Back to Basics: In Favor of Simple WordPress Themes

For those of you who have been using WordPress for the better part of a decade, you might remember the classic Kubrick theme.

WordPress 1.5, released in 2005, introduced themes to the world, and their style and usability has been one of the main factors behind WordPress’s extraordinary growth.

In the earliest days, most WordPress themes were relatively simple, designed with one purpose in mind, and featured stripped-back functionality – so-called “niche themes”.

Over the last few years, everything has changed, however: in 2015, niche themes are a something of a dying breed.

The default WordPress theme for 2016
The default WordPress theme – Twenty Sixteen

These days, WordPress consumers are far more likely to spend their hard-earned cash on powerful multi-purpose themes. Just take a look at the top-selling WordPress themes on ThemeForest; all of the top ten either feature the word “multi-purpose” in the name or would fall into the multi-purpose category. These themes have tens of thousands of downloads to their name, too.

However, despite all of their customization options, versatility, and added functionality, the multi-purpose themes aren’t always the best option. Today, I want to speak up for the small guys, by arguing the point that simple WordPress themes are best. Here are five reasons.

1. Bloat-free Code

Do you want a theme that’s completely bloated, or one that’s free from bloat?

On the face of it, it seems like an obvious answer – a theme that’s free from bloat.

Unfortunately, when you buy one of the all-in-one MEGA themes, you’re getting a theme that’s full of inefficient, bloated code.

How else do you think the developers give their theme the capabilities for every customization and functionality under the sun? All those different layouts, the custom post types, and the added functionality require extra lines of code in order to function properly.

Put it all together and you get a theme that’s seriously bloat-heavy – and bloat-heavy themes result in slow load times, and we all know how damaging that can be.

On the flipside, the cleanly coded, simple WordPress themes are lightning quick – bringing all sorts of user experience and SEO benefits.

2. Can a Theme Do a Plugin’s Job?

One of the biggest reasons for WordPress’s incredible rise to prominence is the platform’s theme and plugin architecture. In the past, the job of your themes and plugins was clearly defined:

  • Themes handle your website’s design, style, and aesthetics.
  • Plugins add new features, functionalities, and widgets.

In recent years, the lines have blurred, however. These days, the popular multi-purpose themes bundle in the functionality of a number of plugins.

The question: can a jack-of-all-trades, all-in-one WordPress theme really outperform a specialist plugin for a specific functionality?

The answer, of course, is no.

The complicated, multi-purpose themes can do lots of things, but they often can’t do them as well as a specialist plugin.

If you decide that a specific functionality is integral to your website, you should install one of the top plugins in that category for the job – not depend on your theme. In other words, it’s often better to get a simple, clean theme and then extend it by installing top plugins.

And, when you consider that you won’t be using many of the functionalities supported by your theme, and you’ll be turning elsewhere for some of its functionalities, the all-in-one theme is suddenly carrying a lot of excess baggage.

3. Avoid Theme Lock-in

Many all-in-one themes market themselves as “the only theme you’ll ever need.” Unfortunately, by using one of these themes, they quickly become “the only theme you can actually use.”

This problem is commonly referred to as theme lock-in.

Now, most of the all-in-one themes support beautiful custom layouts, as well as an abundance of extra functionalities.

The problem?

To create a unique layout, the theme relies on shortcodes and custom post types.

You might think that you can quickly and easily change your website’s design by installing a new theme.

Wrong.

The moment you deactivate your existing theme, you’re also deactivating everything else – including the custom post types and shortcodes.

In the time it takes for you to click deactivate, your website suddenly becomes a hotbed of gibberish. All of your shortcodes, layouts, and functionalities; broken. All that hard work; gone.

In other words, unless you’re prepared to build your website from scratch, theme lock-in forces you to continue using that theme. That’s a big concern if you ever want to re-brand or just freshen up your site’s design.

If you use a simple WordPress theme on the other hand – one that isn’t as dependent on built-in shortcodes – you can quickly and easily switch between themes. If you like this flexibility, that’s a huge plus point for simple themes.

4. Let Your Content Do the Talking

Although your website’s design is important, your site is ultimately judged by the quality of your content. Yup; there’s a reason that internet marketers have been spouting the line, “content is King!” for so many years.

When you choose a flashy, all-in-one theme, the impressive visuals can divert attention away from the thing that really matters: the content.

When you opt for a simple, minimalist theme, your content is the star of the show. Your reader’s attention is (rightly) focused on the words on the screen, and this allows your content to have maximum impact – driving fans, social shares, and conversions.

And, in my opinion at least, simple websites are the most aesthetically pleasing anyway.

5. Choose a Specialist Theme

Allow me to recite a well-known phrase: “a Jack of all trades is a master of none.”

That’s what a multi-purpose theme is – a Jack of all trades. By trying to appeal to everyone – and doing a decent job, in fairness – these themes are unable to meet the specialist requirements of a business owner in your niche.

That’s one of the main selling points of using a simple, specialist, niche-focused theme – you get a developer that truly understands your market and knows what design features and functionalities you want.

Sure, you could still craft a useful, functional website using a multi-purpose theme. If, however, you want a ready-made solution straight-out-the-box, use a dedicated niche theme.

Final Thoughts

The WordPress theme you choose is ultimately down to personal preference, but don’t be fooled by the hype – a versatile, multi-purpose theme isn’t always the right one for you.

Although they can boast a lot of impressive features, realistically, you won’t be using them all – and you’ll probably turn to plugins for the most important features anyway.

By all means, give the multi-purpose themes some consideration, but don’t rule out the simple WordPress themes just because they can’t list enough features.

Remember: sometimes the best option is the simple one.

What are your thoughts on simple themes versus multi-purpose ones? Share your thoughts in the comments section below!

AuthorShaun Quarton

Shaun Quarton is a freelance blogger from the UK, with a passion for online entrepreneurship, content marketing, and all things WordPress.

7 replies to Back to Basics: In Favor of Simple WordPress Themes

  1. Hello,

    we in germany have minimal-themes.com a Theme-Shop for extreme and simple Minimal WordPress Themes. No Options, no Frameworks, no Templates for everything… only the core. Very focused developer i think and i buy the package (love one-time-payments for everything).

    I think you must look at google, apple, amazon… very simple designs, for best performance, seo and conversion rate. Simple work better, i think, all the other stuff is bloatware – nothign more. Focused on content, minimal design, nice colors – best work for all blogs out there.

    By the way: great Post about the pros of simple Themes.

  2. Hi Morgan, they are certainly very simple and minimal themes. However it’s a shame the shop doesn’t respect WordPress licensing and use the GPL for their WordPress themes.

  3. Hey Shaun,

    I keep seeing this opinion in the community and partly I agree with it however the issue is way more complex and from my point of view roots in distribution, pricing and partly GPL.

    I started Themeisle around niche themes concept and used my SEO experience, affiliate marketing and freemium distribution to promote them, however the numbers simply doesn’t add-up.

    Let’s look at Lawyeria, we have the most popular free lawyer theme in the wp repo, if you search for free lawyer wp themes we are on 2nd, if you search for best lawyer WordPress themes we are 1st in top 2 listings and added in the next ones and we are doing some adwords as well. We kind of doing maximum possible in the niche ( except themeforest/mojo ), however we sell <$1000/month, if you consider a 2-years lifetime, add commission, affiliates, marketing costs, development + support, the profit is close to 0 AND is the best performing niche theme that we have.

    Considering this, we as theme developers( as well as others in the market ) can't really invest too much development work into this, so obviously niched themes in most of the cases aren't as good as multi-purpose ones, due to the simple fact that you CAN'T make enough money to actually invest in development.

    We have some good examples in TemplateMonster / ElegantThemes, one of the biggest players which lately are focusing more and more on DIVI / Monstroid, just because is better for everybody.

    If we are talking solutions, I see few :

    – Increase the price for niched themes at around $199, in this way the business is sustainable
    – Have TF/ W.org /mojo focusing more on niches rather than most popular kind of listings
    – Use a proprietary license to better protect your work against freelancers/agencies, noways my feeling says that around 30% of paid gpl products are used for free, also this forces developers to offer unlimited sites usage kind of things at a low price.

  4. @ Ionut, thanks for sharing your thoughts from a business perspective.

  5. I’ll totally agree with article’s key message: “A Jack of all trades is a master of none.”

    With RichWP.com, we initially created minimal and low impact themes starting in 2009, but switched to a FrameWork / Child Theme model eventually and added as many sliders, fonts, gallery scripts and design options as possible.

    It was a well thought out system and we sold a lot, but with the rise of responsive designs and the then new WordPress Theme Options API, it wasn’t feasible to maintain anymore and we shifted back to simplified, lean & fast performing themes. Judging from units sold since then it was the right move.

    The key is to not narrow your niche to much. For example: Choose the “business theme niche” instead of trying to create themes specifically for lawyers, as in the given example above! Take the layout and design of Themeisle’s Lawyeria theme (nice theme by the way). It would be a good fit for accountants, business consultants, etc. as well. Create a minimal blogging theme, instead of a theme aimed specifically at food or fashion bloggers (I just learning this on the hard way with my latest Fashion Blog release)!

    Is it harder to market a theme with a broader appeal? A little bit, but the potential customer base is bigger as well. I mean, how much business do I really get out of being in Google’s Top 10 for “Church WordPress Themes”.

    … and to the other topic at hand: RichWP.com is doing well under GPL. Sure, freelancers and agencies use themes for multiple clients. It’s an honour that they’ll choose our themes over others to work with. Will there be repeated business when we release new designs? – You bet and aesthetics and web-design trends constantly change! Another angle to play this is to offer customization services freelancers and agencies can rely on. It frees up there time. Let them outsource time consuming work to us, we have the resources and scale our business in another way they do: WIN-WIN!

  6. @ Felix Thanks for the comment and sharing your experience with RichWP.

    I agree that developers can market their themes too narrowly for a specific use or niche. There are certainly some themes designed for one specific purpose and that’s good, but most themes could be used for a range of purposes.

    However most people don’t have much imagination when it comes to the possibilities for a certain theme so its up to the developer to explain and show what you could do with it. For example you can make lots of different demo sites to show what you can do with a theme if you need you. As you say Themeisle’s Lawyeria theme is marketed only for lawyers but could work well for accountants, business consultants and a wide range of small businesses.

    You’re also right that the GPL can be a win win for theme developers and not something they need to fear.

  7. @PremiumWP – I agree, explaining and marketing to multiple target groups and therefore creating specific demos for specific markets is properly preferable to being locked up in one niche » What do I do with my Rich Fashion Blog Theme now 😉

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