Should I use webflow or wordpress to build static websites?
Raccode

Raccode @raccode

About: Freelance software developer at Raccode

Location:
Málaga, Spain
Joined:
Apr 30, 2022

Should I use webflow or wordpress to build static websites?

Publish Date: May 20 '22
5 18

Hi. I've been using Svelte + Bootstrap to build static sites when a client wanted one. I’m being tempted to use some kind of tool like Webflow or Wordpress + Elementor for this purpose.

The thing is that I still feel I'm faster coding the websites by hand than using these tools, also building them writing the code is free and allows me to keep the price low for the client.

Do you have any experience you can share?

Comments 18 total

  • Andrew Baisden
    Andrew BaisdenMay 20, 2022

    So the client wants to have more customisations and freedom to make changes? My advice would be to go with a Headless CMS. Strapi and Sanity are the top 2 in my opinion.

    • Raccode
      RaccodeMay 20, 2022

      I usually use Contentful for this purpose but I will check those. Thanks a lot for the suggestion!

      • Andrew Baisden
        Andrew BaisdenMay 20, 2022

        Contentful is good too! Really great that we have so many choices we only mentioned 3 but there are a lot more than that.

  • Zelal Hossain
    Zelal HossainMay 20, 2022

    Use WordPress as backend and React.js for the frontend

    • Raccode
      RaccodeMay 20, 2022

      Can you elaborate? I don’t know much about Wordpress but wouldn’t that be the same as just getting a MySQL hosting?

  • Max F. Findel
    Max F. FindelMay 20, 2022

    I think your current stack is pretty good and even better if you're using a CMS. The maintenance cost is low and with proper use of cached content you can scale to thousands of visits without an increased cost.

    In my experience what's most attractive about Webflow is the amount templates, the drag & drop UI and that sort of stuff. But if you're developing the website with Contentful and creating the design yourself, I see no benefit for you.

    • Raccode
      RaccodeMay 20, 2022

      That’s what I think but people nowadays goes like: ‘You still code websites by hand? That takes a lot of time!’

      Idk, I code faster than I drag’n’drop. It’s my experience. Also, I like to have full control over the project.

      Thanks a lot for your comment!

  • Kevin Peckham
    Kevin PeckhamMay 20, 2022

    You may want to check out using GraphCMS. It is a dream to work with and has a free tier that covers smaller web projects no problem. I’m currently using it with Svelte and TailwindCSS to create content managed websites for a few small business clients.

    • Raccode
      RaccodeMay 21, 2022

      Wow, up to 100GB monthly asset traffic and 1 million API calls for free. Incredible, can't thank you enough!

  • Dhravya
    DhravyaMay 21, 2022

    I think your current stack is pretty good. It allows for more flexibility and freedom in terms of what you and your client want.
    But if you want to use a website builder, I think WebFlow is better now because of the amazing templates and also the drag and drop UI, I really enjoyed it.

    • Raccode
      RaccodeMay 21, 2022

      Yep, I had a look to the free demo and it looks pretty cool and customizable. Also, in the premium tier you can export the code and choose the platform where you want to make the deploy.

  • Bernd Wechner
    Bernd WechnerMay 21, 2022

    I don't know what webflow is, but wouldn't touch WordPress with a barge pole unless I was cornered. And as much as detest WordPress I didn't know it could build static sites? Or am I misunderstanding "static", as in I though the term referred to plain HTML pages (none of that fan dangled JavaScript stuff 😉).

    • Raccode
      RaccodeMay 21, 2022

      Same vibe here. But my latest experience is that Wordpress is taking over, is a performance killer and really messy but clients like it. Maybe because they don’t know how rigid it is. I always choose to code websites by hand because of customization, optimization and development experience.

  • Volker Schukai
    Volker SchukaiMay 21, 2022

    I have never understood why people take wordpress for websites. wordpress may make sense for blogs, but for pure static websites?

    Of course it always depends on the size, but a site with 20 individual pages without regular updates can be maintained manually quite well.

    • Raccode
      RaccodeMay 21, 2022

      Well, if you ask me I will still build a blog by myself with the help of a headless CMS. But Wordpress is wrongly used most of the time and overrated.

      My freelance website was build with contentful, and the customization and development experience was smoother: raccode.dev

  • abdulrehman6
    abdulrehman6May 22, 2022

    I think CMS will be better for website as you can expend and customize it in future

  • Faizan Raza
    Faizan RazaMay 22, 2022

    They say if you give a developer a hammer, everything looks like a nail.

    Everyone has an unconscious bias to use the tool they are most comfortable with, even if it's not the right tool for the job!

    You would really need to understand the client their needs and these tools to be able to choose the right one.

    I would assume however, that these drag and drop tools are pretty good if they want pretty standard websites which leverage the inbuilt templates. And it also allows the client to add more templated pages etc easily with the UI rather than digging into code.

  • Rémy 🤖
    Rémy 🤖May 22, 2022

    It's faster than coding by hand if you can get the client to accept that their website will look like a $20 theme with little wiggle room. Once they ask for customization it's a highway to hell.

    If not (probably not) then you're better off doing custom stuff, which has more added-value anyways (but is harder to find I guess)

Add comment