The first complete version of WordPress came out in January 2004. Looking back, I’m not sure many people, including co-founders Matt Mullenweg and Mike Little, realized how rapidly this platform would transform the internet. In the last ten years, WordPress has spread like wildfire.
Interesting WordPress Statistics:
- At this point in time WordPress is currently powering 23.3% of all Worldwide Websites (Sorry for the deceptive title, it is tough to make 23.3 sound appealing).
- WordPress 4.1 released on December 18, 2014 has been downloaded 9,548,082. Almost 10 million times in just over a month!
- The Industry created by WordPress such as website development, hosting, theme and plug-in development, security, and support is responsible for over 1 Billion dollars in earnings annually.
- A 2014 survey conducted by WordPress showed that 25% of WordPress users earned their income from the platform.
These numbers are astounding when you consider the rapidity in which online trends and preferences change. Not bad for a college students “side project”.
Why WordPress?
There are a number of reasons for the continued growth and success of WordPress. The following points quickly sum up some of them
WordPress was Created to Fill a Void in an Emerging Market
In 2002, college student Matt Mullenweg was using the b2 (or cafelog) blogging system for his personal website. Soon after, the b2 software’s creator stopped updating it. Instead of searching for another platform to host his site, Matt chose to create one himself. He started by taking the original b2 and modifying it to include his own features. With help from co-founder Mike Little, WordPress Version 0.7 entered Beta Testing on May 27, 2003. Matt and Mike successfully built a platform that was truly dedicated to blogging just as online blogging was becoming very popular. Kinsta’s History of WordPress also notes that after WordPress was released, Movable Type, a competing blogging software, changed its pricing model, leading many unhappy customers to switch to the free or lower-cost WordPress.
It Takes a Village…
There is an old African saying that states it takes a village to raise a child. Honestly, WordPress was no different. There is a very dedicated, helpful, and welcoming community supporting the platform. WordPress is open source software licensed under GPLv2, meaning it is free to use, customize, and modify. New versions are regularly released, meaning it will not share the fate of the b2 software.
It Puts You in the Driver’s Seat
WordPress put the site owner or webmaster in control. Customization and basic site building was fairly simple and eliminated the need for sophisticated HTML design software like Frontpage or Dreamweaver. The interface is easy to use, user-friendly, makes most simple customizations painless and is supported by a huge ever growing community.
WordPress is a Content Management System
WordPress has quickly grown from blogging software to a powerful Content Management System. It is ideal for those that wish to constantly publish new content and house it all one location.
Constant Innovation & Iniative
Every new WordPress version includes exciting and useful features, and include innovations that make the platform more and more user-friendly and powerful. The community constantly provides an effort to continue to push the boundaries of what is possible for the platform. Companies are even contributing from this effort. In a 2014 post, Matt suggested that companies interested in helping could participate in an initiative he calls Five For the Future where 5% of their workforce’s time is devoted to “helping move the WordPress mission forward.”