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What to Do When Your WooCommerce Store’s Theme is Abandoned or Outdated?

October 19, 2018 By John Leave a Comment

What to Do When Your WooCommerce Store’s Theme is Abandoned or Outdated

We’ve had a few clients who have used themes that were abandoned by the theme developers. In some cases, the store owners come to us with problems regarding their theme and then we find out that the theme has not been updated in over a year. And when a theme has not been updated in a long time, it is inevitable that features will break.

Features Will Break

Sometimes it may just be small formatting issues. While formatting issues are usually easy to fix, this is just a band aid to a big problem. When running an outdated theme, the ideal solution is to address the root of the problem. Update the theme or change to a different theme that is constantly receiving updates.

Sometimes, an outdated theme can break some more important features when it has deprecated codes. These deprecated codes are no longer supported in current versions of WordPress or WooCommerce. Also, new features introduced in WordPress and WooCommerce may not work on your outdated theme. Unless you do something about it, things will just keep breaking. When a core feature of WooCommerce breaks as a result of an outdated theme, your online store will be put out of commission.

Dangers of Running an Outdated Theme

An outdated WordPress theme is not secure

Aside from breaking your site in the absence of updates, running an outdated theme is a major security issue. You are leaving your WooCommerce store vulnerable to many exploits. Some WordPress security tweaks might help keep your site secure. However, when your theme is not receiving updates, these security tweaks won’t help.

The Solution

The only solution to an outdated theme is to replace it with a new theme that is constantly receiving updates.

One thing to consider though is if you have spent hundreds of hours of work on your current theme. In this case, it might be worth hiring someone that will update your theme. If you are going to have someone updating your theme, make sure that that someone also addressed the latest known security vulnerabilities. Also, consider the costs of maintaining an outdated theme. Would it be more cost-effective in the long run if you changed your theme now?

How to Choose a New Theme

When you’ve decided that you want to go with a new theme, there are a few things to consider when choosing one.

Choose a Theme that is Responsive

A responsive theme is a theme that adjusts to different screen sizes. A theme must look good on both a mobile device and a desktop computer. Since Google now considers mobile devices in its search engine rankings, it is imperative to choose a theme that is responsive. Under no circumstances should you use a theme that is not responsive.

Choose a responsive theme

Choose a Theme that is Light

Another option to consider is choosing a theme that is not bloated by unnecessary features. It is definitely handy when a theme can let you change fonts, colors and your page layout in just a few clicks. However, this means that the theme is bloated with code that will slow down your site. What used to be one line of CSS code to change the color of your navigation menu can be hundreds of lines of code built into your theme. Themes made by Themeforest are notorious for this. And while it does make the life of a non-technical WooCommerce entrepreneur a lot easier, you have to ask yourself. Do you really want to add that much bloat to your site when site speed is such an important factor for both SEO and user experience?

Choose a Theme that was Developed by Trusted Developers

There are hundreds if not thousands of themes to choose from. But how do you know which ones are good? One way to look at a theme is to consider the developers who made the theme. We can recommend using Storefront theme since it is made by the same developers that created WooCommerce. You can be guaranteed that Storefront theme will work with WooCommerce with no issues.

The Genesis framework is also a good option. Note that Genesis is a theme framework and you will need to install a child theme when you use it.

Costs of Changing to a New Theme

Cost of Changing to a New ThemeEven if you choose to use a free theme such as Storefront, changing to a new theme will still cost you. If you are able to change your theme on your own, it won’t cost you anything financially but you’ll still be spending a lot of time on it. Hire people to do the grunt work. Don’t spend dozens of hours trying to work on tweaks to your theme when a developer can do it in an hour or two. If you don’t have access to a developer, you can contact the Wooassist team. We can help you change your theme.

What to Do Before Changing Your Theme?

Before changing your theme, it is best practice to create a development or staging site and test your new theme installation there. Several hosting providers such as WPEngine and Siteground have built in tools that let you easily create a staging site in just a few clicks. You can also create a development site manually.

Also, create backups. Before doing any development work on your WooCommerce store, it is important to create a backup. In the event that you break your site, you always have a working backup that you can restore.

What to Do Before You Go Live with Your New Theme?

When you’ve installed your new theme and you’ve done all of the tweaks that you want, it is important to do some user testing. Testing your site is a necessary step before moving any major changes to the live site. Check out this blog posts for a list of things that you need to check before your site goes live. On top of the list, make sure to check that any custom features that you have added to your site are working.

Do you require any help with changing an outdated theme? Drop us an email and we might be able to help.

Filed Under: How-To Articles Tagged With: Genesis, mobile friendly, responsive design, Storefront, WooCommerce

How to Speed Up Your WooCommerce Store

August 3, 2015 By John 3 Comments

SnapCrab_2015-07-03_10-57-18_No-0000

Aside from the products or services you offer, there’s another crucial factor that may affect your conversion rate. We’re talking about your site speed. Any delay is enough reason to make your customers leave. This converts to lost revenue, which can hurt your bottom-line. How can you prevent or change this? This article will serve as an in-depth guide to and will teach you how to speed up your WooCommerce store.

In this article, you’ll learn about the following:

  • Why invest in site speed optimization?
  • What hardware and software you need?
  • Improving Site Speed by Caching and Minifying
  • Speed Up Site by Optimizing Images for Web
  • Using a CDN to Increase Site Speed
  • Cleaning Your Database to Speed Up Site
  • More Ways on How to Speed Up Your WooCommerce store

Why Invest in Site Speed Optimization?

Studies reveal revealed that 47% of visitors expect a page to load in under 2 seconds. Around 40% of these will abandon a web page if it takes more than 3 seconds to load. Meanwhile, 52% claim that quick page loads are important for their loyalty to a site.

conversion-rate-by-page-load-time

What do these findings tell you, a site owner?

It just shows that site speed is very important. Those two seconds are crucial to capture your visitor’s attention, convince them to hang around, and increase your chance for conversion. Microsoft Bing also conducted a research about server delays and the effect they bring on user behavior.

server-delays-experiment

According to the results, a 2-second longer delay in page responsiveness reduced user satisfaction by 3.8%. They navigated 4.4% fewer pages, with a 4.3% lesser e-commerce revenue per user. Every second matters online.

Here’s the thing: visitors – your potential customers – can’t really tell the difference if a page is ‘just’ slow, or isn’t working at all. Thus, a slow website is quite the same as not having one. Most users won’t stare at the screen and wait. They move on to the next website and never come back.

site-visitors

Google announced that it has included site speed in its ranking algorithm. If your site speed is slow, it can affect SEO by having reduced rankings. They even launched a new web-based tool, which analyzes the performance of web pages.

With these information, we now know that site speed not only sells, but also leads to customer satisfaction and increased conversion.

If your site speed is slow, it’s time to fix that. Read on.

What Hardware And Software You Need?

The foundation you set up for your e-commerce site has a lot to do with its speed. If it’s the root of the problem, quick fixes won’t help. But, what makes a good foundation, and how can you set up a website that runs at lightning speed?

Web Hosting Provider.

What’s your current hosting package? For an e-commerce site, you shouldn’t go with the cheapest. They may have limited RAM, processing power, and disk space which won’t benefit your site at all.

wp-engine

Wooassist recommends:
Wpengine and Siteground

Please note that we are affiliates of these hosts but we have only chosen them based on our years of experience dealing with hosting services for our clients’ and our own sites. And we can say that these two are among the best. If you were to sign up to either of them, we’d be grateful if you did so by clicking either of the links above.

WordPress Themes

Not all WordPress themes are created equal, and not all are extremely fast and well-coded. In choosing a theme, checking the demo speed is a must. Tools such as Pingdom will give you an idea of how well-coded it is.

wp-themes

Wooassist recommends:
Storefront by Woothemes or Any HTML5 theme at Studio Press

Content Delivery Network

CDN is a system of distributed servers that accelerate the delivery of web content, and rich media to internet-connected devices. Since your bandwidth is spread across many different servers, the load on a single server is reduced.

Wooassist recommends:
Wpengine comes with CDN included or Cloudflare

Improving Site Speed by Caching and Minifying

caching-and-minification

Let’s start with the most popular, and probably, the easiest thing: Caching.

What is Caching?

Caching is storing your dynamic content in the server as static content. Serving static content is faster as opposed to dynamic content, which means longer page load times. It’s a fundamental technique of reducing database load and speeding up WordPress websites.

There are two types of Caching:

  • Client-Side
  • Server-Side

Let’s move on to Minification.

When developers make code, they make code with a lot of white space. This practice makes the code easier to read and understand for humans. However, computers don’t need that white space. It just makes reading the code take longer.

Minification is removing all that white space and optimizing the code. This makes it easier for machines to make parsing the webpage faster.

How to Implement Caching and Minification?

It may sound all too complicated, but don’t worry. It is really very simple. All you need is one plugin to do both, and it has all the caching and minification solutions you need.

W3 Total Cache

It’s the second most popular plugin with almost 4 million downloads and a 4.5 star rating. W3 Total Cache is more suitable for high traffic websites running from a VPS or a better hosting environment.

How to Set up Caching with W3 Total Cache?

  1. Before installing W3 Total Cache, uninstall other caching plugins like WP Super Cache
  2. Go to your WordPress admin panel and click on Plugins > Add New

w3-total-cache

  1. Search for “W3 Total Cache”
  2. Click on the ‘Install Now’ button and then activate
  3. Click on Performance on your WordPress dashboard and go to General Settings
  4. The first option that you see on this page is Page Cache.
  5. Check the ‘Enable’ box
  6. Click on ‘Save all settings’

By having this enabled, you will significantly decrease your load time.

How to Set up Minification with W3 Total Cache?

  1. minifyGo to your WordPress dashboard and click on Performance
  2. Look for ‘Minify’ under the Performance menu
  3. Tick “Enable” for HTML & XML, JS, and CSS.

minify-2

  1. Click on ‘Save all settings’

The goal of minification is to make the source code “smaller” in order to improve your site’s performance. Get a more detailed information on each of the settings offered in Minification here.

Speed Up Site by Optimizing Images for Web

Your customers won’t wait around for that picture to load.

customers

Another technique to improve your online store’s performance is optimizing images on your website. High-resolution images may look great, but when you’re loading a 2MB image, it’s going to do more harm than good.

Aim for an image size of less than 100KB, but if you can go smaller without compromising quality, then better. It’s a rule of thumb to not let the images look bad or pixelated.

Striking a balance between a good looking image, and an acceptable image size, shouldn’t be a complex task.

Here are a few ways on how to optimize images for the web:

Using Photoshop

Before you upload your next product photo, logo, or banner image to your store, check the image size first.

optimizing-images-in-Photoshop

Open the image in Photoshop and view it at a 100%.

If the exact size is too large to be displayed on a computer monitor, you need to edit the size of the image. You don’t have to be a Photoshop wizard. Just open the image on Photoshop, and resize or crop your image to the appropriate size. Apart from that, you also need to consider its format and compression.

If you have a style, preset image sizes that you should be using. Click on File and Save for Web (Ctrl + Shift + Alt + S). The smaller the size the faster the image loads on the page.

Using WordPress Plugins

What if you don’t have Photoshop? And, you don’t have the time to optimize every image you add to your e-commerce store? You can always rely on some WordPress Plugins.

WP-Smush

Take WP Smush, for example. It’s popular for stripping hidden, bulky information from your images, reducing the file size without losing quality. You just need to upload your images, as you normally would, and the plugin will do its work behind the scenes.

The free version of the plugin cannot optimize images larger than 1M. You need to upgrade to WP Smush Pro to optimize images up to 8 MB.

Using a CDN to Increase Site Speed

CDN

So far, we’ve talked about optimizing images, caching, and minification. Now, it’s time to explore the concept of using a Content Delivery Network or CDN, and how it can help increase your site speed.

What is a CDN?

As mentioned earlier, CDN is a network of servers located at different locations around the world. It functions to cache the content of your website, so it can be delivered faster to your visitors based on their location.

Let’s say you’re server is based in Australia. Visitors far away from your geographic location will have a hard time connecting to your website. This would result in delayed responses.

With a Content Delivery Network, browsers will have a nearby server that they can connect to. This will deliver your content much faster. CDNs will mostly benefit the websites that cater to a global audience.

Because there are many options available, choosing the right CDN for your website can be tricky. It depends entirely on your needs, and the popularity of your site. Large-scale enterprise sites usually use popular CDN companies Akamai and Level3.

Setting Up CloudFlare CDN through CPanel

When it comes to small website owners, one of the more popular CDN solutions is CloudFlare. They offer a basic free plan that includes fast site performance, board security protection, and powerful stats about your visitors.

If you’re not sure if your hosting is a partner, you can check this list from CloudFlare.

According to CloudFlare, on average, a website using the CDN will load twice as fast, use 60 percent less bandwidth, have 65 percent fewer requests, and is more secure.

If your website is hosted on a CloudFlare hosting partner, you can easily use the tool available on CPanel.

  1. Go to CPanel’s ‘Site Improvement Tools’

cloudflare

  1. Click on the CloudFlare icon
  2. Tick ‘Activate Free’ for the free version or ‘Activate PLUS’ for the paid version

cloudflare-in-cpanel

  1. Enter your email to create an account with CloudFlare
  2. Once activated, click ‘Manage’ to tweak certain settings

cloudflare-settings

And that’s it. Your CloudFlare CDN is all set and the performance of your website should be improving soon.

Setting Up CloudFlare Manually

Here’s what you need to do too set up CloudFlare manually:

  1. Sign up for an account
  2. Add your website on “Select a website” page for scanning
  3. A list of all found DNS records will be shown
  4. Set any subdomains that you would like to pass through CloudFlare
  5. Click on “I’ve added all missing records, continue” once you’re ready.
  6. Choose a plan, free or paid (SSLs won’t work with the free version)

You also need to edit the name server to the new one provided by CloudFlare. You can do this by going to CPanel, and clicking on Domain Manager. Then, go back to CloudFlare settings and click on “I’ve updated my name servers, continue”.

Note: It may take up to 24 hours for the name servers to be completely active.

With a CDN in place, your site should be running a lot faster. This improves the overall user experience and even boost your conversion rates.

Cleaning Your Database to Speed Up Your Site

cleaning-your-database

It’s a strategy that’s rarely discussed. Nevertheless, it can speed up your site just as well as the other methods. It’s maintaining and cleaning your database.

You might think that database is just one of the requirements for a WordPress install. It is, however, more than just that. If you keep your database clean and optimized, it can shave a few seconds of loading speed.

Remember, one or two seconds saved could mean the difference between a bounce and a conversion.

What’s In Your Database?

A database is just like your computer’s hard drive. It’s where all your data is stored. It contains important information such as: posts, pages, your WooCommerce products, comments and product reviews, users and customer information, URLs, etc.

For those who have been using WordPress for a while, doing regular clean ups allow you to reduce your database size. This can lead to quicker, and smaller backup files.

What’s there to clean?

cleaning-your-database-2

Over continued use of WordPress, your database accumulates many spam comments, copies of post revisions, trashed comments, remnants from plugins you are no longer using, themes, and more. When that becomes too large and bloated then website performance will suffer.

Backup Your Website First!

Before you start any database cleaning, it’s very important to create a backup of your website. If your database gets erased or corrupted, you stand to lose everything you have written. There are a couple of plugins in WordPress that can help you do this.

Your hosting provider will most likely have a backup of your website too. Here’s more detailed information on backing up your database in WordPress.

Cleaning Your Database

You may clean up your website database manually, or use these awesome plugins:

  1. WP-Optimize

wp-optimize

One of the most popular and easiest plugins for cleaning your database. It allows you to schedule a regular database cleanup which can be pretty handy. However, WP-Optimize plugin uses direct delete SQL queries which can leave orphaned data left behind.

  1. WP-Sweep

This plugin allows you to clean up unused, orphaned and duplicated data in your WordPress. It can also show you a report of how much clutter you can clean. WP-Sweep uses proper WordPress delete functions.

  1. WP-DBManager

wp-dbmanager

Geared for more advanced users, setting up WP-DBManager can be tricky if you’re not familiar with database elements. It offers more customizable options and features, but it cannot clear bloat.

If you want to use WP-DBManager for its features, look for other means to clear database bloat.

More Ways on How to Speed Up Your WooCommerce Store

woocommerce

Once you’ve set up a solid foundation for your e-commerce site, it’s time to do some fine-tuning. That is, if you’re still having speed issues with your WooCommerce website. Here are more useful tips to help you to solve this matter.

1. Upgrade your hosting account

As soon as you can afford it, do upgrade your hosting account. It would be better to use a good hosting publisher rather than shared hosting. Not only it can improve your site speed, but also prevent down time during high traffic periods.

2. Test your current speed

Checking the current performance of the website gives you a benchmark to compare against after you make the changes. There are various tools to help you check your loading speed:

  • Yahoo! Y slow
  • Google Page Speed
  • Pingdom is the quickest and easiest one

pingdom

3. Use minimum number of WordPress plugins

Using too many plugins in a website can slow your website speed, particularly if you’re using social-sharing plugins. It will help to identify plugins that are slowing you down.

P3 (Plugin Performance Profiler) is a well-known diagnostic plugin that shows which plugins are slowing down your site. It creates a profile of your WordPress site’s plugins’ performance by measuring their impact on your site’s load time.

p3

Once you’ve identified them, you can make an informed decision about whether to keep them, replace them or remove them entirely.

4. Compress your website

Gzip is the most popular, and effective compression method that reduces the response size by about 70%.

Compressing files on your computer as a ZIP file can reduce its total size, which makes it both easier and faster to send to someone. Gzip works the same way, but with your Web page files.

After installation, Gzip automatically compresses your website’s files as ZIP files. This can save bandwidth, and speed up page-loading times. When a user visits your site, their browser will automatically unzip the files and show their contents.

Some plugins will add Gzip to your website in a few simple clicks. For those who want to install it manually, it’s actually very simple.

    1. Open your .htaccess file, which is found in the root directory on your server
    2. Add the following code
AddOutputFilterByType DEFLATE text/plain
AddOutputFilterByType DEFLATE text/html
AddOutputFilterByType DEFLATE text/xml
AddOutputFilterByType DEFLATE text/css
AddOutputFilterByType DEFLATE application/xml
AddOutputFilterByType DEFLATE application/xhtml+xml
AddOutputFilterByType DEFLATE application/rss+xml
AddOutputFilterByType DEFLATE application/javascript
AddOutputFilterByType DEFLATE application/x-javascript
  1. Test whether it’s working by going to Check Gzip Compression

5. Optimize your homepage

Your homepage is a crucial part of your site because visitors land there the most. There are a few easy ways to ensure that your homepage loads quickly.

  • Show excerpts instead of full posts
  • Reduce the number of posts to 5 or 7
  • Remove unnecessary sharing widgets
  • Remove inactive plugins and widgets that you don’t need

A clean and focused homepage design will help your page not only look good, but load quicker as well.

6. CSS on Top and JavaScript at the Bottom

It’s widely recommended to link your style sheets as close to the top of the page. The reason is that browsers won’t render a page before rendering the CSS file.

Meanwhile, JavaScript should be as close to the bottom of the footer. Doing so can prevent browsers from parsing anything until it has fully loaded.

With just this simple fix, page-loading speed will improve, since files are forced to be downloaded in the optimal order.

7. Disable content hot linking and leeching

When other sites direct link to the images on your site, it can make your server load increasingly high. This adds up as more and more people “scrape” your posts.

Conclusion:

Just How Important is Site Speed?

importance-of-site-speed

Consumers take advantage of online shopping because of the convenience it offers. Most people can’t stand waiting in lines. And, they especially get frustrated when it’s taking longer than expected.

Now, going back to your website, users won’t wait for your site to load. If it takes too long, they’ll definitely find another online store.

Another thing to keep in mind is that Google wants the best experience for their users, giving site speed utmost importance. They even reward sites that have clean codes and download quickly.

Page speed is now one of 200 or so signals Google uses to determine rank. More importantly, do it for your existing and potential customers. The faster a page loads, the more satisfied they will be.

Filed Under: How-To Articles Tagged With: best practices, caching, CDN, CloudFlare, conversion optimization, CPanel, Genesis, how-to, minification, optimizations, photoshop, SEO tools, site speed optimization, Siteground, Storefront, W3 Total Cache, website maintenance, WooCommerce, woothemes, WordPress, WPengine

Choosing a Theme for WooCommerce – What to Consider?

October 23, 2015 By John Leave a Comment

There are thousands of free and premium WordPress themes. You might need some help in choosing a theme for WooCommerce. But how exactly do you pick one that’s right for your Woocommerce store?

This article explains what to look for to fit the design requirements of your store and also the functionality requirements and to make sure your new theme will play nicely with Woocommerce.

Different themes have different layout styles. Knowing what you want or need will make looking for a theme easier. Right sidebar, left sidebar, full-width, or maybe parallax? Are you going to be using image sliders? Also, it is important that the theme that you choose supports WooCommerce integration.

Once you know what you need, it might be a good idea to talk it over with your web developer. He might already know of a theme that will suit your purpose.

woocommerce-themes

Here are some criteria for choosing your theme:

Aesthetic Needs

Of course, you shouldn’t focus on the look alone. But, you also need to make sure that the theme matches the look and feel you want. You may be able to customize colors, but major changes on the design are best left to pros. As you choose a theme, it should meet at least 80% of your layout, visual, and content needs.

Stay away from poorly coded themes as this could spell problems for your website down the track when updates are needed.

Many themes also offer a lot of other functionalities that allow users to easily edit the look of their site. However, such themes could add unnecessary bloat to your website. This unnecessary bloat could put strain on your page load times and cost you sales.

Be cautious of Themeforest themes as they are notorious for this. Instead of using a theme with many customizable options, you’ll be better off editing the CSS of the child theme to get your desired look.

We recommend Genesis themes and Storefront.

WordPress Updates

Most themes should support the latest version of WordPress. Still, you should verify before making your purchase. Some older themes that are no longer being updated may not support the most recent updates to WordPress. It’s important to keep up with WordPress updates for functionality and security purposes.

WooCommerce Compatibility

Your theme should be able to integrate with WooCommerce.

WooThemes recommends doing a quick check. Take a look at the theme’s demo and view the source code. You can do this by right-clicking on the page and clicking on “View Page Source”. Look for the WooCommerce version meta tag. Search for the words: WooCommerce Version

The closer it is to the current release of WooCommerce, the better. If it is nowhere near, look elsewhere for a better theme.

Also, go with a theme that has less custom WooCommerce templates. This is because having a lot of WooCommerce templates customized will be a pain to update.

The theme should not have a lot of unnecessary customizations which can be done through a plugin.

Multiple Layouts

Review the theme description and demo to ensure that the theme supports the layout you want to create.  Look for the theme’s documentation and review it to know if the theme can accomplish what you need.

storefront

Don’t just assume that the theme you chose will accommodate one or two sidebars, full width pages, or columns within content.

Theme Navigation

How many menus do you plan on having? Some site owners need secondary menu for categories. Check if the navigation bar can accommodate all your primary menu options. If you hired a web developer, discuss your content sitemap and navigation requirements first before buying your new theme.

Call-to-Actions

As an e-commerce website, you want your visitors to do something and eventually buy your product.

call-to-actions

Make sure your theme can support your list of visitor to-do items. A cohesive design, with built-in options for call-to-actions is recommended.

SEO Friendly

WordPress is SEO friendly by default, but not all its themes are. To achieve an ideal SEO ranking, it’s important for search engines to digest your content. In this case, quality code and solid design architecture are required. Here’s a do’s and don’ts guide from Yoast to make your theme SEO friendly.

Level of support

Theme support is usually available by phone, email, video tutorial, instruction manuals, forums, etc.

support

However, some developers don’t have much time to provide support or answer forum questions that often. For beginners, make sure your theme offers lots of support features.

Reviews and Feedback

If there are available reviews, read through them thoroughly to point out any theme pros and cons.

reviews

Take note of trends, plugin conflicts, and complaints. It may not have a 100% satisfaction rating but a strong rating may be present. Look at both positive and negative feedbacks. Take negative feedbacks with a grain of salt.

Fixed vs Responsive

Most WordPress themes are now designed to be responsive. This means that your website adapts to fit the screen size of the device where it’s viewed. If a potential client is browsing your site, he’ll find it easy to navigate. Not all themes are responsive and since Google has started penalizing non-mobile responsive sites, a responsive design is the only way to go. There is no reason you should be creating a non-responsive site. Check out our post on Google’s Mobile-Friendly Update.

Do you have any more tips when choosing a theme for a WooCommerce site? Let us know in the comments.

Filed Under: How-To Articles, Theme and Plugin Reviews Tagged With: child theme, colors, Genesis, how-to, mobile friendly, responsive design, Storefront, WooCommerce, woothemes, WordPress, WordPress updates

The Wooassist Blueprint: What Goes on in the Wooassist Backend

July 22, 2016 By John Leave a Comment

We’ve created our fair share of WordPress sites and provided support for other WooCommerce store owners since 2014. At the same time, we maintain and improve Wooassist.com. But what goes on in the Wooassist backend? Here we’ll provide a sneak peek of what goes on behind the scenes.

Publishing Platform

wordpress-logo

WordPress is one of the best Content Management System (CMS) with over 60 million websites powered, Woasssist included. It is free and open-source, with thousands of available plugins and themes to change and extend the look and functionality of your site.

Hosting Provider

WPEngine-logo-white

WPEngine provides one of the best WordPress hosting services on the web. Our hosting plan with WPEngine comes with caching, backup features and Content Delivery Network (CDN) provided by their partner MaxCDN. They use Ever Cache for speed and massive scalability. They also have one of the best support compared to other hosting providers.

WordPress Themes

Genesis Framework

logo-Genesis-Framework

Genesis Framework is a powerful foundation for building websites in WordPress. It is compatible with WooCommerce and anything can be customized around its core code using child themes. It is also SEO optimized.

 Parallax Pro

logo-Parallax-Pro-white

We use Parallax Pro theme on top of the Genesis framework. Notice how the Wooassist homepage content has a vertical design for easy visual eye movement and flow. As you scroll down the page, you will see that the content is divided into sections. The theme is also mobile responsive.

Installed Plugins

It is best practice to deactivate and delete any unused plugins on your site to minimize site bloat. Just stick to what features you need and the plugin that offers just that.

WooCommerce

WooCommerce

Since Wooassist provides WooCommerce support, it makes sense that we use WooCommerce.

Built with developers in mind, WooCommerce is extendable, adaptable and open source. It works with the core features of WordPress and is one of the most widely used ecommerce plugins. It’s free and allows for maximum flexibility and customization. You can even expand its features with a growing collection of more than 300 extensions.

WooCommerce Customizer

WooCommerce-Customizer

WooCommerce Customizer is a free plugin that adds an extra settings page for WooCommerce. This helps you make quick changes which otherwise would require writing some custom PHP functions. Basically, you can optimize the look of your WooCommerce store for optimum conversion, without writing any code.

Genesis Connect for WooCommerce

Genesis-Connect-for-WooCommerce

When WooCommerce is installed on a site using the Genesis platform, you may find some product pages do not display properly. Genesis Connect for WooCommerce fixes this by replacing WooCommerce’s built-in shop templates with its own Genesis-ready versions. These templates are single-product.php, archive-product.php and taxonomy.php.

WooCommerce Google Analytics Integration

WooCommerce-Google-Analytics-Integration

WooThemes created WooCommerce Google Analytics Integration plugin and is a must to integrate analytics in WooCommerce versions 2.1 and up. This plugin inserts tracking codes into your store pages.

WP-Optimize

WP-Optimize

We use WP-Optimize to clean and keep our database down to a reasonable size. The plugin helps clean up your WordPress database by removing old revisions of posts and stale/trashed comments. It also allows for optimization of your WordPress core tables.

WordPress Related Posts

WordPress-Related-Posts

WordPress Related Posts automatically adds thumbnails at the footer of your content. This helps readers find other relevant posts in our blog for further reading.

WooCommerce Paypal Pro

WooCommerce-PayPal-Pro

We use WooCommerce Paypal Pro as our payment gateway. Our clients can pay with their credits cards. A Paypal account is not necessary.

WooCommerce Checkout Manager

WooCommerce-Checkout-Manager

We use WooCommerce Checkout Manager to customize the fields on our checkout page. This allows for faster and easier checkout.

Akismet

Akismet

We trust Akismet to safeguard our site against spam comments. This product by Automattic comes bundled with WordPress installations. You just need to sign up at their website and get your API key to activate it. Akismet automatically checks incoming comments and moves ‘spam-like’ comments to the Spam folder.

PopupAlly

PopupAlly

We use PopupAlly to show time-delayed and exit intent popups for our free e-book offer and newsletter subscription, respectively. The plugin makes it easy to customize popup forms even for novice users.

Yoast SEO

Yoast-SEO

We use Yoast SEO to optimize our blog post and pages for SEO. It is a powerful plugin that helps to give any site an SEO boost. This plugin can also help optimize product pages and product categories in WooCommerce.

Visual Form Builder

Visual-Form-Builder

We use Visual Form Builder to create forms such as our contact form and custom package form. Visual Form Builder is easy to set up and use even for novice users.

Responsive Pricing Table

Responsive-Pricing-Table

We use Responsive Pricing Table plugin to add a ‘Pricing Tables’ tab in the WordPress admin panel . This allows for creating pricing tables without coding. You can add features of up to 5 plans and display the price table anywhere with a shortcode.

Redirection

Redirection

Redirection is a free plugin that makes managing our 301 redirects easier. It also helps us keep tabs on any 404 errors. We use this mainly when changing slugs of blogs post when optimizing for SEO.

Filed Under: Theme and Plugin Reviews, Wooassist News Tagged With: Genesis, navigation, optimizations, plugins, PopupAlly, redirection, website development, Wooassist, WooCommerce, WooCommerce products, woothemes, WordPress, WPengine, Yoast

Google Mobile Friendly Update: Is Your Online Store Ready?

May 4, 2015 By John Leave a Comment

wooassist-iphoneGoogle mobile friendly update to penalize non-mobile friendly websites is out. Don’t tell me you didn’t see this coming. As more people used mobile devices to surf the internet, Google had to act. It was only a matter of time before Google started prioritizing websites that are optimized for mobile devices. The new algorithm came into effect April 21.

If you have an e-commerce store you should be concerned about all updates from Google. For a lot of online stores, the success of your business depends on Google. This update could destroy your rankings if your website is not mobile responsive. If ranking high in Google is a big part of your revenue strategy then this could be disastrous for your business.

What You Should Do

Use this Mobile-Friendly Test. If your website passes the test, then you have nothing to worry about. But if your website fails the test, you’ll be presented with suggestions on how you can resolve the problem.

If you have an e-commerce store using WooCommerce, there are a lot of responsive WordPress themes that you can use. These responsive themes are optimized for use on mobile devices. WooTheme’s own Storefront theme made especially for WooCommerce is responsive so that’s worth a look. We can also recommend Genesis themes from StudioPress.

How Much Will it Cost?

mobileThat question is a bit like. “I need a car. How much will that cost?” Of course, the answer is, “It depends”. But to give you an example, we have recently upgraded a few clients themes to the new Storefront theme for between $400-$600.

When upgrading a theme, you tend to notice things that you probably should have noticed on the original site, and need to update those as well. So setting a budget of $1000 – $1500 is probably more realistic.

Should You Have Made Your Site Responsive 12 Months Ago Anyway?

This update by Google might just be the thing that most store owners needed to push them into action. Non-responsive ecommerce sites are more than likely leaving a lot of money on table. There is some strong evidence to support this: 14-brands-that-increased-conversion-rates-via-responsive-design

For example, O’Neill Clothing’s redesign achieved some fairly spectacular results on iPhone/iPod:

  • Conversions increased by 65.71%.
  • Transactions went up 112.5%.
  • Revenue increased by 101.25%.

Similarly, on Android devices:

  • Conversions shot up by 407.32%.
  • Transactions increased by 333.33%.
  • Revenue increased by a whopping 591.42%.

Personally, we haven’t seen results this good on the sites we manage. But nonetheless, all responsive redesigns we have done have paid for themselves within 6 months.

The Mobile Friendly Algorithm

Like usual, Google’s algorithm remains a trade secret. It is now up to SEO experts to try to figure out what the algorithm considers in its ratings. Google is actually forgiving this time around as they did provide that tool that will let you check if your website meets their mobile-friendly standards.

If you want to see what your ecommerce store looks like on different mobile devices, you can use this mobile user testing tool. This tool emulates screen sizes of the most popular mobile devices so you can see exactly what your site looks like on a mobile device.

What Sites Were Affected

According to an article from USA Today, the algorithm update could affect as much as 40% of top websites.

Here is the test result of one website that did not meet Google’s mobile-friendly update.

ryanair-non-mobile-friendly

A few weeks before the new algorithm came into effect, tech website TechCrunch tested the websites of Fortune 500 companies. Surprisingly, 44% of Fortune 500 companies’ websites did not pass the mobile-friendly test. So if your ecommerce store didn’t pass the test, you are not alone.

I Failed the Mobile Friendly Test. Should I be Worried?

Well, you should be worried. Still, according to an article from Search Engine Land, it’s not too late to act. You can still fix your website. While some changes in rankings were seen just a day after the update, these changes were not significant. This does not mean you shouldn’t bother doing anything. Sooner or later, Google could clamp down and bring harsher penalties to non-mobile friendly websites. Don’t wait for it to hit hard before you do something.

Filed Under: How-To Articles, SEO For E-Commerce Tagged With: e-commerce, Genesis, Google+, how-to, mobile friendly, responsive design, Storefront

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