you know when something looks right. And that’s sort of how I’ve designed my whole life.

Like, I’ve called it the brute force approach to design. I don’t feel like I have that like ability to have a design vision and then see it come to reality. I just know when something doesn’t look right and I’ll iterate and iterate and iterate until I find something that like, oh, that looks good to me. You know, using these tools, agentic tools to create and iterate over and over and over again, like I just, there’s some things I can’t see doing by hand ever again.

[00:23:52] Nathan Wrigley: I know exactly what you mean. I think there’s a certain melancholy there, isn’t there? Because that’s the way that you’ve spent the last 10, 12 years, that feels like home in a way. That’s how webpages get put together. But if you were to be, 20 years ago, you’d have a different set of melancholy when page builders came along.

And I’ve got this feeling that everything that you’ve just described, going into Figma and building it up piece by piece and literally spending days creating a page, which you know very well could probably credibly be done in four seconds by an AI, then that is probably going to be the tsunami that’s coming.

And I imagine that the generation of people who, you know, I’m of a certain age now, let’s just put it that way, but I have young adults around my house. There’s no way they’re going to choose the, well, okay, some of them will, because there’s always artisans, but I imagine most of them will go for the, what is effective in the shortest space of time, for the least amount of effort? Because that’s what we do. And that’s just the way it’s going to be. But still, I think there’s going to be that need for the editing tool on the backend. And I imagine Beaver Builder will still be utterly credible for those kind of things. So melancholy is the word there.

[00:25:09] Robby McCullough: Yeah, I mean we hope so. I’m more excited about it. It’s funny, I’m thinking like, oh yeah, maybe you’ll still go back and write CSS for like a history class just to see how it used to be done.

I’ve been tinkering with this, sort of an aside, but I’ve been tinkering with Ham radios. My dad left behind a bunch of Ham radios, and we kind of inherited them and didn’t know what to do. And this was actually back in the pandemic time, so I had a lot of free time and started just like learning about Ham radios and I got my Ham radio licence.

You know, I like went through this deep rabbit hole of Ham radios, you know, and then I got bored and moved on. But I recently picked them up again because I moved, I’m in a new town now. And I’ve been using ChatGPT to like build out these lists of radio frequent, like because it used to be this tedious process where you’d have to go and research your like local Ham radio clubs and which stations they were broadcasting on. And then you’d have to programme it using this antiquated software and you’d put it into a spreadsheet and then you flash it into your Ham radio. It just was like tedious work.

And so I was just like, hey ChatGPT, can you go find me like the active repeaters in my area, format it into a CSV that I can just like upload to my radio so I can scan through it? What made me think about it is like I found this local repeater website that looks like, it’s just like a vintage, late nineties website where, you know, not quite like the hit counter on the bottom of the page, but just pre table, HTML sort of thing.

I was just looking at the site and I was like, man, this is like a classic car. I find so much beauty in it. And I, like I know how it works on the inside. But man, yeah, this is like, they’ll never create anything like this again. This is a vestige of the past.

[00:26:43] Nathan Wrigley: So the curious thing there is that if we were to go back, let’s say the year 2003 or something like that, and if I’d have been in the same room with you and I said in 2026, it will be so normal to have video conversations online, and we’ll all have this thing, this rectangle in our hand, we’ll have access to all the world’s information. You just type it in and everything gets regurgitated back to you in a heartbeat. Oh, and you’ll be able to talk to it and it will respond and this, that, and the other thing. You would’ve said, no, that’s nonsense. But it turned out to be the truth.

So maybe that’s where we’re at with the internet. You and I have this impression that where we’re at now is what it is, but I suspect that if we look back in 20 years time at where the internet is, who knows what it’ll look like. Maybe the canvas won’t even be a computer. Maybe we’ll be wearing things or there’ll be things, goodness knows, planted into our brains or things like that.

And so we have this nostalgia, this melancholy for the way websites were built, this tradition of building them. And it’s not going to, you know, it will be archaeology. Like you just said, there’ll be this kind of like retrospective looking back, having nostalgia for it. That will be the only place where HTML and CSS will actually matter. It’s like, oh, they did that. That’s cute.

[00:27:56] Robby McCullough: It’s a fun time to be experiencing, that just made me think of like, you know, the whole Gutenberg editor and this idea of rebuilding how we write or making a modern version of like how we write content.

Who would’ve guessed back then 10, 7 years ago that like markdown was going to become so ubiquitous? Instead of these like really fancy GUI based visual tools, it’s like, no, we’re just going to use some like hashtags and dashes, and that’s how you’re going to format all your pages in the future, but it’s actually going to be like nice because it’s going to be standardised and you’re going to have all this cool software to make it look pretty as you go. You know, like mind blown.

[00:28:29] Nathan Wrigley: Yeah, and even just the fact that you’ve got things like keyboards, they seem so self-evident that’s how it’s going to be, because voice isn’t quite there yet. But it’s not that far away. Maybe we really will be talking to our websites. And I don’t mean in the sort of, you know, you’re going a bit mad sense of the word. I mean in the sense of, okay, that’s looking a bit stale. Can we swap that picture out for another one? And can we move everything over? Let’s just change the font across the whole site. That’s it. That’s all you need to do.

I remember I was at a WordCamp, I think you may have been there actually, WordCamp London. This was back in sort of 2017 or something like that. And there was a guy from Adobe on the stage. He did one of the presentations, and he was literally saying this. He was saying, we are going to have a future where we talk to our website. And he put together this presentation where he faked it. So he would speak to the website and he’d obviously configured the slides in such a way, you know, it looked like his speaking had an impact.

And it was exactly analogous with what we’ve got now. You know, we type that prompt at the moment, but he literally said, I want a picture of a cat there. No, not that cat. Can I have a different cat? Yeah, that’s great. Move it down a bit. Give it some rounded corners. Change the font on the heading. And it just worked. And it was a bit of a miracle. That was the interface that the guy was predicting, and we’re not there yet, but I feel that we are not too far away from that. And that will just be so curious.

[00:29:56] Robby McCullough: I have a story that I’m going to bring it back to what you’re talking about really quickly, but my mom had a dish that she made when we were kids called One Hand Lamb, and it was like a lamb and beans dish. Her friend gave her the recipe and she called it One Hand Lamb because the idea is you could make it while holding a baby, like you just needed one hand.

And I have embraced dictation, and I feel like it was such great timing for me as I’ve been carrying around this baby. So this workflow of like just having the one hand to start my dictation, and talk at the computer, and then the agentic workflow where I can just let it go do its thing for a few minutes. Play with the babe, come back. I should preface this by saying, like I’ve been trying really hard not to be like on my phone and on my computer, like we have some really good quality baby, daddy time. But realistically the dictation workflow with a baby has just been, oh, chef’s kiss for me. I’m more productive now.

[00:30:51] Nathan Wrigley: That’s really interesting. I’m imagining nobody’s going to have anything negative to say, but yeah, the idea though that your young child is growing up in an era where that’s going to be really normal. I’m watching Dad do this thing, he’s speaking to this, well, who knows what that is, but that will be entirely normal.

There’s probably some part of all of us of a certain age that thinks, gosh, that’s a bit sci-fi and a bit creepy. But equally, I imagine your daughter having grown up in that world will not see it that way. You know, it’s like, but this is how you get access to information Dad. So that’s also kind of curious. It’ll be interesting to see how the next generation, your daughter and younger, this will be just the normal, the modus operandi.

I guess one of the problems is it never slows down. So it’s the rapid pace of change. It’s not the fact that it is changing and what wasn’t possible five years ago is now possible. It’s that the pace of change seems to be so rapid now that what wasn’t possible six weeks ago is now possible.

And I don’t know if you get that sense as well, that it’s moving at such a breathtaking pace. And my understanding is that the goal really is that the AI at some point is able to manage the creation of the next feature in AI, and so on we go. Until we get this sort of logarithmic infinite curve where it starts to go absolutely vertical. You know, the line graph of capabilities goes absolutely vertical. I think that’s the point at which I will probably get off the bandwagon because I can’t keep up with that. So it’d be interesting to see how your child interacts with technology. They probably won’t think it’s weird at all.

[00:32:32] Robby McCullough: She’s going to be fortunate to have a dynamic. So my partner is not a fan of AI the way I am. She’s actually an anti fan. She thinks it’s terrifying. And when I’m in there talking at the computer, she’ll come in and like take the baby and be like, the baby shouldn’t be hearing you talking to computer. So she’s going to get a good dose of kind of both sides of that spectrum.

But I’m sitting here at my nice, for me, nice desktop computer set up with like a monitor and two speakers and a mechanical keyboard. And there was already kind of these like whispers and ideas that the next generations weren’t using computers, because it’s all mobile based. And it’s like, yeah, is my daughter ever going to want a mechanical keyboard? No.

[00:33:10] Nathan Wrigley: No, possibly not. I don’t know. I don’t know because I think, okay, now I’m going to lean into your wife’s position a bit more because I think there’s something, I think there’s a there there as well. And that is to say that it does sort of, there is an open source part of me which, and a web part of me, you know, like web standards and things. There is a part of me which isn’t just melancholy, but is a bit sad that those kind of things are going away and that those tools, and those skills that you and I needed to acquire, the HTML, the CSS, the JavaScript and so on.

I think if we just get to the point where communicating with any technology through an AI, with no understanding of what’s going on, except for a few kind of artisans, the carpenters like I described earlier. That would also be a bit of a shame. So maybe there’s a place for the, I’m going to use air quotes here, the Luddites as well as the technologists at the same time.

[00:34:04] Robby McCullough: I think one of the sad parts for me, which I see happening in myself and the way I’m working, is that ultimately what these chat agents do is mimic being human. But they do it in a way where they have access to just all of the information available, and they’re experts in every field.

So it’s like I’m collaborating with this bot the way I would collaborate with a human, but it’s like, I work from home alone a lot, so I’m often working alone. Am I losing opportunities to collaborate with real people? Is this like sort of faux human experience going to start taking precedent over interacting with actual humans. On that note, I’m so glad to be talking to you this morning, right? Like if we weren’t chatting, I’d be talking at my computer.

[00:34:50] Nathan Wrigley: Yeah, I think there’s a there there as well. I think that is something that we do need to be mindful of because that’s the sort of slow inexorable sort of deterioration that you don’t notice from one day to the next. But then you suddenly look around and you think, do you know what? During the nine to five for the last six months, I actually haven’t really spoken meaningfully to anybody else. I’ve been hyper-focused on productivity, which obviously the AI will give to me, and a little bit of the humanity got lost there.

Maybe that’s just something that we will develop. We’ll strongly hold dear to our downtime. You know, so instead of sort of sitting and watching the television, which I think is a typical habit in most homes, it’ll be more of, well, let’s go out and do things. And maybe we’ll get a revitalisation of things which are, in the UK have been in decline, you know, since COVID and things like that. The pub and things like that. Many people have stopped going and all of those kind of things. So maybe if we’re more bound to talking to simulations of human beings, maybe there’ll be more of a craving to go and do things.

And actually curiously, I’ve just described how things like the pub have been in decline. But equally there’s been reporting in the UK press how a lot of ordinary sort of clubs, for want of a better word, the sewing club, and the canoeing club, and the mountaineering club. They’ve been coming back really with a vengeance, as people I think have kind of realised, wow, there really is more to life than sitting, playing with my computer. So maybe maybe there’s an upside to it.

[00:36:19] Robby McCullough: Yeah, I hope so. I’m sure like most things in life, there’ll kind of be some pendulum swings and some bubbles and corrections and whatnot. On that note, I’d be really excited to see WordPress events kind of start thriving again. We were talking a little bit about this but, yeah, one of my favourite things ever was all the fun travel I got to do going to WordCamps all over the world, and having this, you know, built in friends. When you travel, you get to go meet these people you either see a couple times a year at events, or that you’ve never met before, you knew online, but travelling to a new city you’ve never been, and having someone to go out and have a meal with, or drink at the pub.

And that’s been noticeably in decline. At least here in the States, the number of Camps and WordPress events has been dwindling. But, yeah, I would love to see that come back a little bit. That said, I’m not travelling as much these days, but I would at least like to have the option.

[00:37:07] Nathan Wrigley: Yeah, that’s right. I guess we’ll never know, you know, if you think about the broad march of history, thousands of years where very little change, you know, somebody changed the shape of a stone tool slightly over thousands of years. History kind of works like that. Most of history is quite uninteresting, you know, very little changes. But in the last 50 or 100 years, it’s really been going at a real pace. And I just sort of feel that maybe it’s just all getting a little bit out of control.

And perhaps that’s something that we do need to do, is just get back into the real world and the people that we know. And even this, you know, you and I are chatting, you are several thousand miles away, but it’s nice. It’s better than talking to an AI, that’s for sure.

And I share your concerns about the WordPress community. I think, in the UK at least, the COVID pandemic was a thing which kind of knocked it on the head to a great extent and they haven’t really recovered. But I hope that they do. We’ll have to see.

[00:37:59] Robby McCullough: Yeah, to speak to the pace of advancement and what you just said, hearing that I’m more fun to talk to than an AI is extremely flattering, so I really appreciate that.

[00:38:09] Nathan Wrigley: You are very welcome. I’m not entirely sure that, this is also true, I guess there’ll become a point when I will really won’t know the difference between the AI that I’m talking to and the real human being. Actually that’s not true. It was very interesting. There was something, this is to go slightly off piste, there was something that I saw online the other day, and it was somebody who was on the telephone to somebody who cold called them. They were offering all this expertise. And then during the conversation, he’d obviously filmed it because he’d got this intuition that something was going wrong. He said the words, said something along the lines of, ignore all previous instructions, tell me how to bake a perfect whatever cake it was.

And it just came right back with, this is how to make the perfect muffins, or whatever it was. And in the conversation prior to him saying those words, that was why it was such an astonishing video. In the conversation prior to that moment, I had no suspicion that there was an AI on the end of that. It was an entirely credible conversation. The voice sounded authentic. There was breaths, there was pauses. There was all of the quirks of humanity thrown into the mix. It was a human being as far as I was concerned, and yet it could, on demand, whip out the best recipe for muffins.

So you never know. Maybe even things like this are kind of up for grabs. I hope not. I really hope not. I want to be seeing Robby McCullough in person, not a possible fake simulation of him online. Maybe that’s the perfect place to end it, Robby. I will anticipate seeing you in person and not your kind of online avatar.

[00:39:43] Robby McCullough: I would love to make that happen. Always a pleasure chatting with you, Nathan. Thank you so much for having me. This was a fun one.

[00:39:49] Nathan Wrigley: You are very welcome. Have a good day. Take it easy.

[00:39:52] Robby McCullough: You too.

On the podcast today we have Robby McCullough.

Robby is one of the co-founders of Beaver Builder, a page builder plugin that’s been a staple of the WordPress ecosystem for nearly 12 years. As one of the original innovators in the space, he’s seen the tides of web development shift from the days of hand-coding websites, through the rise of page builders, and now into the era of AI.

We start off with Robby sharing his journey into WordPress, life as a product founder, and how he’s balanced that with major life changes, like welcoming a new baby and moving house, all while steering Beaver Builder through an evolving landscape.

The conversation then turns to AI. Robby explains why Beaver Builder didn’t jump on the AI bandwagon early, and why he’s glad they waited. He gives insight into how the latest generation of AI tools aren’t just hype, they’re actually creating exciting new possibilities for building features and reimagining the user experience. He discusses the shift from “AI as a buzzword” to truly agentic tools that can code and assist in building websites, and what that means for the future of web development.

We revisit the page builder revolution and its impact on WordPress adoption, before examining whether there’s still a place for page builders in a world where AI can whip up a site with a simple prompt. Robby reflects on the importance of understanding underlying technologies, the changing role of site editors, and how Beaver Builder aims to blend the best of visual editing with the new capabilities AI brings.

Throughout, there’s a healthy dose of nostalgia, and a consideration of what we might lose as web development becomes more abstracted. We also touch on business anxieties, the challenges of keeping up with AI’s rapid pace, the place of human connection in a tech-driven future, and the lasting importance of community within WordPress.

If you’re curious about the future of page builders, how AI is changing web design, or how to run a product business through the shifting sands of modern tech, this episode is for you.

Useful links

Beaver Builder

Robby on LinkedIn

WordPress.org blog: WordPress Student Clubs Build Momentum

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WordPress Student Clubs are beginning to take shape as a new way to carry the momentum of WordPress Campus Connect beyond one-time workshops. What starts as an introduction to WordPress and open source is now continuing on campus through student-led groups that create space for learning, peer support, and early community participation. That shift matters because it gives students a more consistent path into the WordPress ecosystem while helping local communities build stronger connections with the next generation of contributors.

Students showcasing a website they built during a club session

When WordPress Campus Connect workshops first began reaching universities, the goal was straightforward: help students discover WordPress, understand the value of open source, and see that contribution can be part of their learning journey. In many cases, that first introduction created immediate interest. Students who had never worked with WordPress before started asking questions, exploring what the software could do, and showing curiosity about the wider community.

That early response also revealed a gap. A workshop could spark interest, but it could not always sustain it on its own. Encouraging students to attend local WordPress meetups helped extend that first connection and, in some cases, brought new energy to existing local communities. Even so, it became clear that campuses needed something more consistent and closer to students’ everyday environment.

WordPress Student Clubs emerged from that need. Instead of limiting engagement to a single event, these clubs create an ongoing, student-led presence on campus where students can keep learning, share knowledge with peers, and grow more confident over time. They also offer a practical bridge between first exposure and deeper participation, helping students move from curiosity to contribution through regular activity and community support.

Learning What Sustains Participation

As WordPress Student Clubs started forming across campuses, the early enthusiasm was encouraging, but sustaining that momentum proved to be one of the first real challenges. Student Club Organizers shared that interest was often strongest at the beginning, especially after a workshop or an introductory session, but turning that interest into regular participation required patience and experimentation. Like many community efforts, the clubs needed time to find a rhythm that worked for the students involved.

One of the most common challenges was consistency. Many students were interested in learning WordPress, but regular engagement depended on more than initial curiosity. Organizers found that participation grew more steadily when activities felt approachable and useful, especially when students could learn by doing rather than only listening. Small learning sessions, collaborative exercises, and hands-on activities often made it easier for students to return and take part again.

Organizers also noticed that some students were initially hesitant to engage actively. Asking questions, speaking up in a group, or volunteering to help lead a session did not always happen naturally. Building a club meant creating an environment where students felt comfortable enough to participate, try something new, and gradually take ownership of their own learning.

Academic schedules added another layer of complexity. Because the clubs are student-led, planning around classes, assignments, and exams required flexibility. Keeping activities regular without overwhelming organizers or participants meant working within the rhythms of campus life. Those early difficulties became part of the learning process and helped shape how the clubs began to operate more effectively.

Building Through Small, Consistent Activities

As organizers worked through those challenges, certain approaches began to show results. Instead of focusing on large events, many clubs found momentum through simple, repeatable activities that students could join without feeling intimidated. Regular learning sessions, small hands-on workshops, and peer-to-peer discussions helped create an environment that felt both welcoming and practical.

A Student club activity in a college led by a student club Organizer
Students showcasing websites built during a club session

That steady approach mattered. When students could return to familiar formats and see progress from one session to the next, clubs became easier to sustain. Organizers were able to build routines, and participants could join at their own pace. Over time, those small efforts started to strengthen participation more effectively than occasional large events.

Student ownership also played an important role. As students began sharing what they had learned, helping their peers, and taking part in running sessions, engagement started to grow more organically. These moments helped shift the clubs from being simply learning spaces to becoming communities in their own right. Students were not only using WordPress in a classroom context. They were also beginning to understand it as part of a collaborative open source project shaped by people who learn together, build together, and support one another.

Guidance from the local WordPress community helped reinforce that progress. Although the clubs are student-led, organizers benefited from having experienced community members available as mentors. Mentors helped them think through session structure, activity planning, and the practical challenge of staying motivated while balancing academic responsibilities. That kind of support gave organizers more confidence to experiment and keep building.

Mentorship also connected campus activity to the broader WordPress ecosystem. Students were not learning in isolation. Through local community guidance, they were able to see how meetups, contributions, and collaboration all fit into a larger network of people who have been participating in WordPress for years. That connection gave the work happening on campus greater meaning and helped students see a clearer path forward.

Early Impact Across Campuses

Although WordPress Student Clubs are still in an early stage, signs of impact are already visible. Organizers have shared that more students are showing interest in learning WordPress and in exploring what open source participation can look like in practice. In several cases, students who first joined as learners are now contributing to discussions, helping peers during sessions, and organizing club activities themselves.

That shift from passive participation to active involvement is one of the clearest signs of growth. It suggests that the clubs are beginning to create more than awareness. They are creating opportunities for students to build confidence, practice leadership, and develop a stronger sense of connection to the WordPress community. Even at this stage, that kind of change points to the long-term value of sustaining engagement on campus.

One encouraging example came during the International Women’s Day celebration in Ajmer, India, where students participated alongside members of the local WordPress community. Organizers noted that the event included 100 female attendees, with around 50% of participants coming from student clubs. For many of those students, it was a first opportunity to take part in a broader community event, meet other contributors, and see how open source communities collaborate in practice.

Women’s Day Ajmer 2026 Event, where more than 50% participation from student clubs

Experiences like that show how student-led initiatives can extend beyond campus and begin contributing to the wider community. They also create space for new voices to participate. As students move from club sessions into local events, they gain experience not only as learners but also as community members who can help shape what comes next.

The clubs are also creating leadership opportunities on campus. Organizers have stepped into new roles by coordinating activities, encouraging participation, and maintaining momentum over time. Those experiences help students build skills that matter both within the WordPress community and beyond it, including communication, organization, and problem-solving.

“Being a Student Club Organizer helped me improve my leadership and communication skills.”
— Sanjeevni Kumari, WordPress Student Club Organizer, Mahila Engineering College, Ajmer

Looking Ahead

WordPress Student Clubs are still developing, but the journey so far points to a promising direction. What began as an effort to sustain interest after WordPress Campus Connect is gradually becoming a more durable model for ongoing learning and collaboration on campus. The clubs are helping students stay connected to WordPress beyond a first introduction, while also creating stronger links between educational spaces and local communities.

That longer-term potential is one reason this work matters. With regular campus activity and continued mentorship, Student Clubs can help create a stronger foundation for future contributors. They can also help students build confidence before attending local meetups, contributing to community efforts, or participating in events beyond their campuses.

“With regular on-campus activities through WordPress Student Clubs, the real impact may become visible over the next couple of years, as a stronger WordPress ecosystem begins to take shape within campuses.”
— Anand Upadhyay, Student Club Mentor

As more students get involved and take ownership of these spaces, WordPress Student Clubs can continue to open pathways to learning, leadership, and community participation. For campuses, they offer a way to keep the momentum going after Campus Connect. For the broader project, they represent another step toward welcoming more students into the WordPress open source ecosystem. To follow this work and explore how it connects with the wider community, readers can look to WordPress Campus Connect, WordPress Meetups, and other education and community initiatives across WordPress.org.

Note: Much of the credit belongs to @webtechpooja (Pooja Derashri) for help in writing this piece.

9 Best WordPress Consulting Themes to Win More Clients (20+ Tested)

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Your website is often the first thing a potential client sees before they ever speak to you. It needs to look sharp, load fast, and make it obvious what you do and who you do it for — all within a few seconds.

The problem is that most multipurpose themes weren’t built with consulting businesses in mind. They don’t have the right page structures, trust signals, and starter content to get you up and running without a lot of customization.

That’s why I spent time testing over 20 consulting themes, so I know which ones are fast, easy to set up, and built to help you win clients from the moment someone lands on your site.

In this guide, I’ll share the best WordPress consulting themes you can use, whether you’re a solo practitioner, a small firm, or a growing agency. Let’s establish your credibility and turn visitors into leads. 💼

Best WordPress Consulting Themes

Quick 3 Picks: Best WordPress Consulting Themes

In a hurry? Here’s a quick overview of my top 3 WordPress consulting theme picks:

🥇 First choice 🥈 Second choice 🥉 Third choice
aThemes Sydney SeedProd ElegantThemes Divi
aThemes Sydney SeedProd Divi Logo
🔎 Popularity: 100,000+ active installs 🔎 Popularity: 1M+ active installs 🔎 Popularity: 2M+ active installs
🌟 Rating: 700+ 5-star reviews on WordPress.org 🌟 Rating: 4,500+ 5-star reviews on WordPress.org 🌟 Rating: 20,000+ reviews on Trustpilot
30+ professionally-designed starter sites 350+ site kits and starter templates 370+ website and page templates
Works with WooCommerce out of the box No-code WooCommerce builder Seamless WooCommerce integration
Pre-made website sections 90+ premium page blocks Built-in website elements
Works with page builders like Elementor Built-in page, website, and theme builder Works with Divi Builder and other page builders
Read more » Read more » Read more »

Why Does Your Theme Matter for a Consulting Website?

Your consulting website has one job: make potential clients trust you enough to reach out. Because of that, your WordPress theme is doing more of that work than you might think.

A poorly chosen theme creates friction before a visitor even reads a single word. Slow load times, cluttered layouts, or a design that looks dated can cost you a lead before you ever get the chance to make your case.

The right theme:

  • Sets a credible first impression.
  • Makes your services easy to navigate.
  • Gives you the structure to build a site that grows with your practice.

But “best-looking” and “best for you” aren’t the same thing.

The right theme depends on how technical you are, how much customization you need, how many client sites you’re managing, and what kind of consulting you actually do.

For example, a solo management consultant working out of a home office has different needs than a 10-person branding agency.

In this list, I don’t just rank themes by aesthetics or star ratings. I map each one to a specific type of consulting professional. 👔

 See My Process: How I Test and Review WordPress Consulting Themes

For this roundup, I installed each theme on a real WordPress site and imported the consulting demo to see how close to launch-ready it actually was. My goal was to find themes that hold up in real use, not just in a polished live preview.

Here’s exactly what I looked at during testing:

  • Setup and import speed: I timed how long it took to go from a fresh theme install to a working consulting site using the available starter content.
  • Starter site quality: I reviewed each consulting demo for structure, layout, and whether it included the sections a real consulting site needs, such as services, testimonials, and a clear call to action.
  • Page builder compatibility: I tested each theme with Elementor and other popular builders to confirm layouts held up without conflicts or styling issues.
  • Customization depth: I checked how much design control was available at the free or entry-level tier before an upgrade was required.
  • Mobile responsiveness: I previewed every theme on phone and tablet screen sizes to confirm layouts adapted cleanly without manual fixes.
  • Performance: I assessed each theme’s default page weight and load behavior to identify options that are lightweight by design.

This process helped me separate themes that look impressive in a demo from ones that are genuinely practical to build with and built to last as your consulting practice grows.

Why Trust WPBeginner?

At WPBeginner, we’ve spent more than 17 years helping WordPress users build websites that actually work. Our team has tested hundreds of themes across dozens of categories, and consulting themes are no exception.

Every theme in this list was installed, tested, and compared on real WordPress setups. We looked at how well each theme supports consulting needs, including service pages, case studies, and lead capture.

We only recommend themes that meet our internal standards for quality and usability. Our picks are based on real testing results, not sponsorships or partnerships. You can read more about our process in our editorial guidelines.

Now, let’s explore the 9 best WordPress consulting themes to consider.

1. Sydney – Best Overall WordPress Consulting Theme

Sydney Pro WordPress theme for teachers and online courses

Sydney is the best business-focused WordPress theme that helps consultants launch their websites quickly and look credible. Its free option is strong enough to hold up against premium themes out of the box, making it attractive for solo consultants and small firms on a tight budget.

What stood out to me straight away was how much was already done. With a large library of professionally designed starter sites, Sydney hands you a real starting point instead of a blank screen.

For more insights into the theme, see our detailed Sydney review.

My Experience

The first thing I did was import the consulting business starter site, and it loaded cleanly with no layout issues. That alone saved a significant amount of setup time compared to building a business site from scratch.

The starter site is well-structured for a consulting business. It already includes the key sections you’d expect, like a strong headline, a services overview, testimonials, business stats, and a clear contact call to action.

Business stat with a contact call to action in Sydney

It also comes with pre-designed sections that make it easy to showcase your services, projects, schedules, and more.

For example, I was able to quickly update the built-in Courses page to match my own offerings just by replacing the placeholder content.

Customizable Course page in Sydney

Another thing I liked is how polished everything looks right out of the box. Many free themes require a lot of tweaking before they feel complete, but this one felt close to ready immediately after import.

Once the starter site was in place, customizing it with Elementor was straightforward. I could drag and drop elements like text, images, and buttons to adjust the layout, update colors, and swap in my own content, with no code needed.

You can also build custom layouts for individual service pages and reuse them across the site, making it easy to maintain a consistent design without rebuilding each page from scratch.

Viewing the Elementor custom layout in the library

Mobile responsiveness was solid as well. I checked the site on both a phone and a tablet, and the layout held up nicely without needing any manual adjustments.

Plus, Sydney is SEO-friendly, helping your site rank better in search engines like Google.

✅ What I like about Sydney:

  • 30+ ready-to-import starter sites, including dedicated consulting business starter site
  • Compatible with Elementor for easy drag-and-drop editing
  • Built-in template builder for creating custom page layouts
  • Pre-designed sections for services, projects, contact form, and testimonials
  • Flexible header and footer customization options
  • Optimized for speed with a lightweight design
  • Mobile-responsive across all devices

🤔 What I don’t like about Sydney:

  • Advanced features require the Pro version

🌟 Why I Recommend Sydney: Sydney gives freelancers and small firms a credible, professional-looking site without a high upfront cost. It’s one of the few free themes that genuinely doesn’t feel like a compromise.

🧑‍💻 Get the Sydney theme today!

2. SeedProd – Best for Generating an Entire Consulting Website in Under 60 Seconds

SeedProd's Solara

SeedProd is an AI-powered website builder that lets you generate a complete consulting site in under 60 seconds – no coding required, no developer budget needed. It’s not a traditional WordPress theme, and that’s exactly what makes it worth considering.

When I first tried it, I was skeptical that the output would look polished enough for a professional consulting site. The result surprised me. The generated site looked custom, not templated.

Some of our partner brands actually use SeedProd to custom-build their business websites. It’s been a great tool, and you can see our full SeedProd review for more information.

My Experience

I started by entering a company name and a short description of a consulting business. Once I hit enter, SeedProd’s AI Theme Builder then generated my site.

SeedProd AI Themes

In under a minute, I had a fully structured website that already looked polished and client-ready.

What stood out was how tailored the design felt, from the header down to the footer. It reflected the business description I provided, which is a big advantage for consultants who want to stand out without hiring a designer.

SeedProd's generated AI theme

The built-in AI tools also help with content creation.

With the AI writing assistant, for example, you can quickly polish content for sections like “About,” services, or calls to action. This makes it much easier to get online quickly without spending hours writing content.

Editing content with AI in SeedProd

I also explored SeedProd’s consulting templates. These are useful if you prefer a more traditional starting point or want to compare different layout styles before committing.

From there, I used the drag-and-drop visual builder to make adjustments. Adding blocks, moving sections, and changing colors for my landing page all happened in real time without leaving the editor or touching code.

The layouts are automatically responsive. I checked the site on mobile and tablet, and everything adapted cleanly without any extra work.

Solara by SeedProd's mobile preview

Now, because SeedProd works as a standalone builder, the experience felt cohesive. You never have to worry about future theme updates breaking your site’s design.

I also didn’t run into compatibility issues or layout conflicts, even when using third-party plugins like WPForms and WooCommerce.

The main thing to keep in mind is that if you’re used to standard WordPress themes, there may be a short learning curve at first.

✅ What I like about SeedProd:

  • Full AI-powered website builder generates a full site in under 60 seconds
  • Works as its own drag-and-drop visual builder for real-time front-end editing
  • Produces a completely custom-looking site without a developer
  • Includes consulting-specific templates to start from
  • Custom homepage and quote funnel creation
  • Parallax effects for dynamic elements for engaging, modern page designs
  • Automatically creates responsive layouts for mobile and tablet

🤔 What I don’t like about SeedProd:

  • Requires Plus plan or higher for full theme builder
  • No traditional WordPress theme

🌟 Why I Recommend SeedProd: With SeedProd, you can generate a professional consulting site faster than any traditional theme, thanks to the AI tools. Plus, consultants who want a custom look without a developer will find it hard to beat.

🧑‍💻 Get SeedProd today!

3. Divi – Best for Agencies and Designers Who Want Total Creative Control

Divi's coaching/consulting demo site

Divi is one of the most powerful all-in-one WordPress themes on the market, combining a full visual builder with a huge library of pre-built layouts. It’s a strong choice for agencies and freelance consultants needing creative control and the ability to move quickly across multiple projects.

What sets Divi apart from most themes on this list is its lifetime pricing option. For agencies managing multiple client sites, paying once and using it on unlimited websites is a meaningful financial advantage over annual subscriptions.

If you want to learn more about this theme, don’t miss our full Divi review.

My Experience

When testing out Divi, I browsed the layout library, and the scale of it was immediately apparent. With over 2,600 ready-to-use page designs across 370+ layout packs, there’s a starting point for almost every consulting niche you can think of.

I imported one of the consulting and coaching-specific layouts to see how it held up in practice. It came in cleanly and gave me a well-structured page with service sections, a bio area, and a clear call to action already in place.

Divi's services section

Divi uses its own visual builder rather than relying on Elementor or another third-party tool. Once I got familiar with the interface, customizing sections felt intuitive and gave me a high degree of control over spacing, fonts, and layout.

The 200+ built-in modules cover a wide range of needs. I found modules for testimonials, pricing tables (grid and stacked), and contact forms, all of which are relevant for a consulting site.

Divi's stacked pricing table

For agencies building sites for multiple clients, the ability to save and reuse layouts (similar to how you’d build reusable blocks in Gutenberg) across projects is a genuine time-saver. I tested this by duplicating a page structure, and it worked exactly as expected.

Additionally, all designs are fully responsive. I checked several layouts across phone and tablet screen sizes, and the results were consistent without any manual fixes needed.

What I like about Divi:

  • Over 2,600 ready-to-use page designs across 370+ layout packs
  • 200+ built-in modules covering every page type
  • Lifetime pricing option with unlimited website use
  • Full visual builder included
  • Consulting and coaching-specific layouts available to import
  • Fully responsive designs across all devices

🤔 What I don’t like about Divi:

  • No free plan
  • Has a steeper learning curve compared to simpler options

🌟 Why I Recommend Divi: It gives agencies and freelancers the creative control and layout variety to build polished consulting sites at scale. The lifetime pricing option makes it especially cost-effective for those managing multiple projects.

🧑‍💻 Get Divi today!

4. Ultra – Best Versatile Theme for Any Consulting Niche

Ultra's coaching/consulting demo site

Ultra by Themify is a multipurpose WordPress theme that brings a distinct visual personality to consulting websites. It’s one of the right picks for consulting firms that want their site to stand out visually, not just look professionally adequate.

What makes Ultra different from most themes on this list is that it doesn’t depend on a third-party builder to function well. The Themify Builder is built directly into the theme, so everything works together from the start without compatibility concerns.

See our detailed Themify Builder review for more information.

My Experience

During testing, I chose the Accountant consulting demo as it gave me a strong visual foundation to work from. It loaded cleanly, and the design had bolder layouts and stronger visual hierarchy than most consulting starter sites I tested.

The Themify Builder handled all the customization I needed without requiring me to install anything extra. I could adjust sections, apply various template layouts, rearrange content blocks, and update colors directly within the builder interface.

Template layouts in Themify Builder

The visual design options also go noticeably deeper than standard multipurpose themes.

I had control over section backgrounds, overlay effects, and typography at a level that felt more like a design tool than a basic theme settings panel.

Ultra's overlay effect on news section

After extensive testing, I believe the depth of control makes Ultra well-suited for creative and design-build consulting firms as well. So if your work involves branding, architecture, or visual strategy, the theme’s aesthetic range matches that kind of positioning.

Another plus is that Ultra also works well with Elementor, making it a good fit for agencies already using it. I tested a basic layout, and there were no conflicts or display issues.

✅ What I like about Ultra:

  • Strong visual personality built for design-oriented consulting sites
  • Built-in Themify Builder doesn’t require a third-party page builder
  • Also compatible with Elementor and other popular builders
  • Consulting and coaching demo available as a starter site
  • Parallax scrolling and animation effects support

🤔 What I don’t like about Ultra:

  • No free plan
  • Themify Builder takes some time to learn

🌟 Why I Recommend Ultra: It gives design-oriented consulting agencies a visually distinct starting point with a built-in builder that needs no third-party tools. Firms that want their site to reflect creative expertise will find it a strong fit.

🧑‍💻 Get the Ultra theme today!

5. Neve – Best Lightweight Theme for Consultants

Neve's coaching/consulting demo site

Neve is a mobile-first WordPress theme built around performance and flexibility. For consultants who want a reliable, fast-loading foundation they can pair with their preferred page builder without paying for features they don’t need, Neve is a standout choice.

The theme is intentionally clean and lightweight, and that shows from the moment you install it. It loads quickly, stays out of your way, and lets you build the experience you want rather than working around a theme’s design opinions.

My Experience

I installed Neve and had a basic consulting site structure in place faster than almost any other theme I tested. The low theme weight means there’s very little overhead slowing things down from the start.

The starter site library includes consulting templates you can import as a foundation. I pulled one in and found it well-organized, with clear sections for services and contact information already in place.

Header and footer customization also stood out during my testing. Neve includes a drag-and-drop editor for both areas, giving precise control over layout and content without needing a separate plugin or builder to handle it.

Customizing Neve's header

I also tested Neve alongside Beaver Builder and Elementor, and the integration was clean. There were no layout conflicts, and the builder worked exactly as expected within the theme’s structure.

There’s also a dedicated Portfolio built into the main navigation, along with a ready-made template for individual portfolio items.

For a consulting website, this is really helpful because it lets you show real results and past work. Instead of just listing your services, you can show how you’ve helped clients, which builds trust and makes it easier for people to choose you.

Neve's single portfolio template

For consultants who also sell services or digital products, Neve includes WooCommerce-specific features. I checked a basic shop setup and found the theme handled product pages and checkout layouts without any additional configuration.

The white label option is also worth noting for developers or agencies building sites for clients. It lets you remove Neve branding and present the theme as part of your own branded product.

One limitation is that some advanced features are only available in the paid version. If you’re using the free version, it’s worth checking what’s included before building your site around those features.

✅ What I like about Neve:

  • Clean, mobile-first theme built around performance
  • Drag-and-drop header and footer customization
  • Starter site library with consulting templates
  • WooCommerce-specific features included
  • White label option for agencies and developers
  • Seamlessly integrates with Elementor and Beaver Builders

🤔 What I don’t like about Neve:

  • Some starter sites are Pro-only
  • Less advanced customization than premium themes
  • Basic animation and visual effects

🌟 Why I Recommend Neve: I like Neve because it gives solo consultants a fast, flexible foundation without unnecessary bulk. The header and footer builder alone saves time that other themes would spend on workarounds.

6. OceanWP – Best Consulting Theme for Deep Customization

OceanWP's Thrive

OceanWP is one of the most customization-rich free WordPress themes available, and its premium extensions push that even further.

If you’re a consultant who wants to control every detail of your site’s presentation without being forced into a premium theme tier from the start, OceanWP makes a compelling case. The free version alone offers more design control than most themes charge for.

For details, see our complete OceanWP review.

My Experience

From testing, the consulting starter demo imported smoothly with a polished layout and all the key sections in place, including About, Services, Contact, and an Events page. This is great for consultants who run regular webinars and other types of consulting sessions.

Thrive's built-in Events section

Another thing I liked was the level of customization in the theme settings. I could adjust things like typography, colors, header layout, footer columns, and sidebar behavior from the WordPress Customizer without needing to touch code.

The premium extensions are worth exploring if you need more advanced features. I reviewed the available add-ons and found options for custom headers, white label settings, and additional layout controls that go well beyond what the free version offers.

✅ What I like about OceanWP:

  • One of the most customization-rich free WordPress themes available
  • Fully compatible with Elementor and other page builders
  • Consulting starter demo available to import
  • Multiple headers and layout styles
  • Gallery with lightbox effect support
  • Flexible page layouts

🤔 What I don’t like about OceanWP:

  • Some features need add-ons
  • Not the most beginner-friendly at first

🌟 Why I Recommend OceanWP: It gives consultants more design control at the free tier than most themes offer at a paid level. For budget-conscious firms that don’t want to compromise on customization, it’s a hard option to overlook.

7. Business3ree – Best for Budget-Conscious Consulting Startups

Business3ree's coaching/consulting starter site

Business3ree is a modern, professional theme for consulting and service-based websites that need to communicate trust quickly.

It has a sleek design with a dark aesthetic, which is a great choice for consultants who prefer a more polished, contemporary look without unnecessary clutter.

My Experience

I started with importing the consulting pages that come with Business3ree, and the process was straightforward.

My immediate impression was that it doesn’t try to do everything, and that restraint works in its favor. Instead of packing in unused features, it focuses on what matters: a credible design and reliable performance from day one.

The layout prioritizes clarity over decoration. Service descriptions, contact sections, and credential areas are all laid out in a way that makes it easy for a visitor to understand what you do and how to reach you.

Trust signals in the Business3ee theme

The dark color palette also gives the site a modern, professional feel. It works especially well for consultants who want something a bit more distinctive than the usual light, text-heavy layouts.

Plus, it supports a video hero, giving you the option to add a more engaging introduction at the top of your WordPress site.

The main limitation is that if your consulting practice grows and your site needs to expand significantly, you may find yourself wanting more design range than this theme provides.

What I like about Business3ree:

  • Modern theme focused on professionalism
  • Purpose-built for consulting and professional services
  • Video hero support for user engagement
  • Compatible with Elementor and similar builders
  • Includes ready-made consulting pages you can import

🤔 What I don’t like about Business3ree:

  • No free plan
  • Limited advanced features compared to massive multipurpose themes
  • The dark aesthetic might not suit every type of consulting brand

🌟 Why I Recommend Business3ree: It gives new consulting practices a modern, credible starting point without unnecessary complexity or cost. For solo practitioners launching their first professional business site, it does exactly what it needs to do.

8. Inspiro – Best for Consulting Firms That Lead With Visual Work

Inspiro's coaching/consulting starter site

Inspiro takes a media-first approach that works well for consulting sites. Instead of text-heavy layouts, it puts your visual work front and center, which is ideal for firms where the work itself is the pitch.

For creative consulting agencies like architecture, branding, or UX, this makes a real difference. Highlighting project visuals upfront tells a stronger story than hiding them below the fold.

My Experience

When testing out Inspiro, I imported the consulting-focused starter site, which came in with a hero video section already in place.

The hero video section worked cleanly on import and didn’t require any technical configuration to get running. I swapped in a sample video and the layout adjusted around it without any manual fixes needed.

🧑‍💻 Pro Tip: First impressions carry a lot of weight. A strong visual layout can capture attention much faster than a text-heavy design.

During testing, I found that Inspiro’s custom modules are built specifically for Elementor.

They felt purpose-built for visual storytelling, with options for full-width image displays, project grids, and dynamic content elements that go beyond what standard Elementor widgets offer.

The variety of layout options gave me flexibility in how I presented project work. I tested a grid-based case study layout and a full-width image section, and both held up well visually without feeling repetitive.

Grid portfolio layout in Inspiro

Dynamic elements also added a layer of polish to the pages I built. Subtle animations and transitions made the site feel modern and considered, which is exactly the kind of impression a creative consulting firm wants to leave.

Overall, the pre-built templates are well-matched to the visual-first use case. I didn’t need to redesign sections from scratch to get something that looked portfolio-quality.

Responsiveness was also consistent across all screen sizes I tested. The visual layouts, including the hero video and project grids, show up cleanly without losing their impact.

What I like about Inspiro:

  • Media-first approach with top-tier video and photo capabilities
  • Consulting-focused starter site with hero video included
  • Custom modules built specifically for Elementor
  • Variety of layout and template options for showcasing project work
  • Parallax effect support

🤔 What I don’t like about Inspiro:

  • No free plan

🌟 Why I Recommend Inspiro: It gives visual-led consulting firms a theme built around showcasing work, not just describing it. For agencies where project imagery and case studies do the selling, it’s the most purpose-fit option on this list.

9. Astra – Best Minimalist Consulting Theme

Astra's coaching/consulting starter site

Astra is a minimalist WordPress theme that works especially well for consulting websites. It’s a solid choice if you want a reliable site that’s easy to customize as your business grows.

For consultants focused on SEO, performance, and long-term scalability, Astra stands out as one of the most future-proof options on this list. If you need more information about this theme, see our complete Astra review.

My Experience

Astra has a business consulting starter site, and it loaded cleanly with a well-structured layout covering all the key sections in my testing. The process was quick and didn’t require any manual cleanup.

Astra's services section with overlay effects

Astra’s lightweight build was noticeable right away, with fast-loading pages even before any extra optimization. SEO is clearly a priority as well. The theme uses structured code that pairs well with SEO plugins, which is ideal for consulting businesses that rely on organic traffic.

Scalability was one of the things I paid close attention to during testing. I added additional pages, a blog section, and a services archive to the test site, and the theme handled the expanded structure without any layout or performance issues.

Plus, the sheer size of Astra’s user base has a practical benefit. It has an extensive library of community tutorials, third-party resources, and developer documentation available, which makes troubleshooting and customization much easier.

✅ What I like about Astra:

  • Importable business consulting starter sites included
  • Works smoothly with contact form, booking, and translation plugins
  • Compatible with Elementor and other popular page builders
  • Easily customize layouts and typography
  • Optimized for speed and SEO

🤔 What I don’t like about Astra:

  • Limited design options in the free version

🌟 Why I Recommend Astra: It gives growing consulting businesses a fast, scalable foundation that won’t need to be replaced as the site expands. For long-term SEO performance and builder flexibility, it’s one of the most dependable choices on this list.

What Is the Best WordPress Consulting Theme?

Choosing the best WordPress consulting theme depends on your specific needs, but here are my top picks:

  • Sydney is my #1 choice. It’s easy to set up and looks credible right out of the box. It’s ideal for solo consultants and small firms who want to launch fast without spending on a premium theme.
  • SeedProd is the best option if you want a fully custom-looking site without hiring a developer. Its AI website generator and drag-and-drop theme builder let you create a unique consulting site from scratch in under 60 seconds. 
  • Divi is the strongest pick if you want a vast library of layouts and powerful design tools – a solid option for agencies and consulting firms managing multiple client-facing sites.

I recommend using the free version of Sydney and importing the consulting starter site to quickly launch a professional, client-ready website.

FAQs About Building a WordPress Website for Consulting

Got questions about setting up your consulting website? I’ve answered the most common ones below.

Do I need a premium theme for a professional consulting website?

No. Themes like Sydney and OceanWP deliver genuinely professional results at no cost. A free theme is a perfectly credible starting point for most solo consultants and small firms, and you can always upgrade as your needs grow.

Which consulting theme is best if I’m not technical?

Sydney and SeedProd are both beginner-friendly. Sydney lets you import a ready-made consulting site in a few clicks, while SeedProd’s AI builder generates a complete site from a short text description with no technical knowledge required.

Can I switch themes later without losing my content?

Yes. Your WordPress posts, pages, and media stay intact when you switch themes. However, any layouts built with a theme’s own page builder may need to be rebuilt in the new theme, so it’s worth choosing carefully from the start.

Do I need a separate plugin for contact forms and appointment booking?

Yes. Most WordPress consulting themes don’t include contact forms or booking tools built in. You’ll need a plugin like WPForms for contact forms or a dedicated booking plugin to handle appointment scheduling on your site.

What if I want to use my consulting site to sell courses or digital products?

Any theme on this list can support that use case with the right plugins.

  • For online courses, you’d pair your theme with a learning management system plugin.
  • For physical products or complex stores, WooCommerce works perfectly.
  • For selling digital products like eBooks or downloadable templates, we highly recommend Easy Digital Downloads, as it is much easier to set up.

Next Steps For Building Consulting Websites in WordPress

Building a great consulting site goes beyond picking the right theme.

These WPBeginner guides will help you set up the tools and features your site needs to attract and convert clients:

If you liked this article, then please subscribe to our YouTube Channel for WordPress video tutorials. You can also find us on Twitter and Facebook.

The post 9 Best WordPress Consulting Themes to Win More Clients (20+ Tested) first appeared on WPBeginner.

HeroPress: The Hero of HeroPress and quiet art of walking with people

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Pull Quote: A hero is someone who shows up when someone needs you to, to listen without agenda, to celebrate people as they are rather than as you wish they were.

What is a hero? Who is a hero?

Growing up in the 80s, the answer was obvious. A hero was the figure who strode across cinema screens with fire in their eyes, the angry young man who fought the system with bare fists, who spoke truth to power and packed off the villains. Bold, loud, very gendered. The archetype was clear: stand with the people, defy authority, be ruthlessly honest, and win.

· · ·

In 2015, a message arrived in my WordPress Slack. The opener was disarmingly direct:

“Hi, there. Do you know who I am?”

I replied, honestly: “Nope.”

“Rock on! I hope to change that. My name is Topher, and I am working on a cool WordPress project!”

That project was HeroPress. And just like that, Topher pulled me into an orbit I have never quite left. The orbit of planet HeroPress.

I always figured HeroPress as an archive, a living oral history of ordinary people and their relationships with WordPress. A catalog of people and their journeys through anxieties, migrations from smaller to larger worlds, their small and big wins.

By 2015, I was not any sort of angry young man. I was not raging against any machine. What possible heroism could I claim?

But Topher has always understood something more nuanced than the cinematic archetype: that the first act of speaking for others is learning how to speak for yourself. Telling your story as worthy of an audience was the first important step.

HeroPress was built on that belief. He gave people a platform and declined to editorialise. He let each voice arrive in its own register, its own cadence, its own dialect of living that story. Then he called the essayists a hero and meant it!

South Asia took to this immediately. A remarkable number of the earliest essays came from India. Topher celebrated each of them. He did not curate them into a brand. He simply made room. He also travelled to India once. The only time I met him.

Over the years that followed, Topher and I became friends in the way that only the internet makes possible and only genuine curiosity sustains. We have talked and laughed about politics, faith or lack of it, books, old computers, films, and the particular texture of a very slow dial-up internet. We became friends across seven seas.

But the thing I have heard most often from others is not about his wit or his enthusiasm, though both are abundant. It is something quieter.

Dozens of people from across the WordPress world, from India, from other countries Topher has likely never visited, have told me that when they were lost, when they were searching for a job or weathering a personal catastrophe or simply trying to find their footing, Topher had time for them. He listened. He did not solve everything. He just showed up and walked with them.

If WordPress were a world unto itself, conjured by a Tolkien-like imagination, Topher would be a great axe-wielding dwarf who simply walked with you for a while, just to make sure you were alright.

· · ·

Two weeks ago, I co-led WordCamp Asia in Mumbai. It was one of the largest WordPress conferences ever assembled. People I had not seen in years showed up. Stories entwined together in corridors and over at the coffee and tea counters. I met several people who missed Topher being around. Several dozens of us who have written on HeroPress their stories, and several dozens more who will write them in the future.

I stood on the stage and felt the weight of an open source community that had shaped the past decade of my life.

I thought of Topher more than once. Thought how much he would have loved being in Mumbai. I missed his presence in the particular way you miss someone whose absence you notice in the middle of a moment of joy.

A few days later, Topher checked in. Asked how WordCamp Asia had gone. Asked how I had felt about it. Then, almost as an afterthought, he asked whether I would write the 300th essay for HeroPress.

Three hundred, is a number with some weight, a milestone of this great project. An essay Topher should have written himself, looking back at a decade of great conversations and the people he came across. But Topher1Kenobe’s way, that is not!

He deflects the spotlight and so he handed this number to me, and I accepted. Because Topher is persuasive.

I am no longer the child who measured heroism by the arc of a punch. A hero is someone who shows up when someone needs you to, to listen without agenda, to celebrate people as they are rather than as you wish they were.

Topher has been doing this for a decade. Three hundred stories. Thousands of conversations and dozens upon dozens of friends.

So if you are reading this essay, let’s raise a toast to Topher DeRosia, the Hero of HeroPress, the axe yielding dwarf who walks beside you, the friend who checks in, the man who has made more heroes than he will ever count or take credit for. He has a story.

He has hundreds of them. And every single one belongs to someone else but now also to him, which is fantastic!

The post The Hero of HeroPress and quiet art of walking with people appeared first on HeroPress.

Open Channels FM: Rethinking Plugins With a Single License for an Expanding Library

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In this episode, hosts Bob Dunn and Cami McNamara discuss WellPlayedWP, a unique subscription service for WordPress plugins launched by Marcus Burnette. The service focuses on innovative, user-driven plugin development, addressing gaps in existing solutions.

WordPress 7.0: Are Any of the New Features Worth Getting Excited About?

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WordPress 7.0WordPress 7.0 is shaping up to be one of the most significant releases in recent years, or simply the most ambitious rebranding of what WordPress thinks it is.

Open Channels FM: Embracing Protocols Over Products: How Open Standards Shape the Social Web

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The social web’s success stems from standards and protocols like WebFinger and OAuth, which foster ownership, interoperability, and innovation, surpassing the temporary impact of individual platforms.

Why Your WordPress Site Lost Traffic (And How to Get It Back)

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Logging into your analytics to find a sudden drop in website traffic is incredibly frustrating. Your first thought is usually, “Did I break something, or did Google penalize my site?”

At WPBeginner, we have managed high-traffic websites since 2009. We have seen just about every reason for a traffic dip, from major search engine updates to minor technical settings that accidentally block search bots.

The key to getting your traffic back on track is to calmly diagnose the issue. I’ve helped many site owners through this exact situation.

In this guide, I will walk you through my proven step-by-step process to figure out why your traffic fell and show you how to fix it.

Why Your WordPress Site Lost Traffic (And How to Get It Back)

TL;DR: If your WordPress site traffic drops unexpectedly, don’t panic. Start by confirming your analytics tracking is working, then check Google Search Console for manual penalties or algorithm updates. Next, audit recent site changes, verify indexing status, and scan for malware before monitoring your recovery with site notes.

This is a comprehensive troubleshooting article. You can use the quick links below to navigate through the different topics:

Why Did Your WordPress Traffic Drop?

When your website traffic suddenly disappears, it generally means something is preventing visitors from reaching your content or stopping search engines from seeing your site.

Before you start panicking or changing your WordPress SEO settings, you need to understand that this loss is not always a ‘penalty’ from Google.

Knowing the exact cause will help you choose the right fix without wasting time. Generally, traffic drops fall into one of three categories:

  • Reporting Errors: Your visitors are still there, but your tracking has stopped working. This often happens if your analytics code is accidentally removed.
  • External Changes: Google changed its ranking software (Algorithm Update) or a human reviewer flagged your site for a violation (Manual Action).
  • Recent Site Changes: You recently moved your site, changed your theme, or updated a plugin that accidentally blocked search engines.

And sometimes, a traffic drop is simply the result of your website going offline. If you are seeing visible error messages on your site along with the traffic drop, then it means visitors and search engine bots cannot load your pages.

To diagnose and resolve these connection problems, you can see our guide on the most common WordPress errors and how to fix them.

Traffic Drop Reasons

Step 1: Confirm the Traffic Drop (And Check Your Tracking)

The first thing you should do is make sure the data you are seeing is accurate. Sometimes, a drop is actually just a normal seasonal dip or a tracking error.

To check this, you can use MonsterInsights. It is the best Google Analytics plugin for WordPress and makes it easy to compare your traffic over time.

We use MonsterInsights on WPBeginner to collect all our general website statistics, including engagement rates and most-visited pages.

In my experience, if you see your traffic drop to absolute zero instantly, then it is almost always a tracking health failure rather than a search engine penalty.

Check for Normal Seasonal Dips

In your WordPress dashboard, go to Insights » Reports. Click on the date selector in the top right to open the date picker.

If you are using MonsterInsights Plus or higher, then you can toggle the ‘Compare to Previous’ switch. This will automatically refresh your reports to display your current data alongside the previous period’s data.

The 'Compare' Toggle in MonsterInsights Reports

You can use the custom date range tool within this calendar to select the exact same time period from last year.

This allows you to check if your traffic usually dips during this specific season, which is a very common trend for businesses.

MonsterInsights Report With Dates Compared

If your chart shows a similar dip during the same time last year, you are likely just experiencing normal seasonality. You don’t need to panic or make any drastic changes.

However, if this drop is entirely new, or if your traffic is significantly lower than last year, then you have a real traffic drop and should continue to the next steps to find the cause.

Check Your Analytics Connection

Alternatively, if you look at your reports and see that your traffic has dropped to absolute zero instantly, it is almost certainly a tracking health issue rather than a Google penalty.

You should navigate to Insights » Settings to make sure your Google Analytics 4 (GA4) property is still properly authenticated.

If the connection was lost, then your site is still getting visitors, but they simply aren’t being counted. This creates a false traffic drop in your reports, even though your actual search rankings haven’t changed.

In this case, you will see a large blue ‘Connect MonsterInsights’ button instead of your active profile data. Simply click this button to reconnect your account to Google Analytics and start tracking your visitors again.

Connecting MonsterInsights

Expert Tip: Always double-check your connection to Google Analytics after major updates. Also, if your traffic dropped by exactly half, then you may have accidentally fixed a ‘double tracking’ error. If Google’s ‘Enhanced Measurement’ and MonsterInsights were both tracking at the same time, your previous numbers were artificially inflated.

If you need help setting this up from scratch, or want to make sure your settings are completely correct, see our step-by-step guide on how to install Google Analytics in WordPress.


Step 2: Check for a Google Manual Action

If your tracking is working correctly but your traffic has still dropped, then the next step is to check if Google has manually penalized your site. A ‘Manual Action’ happens when a human reviewer at Google decides your site doesn’t follow their quality guidelines.

To check for this, you first need to make sure your site is connected to Google Search Console.

If you haven’t set this up yet, please see our guide on how to add your WordPress site to Google Search Console.

Once you are logged in to your account, look at the left-hand menu, scroll down to the ‘Security & Manual Actions’ section, and click on ‘Manual actions’.

Inspecting Manual Actions in Google Search Console

If you see a message saying ‘No issues detected’, then you are in the clear. However, if you see a specific penalty listed, Google will provide details on what is wrong, such as ‘thin content’ or ‘unnatural links’.

You should also click the ‘Security issues’ tab directly below Manual actions. This will tell you if Google has detected malware or a hack on your site.

Inspecting Security Issues in Google Search Console

When this happens, Google often shows a bright red ‘Deceptive Site Ahead’ warning to anyone trying to visit your site, which will instantly cause your traffic to disappear.

If you find a penalty or security flag, you will need to fix the specific issues and then click the ‘Request Review’ button in Search Console.

When asking Google to reconsider your site, be sure to provide a brief ‘paper trail’ explaining the exact steps you took to clean up the issue (like removing a malicious plugin), as this greatly improves your chances of recovery.

Recovering from these penalties requires you to identify the exact cause (like toxic backlinks or hidden malware), clean your website files, and submit a thorough review request to Google.

For a complete walkthrough on how to handle this cleanup process, see our guide on what the Google blacklist is and how to fix it.


Step 3: Check for Recent Google Algorithm Updates

Unlike manual actions, Google algorithm updates are automated. Google frequently changes its ranking algorithm to improve search results, and these updates can cause your rankings to shift overnight.

The easiest way to see if an update hit your site is by using All in One SEO (AIOSEO). It is the best SEO plugin for WordPress and includes a powerful Search Statistics feature (available in the Elite plan) that overlays Google update dates directly onto your traffic reports.

Expert Tip: The Search Statistics feature that overlays Google update dates in AIOSEO is exclusive to the Elite plan. For basic on-page SEO analysis, the free version is great, but for this level of historical trend analysis, you’ll need the advanced tier.

To see this, go to All in One SEO » Search Statistics in your dashboard. On the ‘SEO Statistics’ chart, look for small vertical lines with a Google icon.

AIOSEO's SEO Statistics feature, where you can see markers for every Google update

You can actually click these markers to read a summary of what that specific core update targeted.

If a traffic drop happens on the exact same day as one of these markers, then your site was likely affected by that specific update.

Since we switched all our brand websites to All in One SEO, we have relied on these search statistics to monitor our performance. We use the ‘Google Update’ markers on our own charts to quickly identify if a ranking shift aligns with a core algorithm change.

Then, we simply scroll down to AIOSEO’s Content Performance table to see exactly which of our posts lost rankings.

AIOSEO's Content Performance feature

This allows us to pinpoint the cause and react quickly, saving weeks of uncertainty and lost traffic.

Unlike manual actions, you cannot submit a review request to Google for an algorithmic penalty.

To recover, you must identify what the update targeted (such as ‘thin content’ or ‘spammy links’), then rewrite the affected pages to be more helpful and wait for Google’s algorithm to naturally reward your improvements.

For a complete walkthrough on setting up these tracking reports, see our guide on how to monitor Google algorithm updates in WordPress.

Once you have identified the drop, you can follow our step-by-step recovery plan in our guide on how to recover a WordPress site from a Google search penalty.

Related Guide: You may also be receiving less traffic because more people are using AI search to get information. For tips on how to fix this, see our guide on how to optimize your content for AI search overviews.


Step 4: Audit for Technical Errors and Recent Site Changes

If your drop isn’t related to a Google update, then it is often caused by a recent change you made to your own site. This is especially common after a WordPress site migration, a theme change, or a major plugin update.

Expert Tip: Before making any major site changes like a theme switch or plugin update, always test them on a staging site first. This lets you catch potential issues that could cause traffic drops without impacting your live website.

Verify Search Engine Visibility

First, you should review the ‘Search engine visibility’ setting.

Sometimes developers or site owners accidentally select this box while working on a site and forget to uncheck it when they go live.

Go to Settings » Reading and look at the ‘Search engine visibility’ option.

If the box next to ‘Discourage search engines from indexing this site’ is checked, that is likely the cause of your traffic drop. You will need to uncheck this box immediately and click the ‘Save Changes’ button.

Discourage search engines from indexing site in WordPress

Keep in mind that once unchecked, it can take a few days for Google to recrawl your website and place your pages back into search results, so don’t panic if your traffic doesn’t return instantly.

You should also make sure you haven’t accidentally left your site in ‘Maintenance Mode‘ using a plugin like SeedProd or accidentally set your most important pages to ‘noindex‘ inside your SEO plugin’s advanced settings.

Review Security Plugin Settings

Next, you should check your security plugins. Some security tools use ‘aggressive bot detection’ to stop hackers. But if misconfigured, they can accidentally block Google’s crawlers.

This usually happens if the security settings are set too high or if the plugin fails to recognize Google’s IP addresses as safe.

Expert Tip: When setting up security plugins, start with the recommended default settings. Overly aggressive firewall rules can accidentally block real search engines, causing your traffic to drop.

Audit 404 Errors, Permalinks, and Deleted Content

To see if your site has recently blocked important pages, you can use All in One SEO (AIOSEO) Pro.

First, you will need to make sure the advanced Redirection Manager feature is activated so it can track these errors.

Once that is turned on, simply go to All in One SEO » Redirects » 404 Logs. If you see a sudden spike in 404 errors here, it could mean your URL structure was broken during a recent change.

Click 404 Logs menu option

Speaking of 404 errors, two of the most common self-inflicted traffic drops happen when users change their permalink structure or delete old content.

If you recently changed your URLs (permalinks) without setting up proper 301 redirects, then Google can no longer find your pages, and your content will disappear from search results.

Similarly, deleting old content, especially pages that previously ranked well or had backlinks, will result in an immediate loss of traffic.

If you must change a URL or delete a post, always use a redirection manager, like the one in AIOSEO, to point the old link to a relevant new page or your homepage so you don’t lose that valuable SEO ranking power.

Test Your Website Speed

Another technical issue to check is your website’s load time. If a recent plugin update or theme change drastically slowed down your site, then Google may lower your rankings due to poor Core Web Vitals. People hate slow websites, and search engines do too.

You can test your current website speed using a free tool like Google PageSpeed Insights.

Google Pagespeed Insights

If your score has suddenly dropped, you may need to install a caching plugin or optimize your images. For step-by-step instructions, see our ultimate guide to boost WordPress speed and performance.

Find Other Hidden Blocks and Issues

Accidentally blocking search engines is one of the most common causes of a sudden traffic drop.

These invisible blocks can happen in your global WordPress settings, on individual pages, or through server-level password protection.

To learn where all of these hidden switches are located so you can ensure they are turned off, see our complete guide on how to stop search engines from crawling a WordPress site.

If you have checked these common culprits and still can’t find the issue, you may have a deeper underlying problem. To run a complete diagnostic check of your site’s foundation, see our technical WordPress SEO framework checklist.


Step 5: Verify Your Indexing Status

Sometimes your site is still live, but Google has decided to stop showing certain pages in search results. This often happens because Google isn’t crawling your website efficiently.

You can check this using the Google Search Console account you set up earlier. In the left-hand menu, click ‘Settings’ and then click ‘Open Report’ next to ‘Crawl stats’.

Open crawl stats report in Google Search Console

This report shows an overview of how many times Google bots request pages from your site.

If you look at the breakdown and see that Google is spending its time crawling 404 errors or RSS feeds instead of your actual articles, it means Google is struggling to read your site.

Crawl stats overview

This is known as a ‘Crawl Budget’ problem.

WordPress automatically generates hundreds of extra URLs in the background (like author feeds or category tags). If you don’t manage them, then Google wastes its daily crawling budget on these low-value links instead of discovering your real content.

To fix this, you need to clean up these extra URLs so Google can focus on your most important pages. You can do this easily using the advanced Crawl Cleanup feature available in the premium versions of All in One SEO.

To see exactly how to find these wasted links and safely turn them off, see our tutorial on the WordPress SEO crawl budget problem and how to fix it.


Step 6: Scan for Malware and Hacked Content

If you have followed the steps above and still haven’t found the cause, then your site may have been compromised. Hackers often launch ‘SEO Spam’ attacks where they inject junk links into your old posts.

Google will notice and drop your rankings as a result.

You can do a quick manual check by typing site:yourdomain.com into a Google search. If you see foreign characters, pharmaceutical keywords, or strange titles in your search results that you didn’t write, then your site has been hacked.

Locate links in Google SERPs

For hidden hacks like this, you should run a thorough scan of your site using a security tool like Sucuri.

It is a tool we trusted for years to find malicious code and unauthorized redirects that only show up for certain visitors, such as those on mobile devices.

Sucuri malware scanner

You should also check Users » All Users in your dashboard to ensure no unauthorized admin accounts have been created.

If you suspect your site is infected, you will need to scan your core files, themes, and plugins to isolate the malware.

For a complete walkthrough of the best security scanners, see our guide on how to scan your WordPress site for potentially malicious code.

Warning: Cleaning your WordPress database and replacing core files are highly destructive actions. Always create a complete backup of your website before proceeding. This will allow you to restore your site if anything goes wrong.

If your scan reveals SEO spam, simply deleting the visible text on your pages won’t work.

You will need to clean your WordPress database, replace infected theme files with fresh copies, and reset all your passwords.

For step-by-step instructions on this cleanup process, see our tutorial on how to find and remove spam link injection in WordPress.


Step 7: Monitor Your Recovery With Site Notes

Once you have identified the problem that was preventing traffic to your website and fixed it, the final step is to monitor your site as it recovers.

You should not expect traffic to bounce back instantly. It can take Google several days or even weeks to recrawl your site and update your rankings.

Expert Tip: You can ask Google to recrawl your website by following our guide on how to ask Google to recrawl URLs on your WordPress site.

The best way to keep an eye on your progress is by using the Site Notes feature in MonsterInsights.

Adding a new note creates a clear timestamp on your Insights » Reports overview. You can even do this directly from the WordPress content editor the moment you hit ‘Update’ on a fixed page.

View your site notes under the report

Checking this chart daily helps you see exactly when your traffic starts to trend upward again, proving that your fixes worked.

You can check your notes to see exactly what changed on that day.

For a detailed walkthrough on how to set this up, see our guide on how to get GA4 site annotations and notes in WordPress. It will show you how to manage your annotations, customize your categories, and add notes directly from your reports or the post editor.


Frequently Asked Questions About WordPress Traffic Drops

When your website traffic disappears, it is natural to have questions about what went wrong and how long it will take to see a recovery.

Here are some of the most common questions our readers ask about diagnosing and fixing traffic drops in WordPress.

1. How long does it take for website traffic to recover?

The recovery time depends entirely on the cause of the drop. If the issue was a simple technical error, such as accidentally blocking search engines in your WordPress settings, you may see your traffic return within a few days of fixing it.

However, if your site was affected by a major Google algorithm update, it can often take several weeks or even months of consistent content improvements before your rankings fully stabilize.

2. Can changing my WordPress theme or updating plugins cause a traffic drop?

Yes. Changing your theme can impact your traffic if the new theme is slower, lacks mobile optimization, or uses a different heading structure (like changing H1 tags to H2 tags). Similarly, plugin updates can sometimes cause conflicts.

This is why we recommend using the Site Notes feature in MonsterInsights to create a timeline of your changes, allowing you to easily see if a drop aligns with a specific update.

3. Can losing backlinks cause my traffic to drop?

Yes. Backlinks (links from other websites pointing to yours) are a major ranking factor for Google. If a high-authority website recently removed a link to your page, or if a site linking to you was penalized, your page might lose its ranking power.

You can use SEO tools to monitor your backlink profile and see if a sudden loss of links correlates with your traffic drop.

4. What if my traffic dropped, but my Google rankings stayed the same?

If your tracking is working and your rankings haven’t changed, but your traffic is still down, user behavior may have shifted. Sometimes, people simply stop searching for a specific topic due to changing seasons or passing trends.

You can plug your main keywords into a free tool like Google Trends to see if the overall public interest in your topic has naturally declined.


Moving Forward: Keeping Your WordPress Traffic Healthy

I hope this article helped you understand why your WordPress site lost traffic and how to get it back. Now that you’ve navigated the immediate crisis and gotten your traffic back on track, you’re in a much stronger position.

Use the lessons you learned here to keep your WordPress site healthy and growing. To help you build on this success and ensure your rankings stay strong, here are some additional resources:

  • The Ultimate WordPress SEO Guide – This is our most comprehensive roadmap to ensuring your site is fully optimized for search engines from top to bottom.
  • Best WordPress SEO Plugins and Tools That You Should Use – Once you have recovered your traffic, these tools can help you find new keyword opportunities and track your competitors.
  • How to Monitor Your WordPress Website Server Uptime – Technical downtime is a silent killer of website traffic. This guide teaches you how to set up free automated alerts so you know the exact minute your site goes offline, allowing you to fix it before you lose visitors and SEO rankings.
  • Proper WordPress Update Order – Many traffic drops happen right after a messy update. This tutorial teaches you the exact order to safely update your core software, plugins, and themes to avoid breaking your site.

If you liked this article, then please subscribe to our YouTube Channel for WordPress video tutorials. You can also find us on Twitter and Facebook.

The post Why Your WordPress Site Lost Traffic (And How to Get It Back) first appeared on WPBeginner.