Will WordPress ever go away?
Let’s get this off the table: WordPress isn’t going anywhere but forward in the foreseeable future. The percentage of WP-powered sites continues to grow, and so does its CMS market share. People are devoting more time to the development of the entire WordPress ecosystem.
Is WordPress the future of web design?
As WordPress developers, we need to accept that clients want more and more control over their website. Rather than resenting their input, we should embrace this and work in partnership with our clients. By being flexible and moving with the times, that’s why WordPress developers are the future of web design.
What will be the future of WordPress in 2019?
The Future of WordPress in 2019 will be bright with blocks getting better and WordPress as a platform attempt to find more enterprise space. New users will find WordPress more easy with blocks editor (Gutenberg). Existing users will also embrace blocks editor at a faster pace once the final phase of Gutenberg is implemented.
Will WordPress power over 35\% of the web in 2020?
Developers from all walks of life join. Speculation by them experts has it WordPress will power over 35\% of the web by the year 2020. That’s a huge figure considering WordPress already runs 1 out of 5 websites in 2017. Do you need us to tell you what a user base of this proportion means for your WordPress-related business?
What’s new in 2021 for WordPress block editing?
In 2021 we’re focusing on merging full site editing (Phase 2) into WordPress which brings block editing to the entire site, not just posts and pages. For more information on full site editing, its components, and other active feature work, check out the Feature Projects Overview page.
What is Phase 1 and Phase 2 in WordPress?
Phase 1 was the new block editor, which was released in WordPress 5.0, you can see that in action here. In 2021 we’re focusing on merging full site editing (Phase 2) into WordPress which brings block editing to the entire site, not just posts and pages.