Recently on the PostStatus Slack team, Brin Wilson started a discussion about what it would hypothetically take for WordPress to get to be installed on 51% of all websites (it currently sits at about 27% at the time of this writing): It is an interesting thought experiment, and a lot of interesting points were made during the discussion. Matt Mullenweg weighed in on what he would think makes WordPress the “best possible product”:
Helen Hou-Sandí made an interesting observation about the two different “camps” that seemed to emerge:
Franck Frémont went ahead and wrote up a proposal for a long-term roadmap for WordPress, and challenged me to do the same from the technical perspective. So here’s my take on what I would think is necessary to get WordPress to account for 51% of the web.
Target Audience
Before making change suggestions to go on our roadmap, we need to define what audience we are mainly targeting. Given the methodology that is used to measure the market share (top 10 million websites according to Alexa rankings), I don’t think that targeting individual end users will amount to major changes in market share anymore.
I would rather
Source: https://managewp.org/articles/13863/project-moiety-a-hypothetical-wordpress-roadmap
source https://williechiu40.wordpress.com/2016/11/18/project-moiety-a-hypothetical-wordpress-roadmap/
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