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Why I Still Use WordPress (And Why It’s Punk)
Say the word “WordPress” in a room full of engineers and you can almost hear the collective groan. Security horror stories, slow sites, nightmarish PHP from 2007 – I’ve seen all of it.
I’ve written code every year since the mid-90s. I’ve helped build content management systems, e-commerce platforms and large distributed systems. I’ve used the shiny new languages and the respectable “proper engineer” stacks.
And yet, every time I want to build a new content site, I end up back on WordPress.
Is it beautiful inside? Not really. Parts of it feel like opening a cupboard you haven’t tidied since university. It needs a bit of tuning to be fast and a bit of care to be secure. But that’s not why I use it.
For a content-driven site, the job is simple:
Get words and images in front of the right people, quickly, without turning every idea into a sprint.
WordPress nails that.
Could I build something sleeker with a static site generator or the latest framework? Of course. But then every copy tweak goes through an engineer. Usually me. I don’t need another system where I become the roadmap.
WordPress lets me stop obsessing over the tools and get back to the work: publishing.
Early punk scenes didn’t spread through glossy magazines and major labels. They spread through zines: scrappy, photocopied booklets stapled together on someone’s kitchen table. Cheap tools, total control, no permission required. Punk Leadership
WordPress is the web equivalent of that photocopier.
It’s not glamorous, but it’s gloriously DIY. You own the mess. You own the wins.
Most of the modern internet runs on centralised platforms: LinkedIn, X, Medium, Substack, whatever replaces them next year. They decide who sees your work and when. Algorithms become your actual audience.
With WordPress on your own domain:
In a world drifting towards centralisation and rented audiences, a small, slightly scruffy WordPress site is a quiet act of resistance.
As a senior engineering leader, I don’t use WordPress because it’s fashionable or technically pure. I use it because:
It’s imperfect, a bit rough around the edges, and widely misunderstood.
Which, if we’re honest, makes it pretty punk.