WordPress started as a blogging platform and is still one of the most capable options for content-heavy sites. Custom post types, category taxonomies, author archives, and a publishing workflow most teams are already familiar with.
We set up and optimize WordPress blog infrastructure for small businesses: custom theme design, category and tag architecture, SEO plugin configuration, schema markup, and image optimization. The goal is a blog that search engines can crawl efficiently and AI platforms can cite accurately.
If you are running a WordPress blog and want to move to a platform with less maintenance overhead and better native performance, we also handle WordPress to Webflow migrations with full blog post transfer and 301 redirect mapping so you do not lose the authority you have built.
Part of our Websites service.
WordPress blogs have one meaningful advantage over most alternatives: a massive ecosystem of plugins, themes, and documentation built specifically for blogging. The categories, tags, custom post types, and author archive system are mature and flexible. The main disadvantages are maintenance overhead and performance. Every plugin adds potential conflict points and security risk, and WordPress blogs can get slow quickly without deliberate performance management. For businesses where content volume is high and the team is already WordPress-familiar, it is a defensible choice. For everyone else, Webflow's blog CMS is faster, cleaner, and easier to maintain.
WordPress migration to Webflow is one of the most common projects we handle. Every page and blog post transfers as content. We map 301 redirects from every WordPress URL to its Webflow equivalent so search engine authority transfers instead of generating 404 errors. Images migrate with the content. The custom design is rebuilt from scratch in Webflow rather than translating the WordPress theme, which is the right approach because WordPress themes and Webflow layouts are structurally different. Timeline is typically three to six weeks depending on site size.
The two most common WordPress blog SEO problems we see: posts with no keyword strategy behind them (publishing about topics that get no searches rather than topics people actually look for), and thin posts that answer a question in two paragraphs when Google is ranking 1,500-word posts for that term. Beyond content, heading hierarchy issues, missing schema markup, slow page speeds from plugin overhead, and broken internal linking all suppress rankings. A content audit and technical SEO review together usually surface the specific blockers within a few hours.