Comparisons, how-tos, and case deep-dives across WordPress, OpenCart, Drupal, and Magento. From real client work, not affiliate listicles.
Most CMS blogs are SEO content farms. The same listicles republished every quarter, the same affiliate-driven plugin recommendations, the same shallow tutorials. We stopped reading those years ago. So we publish the kind of writing we wish other agencies did.
The posts here come from real client work. When we benchmark a hosting provider, we have run a real site on it for at least three months. When we recommend a plugin, we have shipped it on production and watched it survive 6+ months of updates. When we say something does not work, it is because we have tried it and it broke.
Comparisons. WordPress vs Wix, WooCommerce vs Shopify, Magento vs WooCommerce, headless vs traditional. Direct calls based on what fits a project, not a thousand-word "both have their pros and cons" essay.
How-tos with a budget. How to migrate a site without losing rankings. How to speed up WordPress past 90 PageSpeed. How to set up Polylang for a multilingual newsroom. Each one tested on a real client site, with the cost and time it actually took.
Case deep-dives. The full story behind a case study: the brief, the stack we picked and the alternatives we ruled out, what broke during build, what we changed at launch, and the metrics six months later.
Tooling reviews. Plugin and module reviews based on actual deployment. We update them when the plugin gets abandoned, when a vendor changes pricing, when a competitor ships a faster alternative.
No affiliate links. No "top 30 plugins" listicles. No content written for AI search ranking that no human will read. No corporate-speak about "empowering businesses to leverage transformative solutions." No vague pieces about "the future of CMS."
If a post is not based on real work and would not change a decision you make, we do not publish it. That keeps the cadence slow (one or two posts per week) but the signal-to-noise ratio high.
Compare WordPress vs Wix on pricing, design flexibility, SEO, ecommerce, and ownership. Discover why WordPress beats Wix for serious websites — and how to migrate from Wix to WordPress without losing traffic.
Filter by CMS above to see posts about a specific platform. The catalog is split into WordPress, OpenCart, Drupal, and Magento, with cross-CMS comparisons and migration posts available across the board. New posts ship most weeks; the homepage and CMS hubs feature the most relevant items first.
If you are evaluating an agency rather than a CMS choice, our case studies are usually a better starting point. The blog is for people doing the work themselves or wanting to understand how we think before hiring us.
Looking for WordPress-specific posts only? See our WordPress blog index — migration teardowns, plugin reviews and editorial workflow posts filtered to the WordPress vertical.
One to two posts most weeks, sometimes none. We publish when we have something tested and worth saying. Slow blogs with strong posts beat daily blogs with nothing in them. If you want to be notified, subscribe to the RSS feed at /blog/feed/ or follow our newsletter (link in the footer).
No. Every post here is written by someone on the team based on their own client work. We have rejected hundreds of "guest contribution" pitches because the quality bar is hard to maintain when you do not know how the writer thinks.
With attribution, yes. Link back to the original URL on topcms.space, do not modify the content beyond translation, and email us at the contact address in the footer if you republish a full post. Excerpts and short quotes (with attribution) are fine without permission.
Comments on technical blogs are mostly spam, mostly outdated questions, and mostly answerable by reading the post twice. We removed them in 2024 and have not missed them. If you have a substantive question or correction, email us — we update posts when we get good feedback.
Mostly from client questions. If three different clients ask the same thing in a month, that question becomes a post. Sometimes we write about a tool we just tested, a benchmark we ran, or a migration that taught us something. We almost never chase trending keywords for traffic.