Is wordpress a good idea to create a personal font shop?
Vasil Stanev
Posts: 795
Hello all,
I'm new to web design and I plan to set up shop parallel with MyFonts 'cause I'm highly dissatisfied with them taking the lion's share of my sales (and probably also hiding some of the sales so they can pocket them, but that's another story).
I'm currently beginning to search for options to do the store on wordpress before I decide whetehr I should or should not pay a professional to do the job. It's going to have a blog so I can write granular type-related topics to get SEO traction after several months, a shop where clients can pay with a card, paypal, revolut, Wise etc., an About+contacts section, and also I'm gonna throw my graphic design portfolio there because every other designer I talk to says Behance is pretty much become unfashionable.
Does this sound like a good plan? Suggestions welcome.
I'm new to web design and I plan to set up shop parallel with MyFonts 'cause I'm highly dissatisfied with them taking the lion's share of my sales (and probably also hiding some of the sales so they can pocket them, but that's another story).
I'm currently beginning to search for options to do the store on wordpress before I decide whetehr I should or should not pay a professional to do the job. It's going to have a blog so I can write granular type-related topics to get SEO traction after several months, a shop where clients can pay with a card, paypal, revolut, Wise etc., an About+contacts section, and also I'm gonna throw my graphic design portfolio there because every other designer I talk to says Behance is pretty much become unfashionable.
Does this sound like a good plan? Suggestions welcome.
0
Comments
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I recommend not using Wordpress. Maybe things have changed since the last time I tried but I don’t think there’s a Wordpress store plugin suited for font licensing. Wordpress sites also depend on third-party plugins and themes that constantly need updating because they’re buggy. Wordpress is really a blogging engine that has been growing and growing for ages, and people do lots with it now, but it was never meant for type licensing. Fontdue is very popular for a reason—it was designed to be a powerful font licensing platform from the beginning.Also, don’t put your design portfolio and your shop on the same page. Make best looking and most functional version of each and make your best types part of your design portfolio.2
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For what it’s worth, I run my website and shop with WordPress and can’t recommend it. Disclaimer though, I’m not a web dev so things might are likely not setup optimally and I’m a small fry foundry on a shoestring budget.The system is not designed with fonts and licensing in mind, so I have to use a bunch of third party plugins like James mentioned too. This friction is one of the factors that’s led me to begin de-monetizing my fonts and offering them for free (among other reasons).You’ll be fighting the system every step of the of the way, from implementing type testers to setting up a working storefront—unless you have a professional developer who can assist with all these aspects. It would be great for the blogging aspect though! But is that worth the hassle with everything else?0
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My developer made me a e-commerce website with Processwire CMS, it's a bit DIY... but works quite fine for me.
With what she built for me, I can publish typefaces(showing the characters set, type testers, sample images) / define license / price, etc. i can publish text and image based “articles”. Plus some legal stuffs like EULA, terms of use. Etc.
I think fondue will suit you well if your main purpose to sell licenses showcasing your typefaces, blogging should not be difficult either. Fondue charge $49 per month + 5% fee on each sale*, excluding stripe processing fee, and as far as i know, they don't seem support paypal. But it seems like most of their sites are built with Word Press... but you can integrate fondue with any CMS I guess?
If i were you, i will just start to design the website and probably thinking about payment methods available in different regions, once the website design is almost there, you can find a web developer, they will definitely find you solutions based on your needs and design sketch.0 -
I used Wordpress for 3-4 years as website platform. You need to start with something, so from that point it's okay solution. But have in mind that it's nerve-wrecking job to set everything up working and looking like you want. It's like using Word for book layout design. Also, have in mind that some plugins don't work together well, some of them are limited in free version, some are pretty outdated... all in one, dealing with hassle and solving problems you've never faced before.
Save money for the real website. In meantime, do what you must, if it's Wordpress, than Wordpress for now.1 -
I’ve used Wordpress for several years now, with the help of a professional web designer who knows their way in and around it. Yes, I confirm what Dusan says, it’s clunky. But inexpensive, and once you realize its limitations, you can work within that.
The big feature is, as Vasil notes, the blog and how that bumps you up in SEO.
I have had more sophisticated designs in the past (with issues of their own), and will no doubt do so in future.1 -
I haven't used Wordpress, but seeing most of the comments here advise against it and considering you're new to web design, I'd recommend you using Squarespace which I used for several years until I decided to switch to Webflow (which is great but demands a better understanding of CSS and HTML). Squarespace is relatively easy to learn if you're tech savvy and it has the tools for sales, portfolio and blog. It also offers a decent level of customization and if you decide to dive deeper into coding you can customise it even more. The only two challenges I faced using it were having to develop custom code for the font testers and finding a way around the sales tools because it's not completely designed for the tiered structure we typically use to sell fonts. If you consider Fontdue, it also comes with the possibility of integrating to Squarespace and Webflow.1
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