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Website help! Please!
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Erica
(last edited May 01, 2017 02:05PM)
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May 01, 2017 02:04PM
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I did the same. Bought from bluehost and they install Wordpress. The themes are free you just have to pick a free one and design how you like. It can be a pain but once u get the hang of it it's cool.
Erica wrote: "I am starting an author website and have already purchased my domain name. I have decided that I want to go with my own website instead of an option like worpress.com. This is new to me and I want ..."Congrats and good for you! I use Bluehost and I really love them - great pricing, great customer service that will talk you down off any ledge and your Wordpress.org site is free with your domain registration. You just set it up, it takes 5 minutes and you're ready to start building a great site. Also bluehost gives you unlimited emails, so, yeah, I'm a fan. And yes there are hundreds of themes that are completely free - no hidden fees. Just take some time and test drive a few of them until you find one you love. Just make sure it is a responsive theme so you know it will work on IOS and Android devices. Feel free to ask me any questions - I'm a huge fan of WP and am happy to help :)
Thank you for the help! This is probably a stupid question, but can I change my theme in the future if my website needs change? Also, can I make changes to the HTML code that comes with a theme incase I want to tweek it?
Erica wrote: "Thank you for the help! This is probably a stupid question, but can I change my theme in the future if my website needs change? Also, can I make changes to the HTML code that comes with a theme inc..."You can def change the theme. I'll pick a theme, add my content and then switch it to six or seven themes in one sitting just to see which one suits me. You can also tweak the codes quite easily by altering the source files. This can only be done in Wordpress.org and not Wordpress.com which is another great reason to use .org with bluehost. Just so you know, wordpress doesn't use html it uses css. It is quite a learning curve, personally, but there are tons of sites that provide css code that is cut and paste so you can customize rather easily. Still, I recommend copying and pasting any code in its entirety before you make any changes just in case you goof and need to revert back to the original css code. I don't even miss html now and I don't do any css coding either. All of it is worth it because of shortcodes. They will be your new best friend! Lastly, here is my email in case you ever need to reach out (view spoiler)
Thank you Erin! I appreciate your advice. I will be sure to keep you in mind if I hit any roadblocks along the way. :)
There are tons of great Wordpress themes for authors, Erica. If you PM me your budget, I can recommend some.
There are tons of great Wordpress themes for authors, Erica. If you PM me your budget, I can recommend some.
Hi Erica. I have sites on both wordpress.com and wordpress.org and I personally love the additional freedom and flexibility I get through the self-hosted wordpress.org site. As mentioned by others already, there are loads of themes (paid and free) to choose from.Another great feature are all the plugins you can choose for a wordpress.org site. These bolt-on bits of kit allow you to do all sorts of extra things (eg picture galleries, spam protection, FAQ posts, checking your search engine optimisation and loads more). There are often free versions of each plugin as well as paid-for versions that have more features.
And, if you install the Jetpack plugin from Wordpress then you get many of the best features of a wordpress.com site on your self-hosted website.
You will have a plugins section in your dashboard when you log in and you can search for things you want from there (or just chuck it into Google!). Please shout if I can help with any questions.
Since I’m a computer tech, I thought I give my two cents worth in this tread. What you choose depends on what you need in the long run. You don’t want to change your system, since that’s a hazard. Most of all, you don’t want to get hacked, since that’s even more trouble.If you want a simple blog, go with wordpress.org. That way you don’t have to worry about the security issues.
You need three things if you want something else. A domain name, webhost and an engine.
About domain name, choose a seller that’s cheap and where you own your name. Not all sellers let you own the name, if so you can lose it if somethings go wrong.
Bluehost is ordinary, not good, not bad. The issue with host are the speed of access and the security. Bluehost cheap accounts have a lousy speed since they overbook their servers, and if your visitors are overseas it can be impossible to access your site. When you compare host, look at your plans percentage of memory and transfer capacity, then ask for the reduction rate during high server load. That will tell you how much they overextend the server.
You also want to compare the server up time warranty, this tells you if the server works.
You need to know the control panel of your account. If it’s something else than cPanel, don’t use it. This is ease of access, but most of all a security issue.
The server should run on Linux, not on Windows. This is a security and price issue; in my view, a Linux server are less vulnerable and a Windows server usually more expensive.
Your plan should have at least 3 SQL-databases, you might want to have an e-mail list in the future and it’s always good to set up an extra site where you can test everything before you crash the live site. You will crash it, that’s part of running your own website. ;-)
Choose a memory limit where you use max 50% of the available memory, otherwise you slow your website down too much. Images, mails and files take up most of the space.
If the host charge you to upgrade the account, they are on the shady side. There might come a time when you grow out of it, and it should be easy and free to upgrade.
Back-up is important. You either do it regularly yourself or let the host do it. Bluehost has a backup service, my experience is that it doesn’t work as intended. When you need the backup its usually not there.
The last thing you have to decide is about the engine. There are plenty out there, but only two that works really well. What you choose depends on what you want it to do.
If you want a blog with a blogroll an a few promotion pages, choose Wordpress. If you want a smart site that promotes information depending on what the viewer looks at and eventually add a store, choose Drupal.
Drupal is much more complex, hence longer learning curve, but there are no limits to what you can do and you never paint yourself into a corner. Wordpress has a shorter learning curve, but if you want more than a blog, you will outgrow it.
Regardless of what you choose. NEVER USE the automatic install with the host. I know it’s convenient, but it’s a major security risk. There are YouTube videos and sites all over internet telling you how to do a manual install, it’s not complicated.
Regardless of what you chose, the easiest way is to buy a professional theme with an install package. It cost around $20-$40 and its wort every dollar. Remember; it should be an install package, not just a theme. The seller usually provides information on how to install it. We usually uses Themesnap and Themeforest, but there are plenty out there.
A good theme is responsive, so it adapts to different devices. It uses html-5 and not flash. It uses a standard framework like Bootstrap and it’s written in PHP and JS (JavaScript). You don’t need to know what that means, but if you choose it you can’t go wrong.
Color and images is easy to change, functionality and where things are on a page is difficult to change if you can’t code PHP and JavaScript.
When you host your own website remember to back-up the site and always download and install the latest updates. If you want to keep you site safe, don’t run strange code like really-funny-i-hurt-your-site-but-looks-great widgets. A lot of the widgets that share on facebook and twitter are security risks and slows down your site. JavaScript games is another bad idea.
It’s not easy to run your own site, if you want to keep it fast and secure. It’s very rewarding, since the sky is the limit and you can do a lot of things out there. The most important: you control your information. That’s why I always run my own sites.
Hope this help and didn’t confuse too much.
Catherine
Some of my sites, all of them run on Drupal.
www.catherinelind.com (In this site I don’t have to add things to the menus or blocks. Everything is automated. I just add the text and images.)
www.houseofcath.com (this site uses suggestions, depending on what visitors look at. This is new, so it’s not much information. Has an Amazon affiliate store on it.)
http://griph.photography (not my site, but I made it. Here the images are categorized and when you click on the text above, it shows the images in that category. Suggestions change depending on what you visit.)
Bwahaha! Sam and Carole, you crack me up! Thank you for the fantastic and thorough advice Catherine. I have set up my website already, but will consider this info for the future. I am glad you posted it so others can benefit from your suggestions too. :)
Sam (Rescue Dog Mom, Writer, Hugger) wrote: "*runs away screaming, more terrified of computer technology than ever* Hugs"You are SO funny!!




