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WordPress that works like a business system, not a fragile theme.

Reston Tech Wiz builds and rebuilds WordPress platforms with clean architecture, editable content systems, custom templates, integrations, performance discipline, and support after launch. The goal is not just a better-looking website. The goal is a site your team can run, trust, and grow.

Custom WordPress development WordPress rebuilds CMS architecture Custom blocks WooCommerce API integrations Performance cleanup Security & maintenance
// 01 why wordpress

Why WordPress earns its place in serious web projects.

WordPress is not valuable because it is familiar. It is valuable because it gives businesses a rare combination: editorial control, open-source ownership, flexible development, a huge ecosystem, and the ability to connect content with the rest of the business stack.

When WordPress is planned correctly, it can be a marketing site, publishing platform, service catalog, lead engine, resource hub, ecommerce system, membership layer, or content backend for other applications.

WordPress.org describes WordPress as a platform for simple sites, blogs, complex portals, and even applications - highlighting flexibility, publishing tools, user management, plugins, SEO foundations, and data ownership.

001

Editorial control

Your team should not need a developer for every text change, service update, landing page, or announcement. A disciplined build gives editors controlled power without turning the site into a free-for-all.

002

Open ownership

WordPress is open source. You are not renting the website from a closed platform that decides what your business can do next. The system can be extended, moved, integrated, and maintained on your terms.

003

Flexible architecture

Pages, services, case studies, teams, locations, resources, products, forms, gated content, and custom data modeled around the business instead of forcing the business into a template.

004

Integration range

WordPress connects with CRMs, analytics, email platforms, payment systems, search tools, dashboards, mobile apps, and external services through plugins, APIs, and custom development.

005

Long-term maintainability

A WordPress project should not end as a pile of plugins and mystery settings. Clear ownership, documented decisions, update paths, security habits, and a real support plan.

// 02 market proof

The platform is not small. The difference is how it is built.

WordPress has massive adoption, but adoption alone is not the selling point. The selling point is what that adoption creates: a large talent pool, a deep plugin ecosystem, mature hosting options, enterprise patterns, documentation, APIs, and long-term continuity.

W3Techs measures WordPress at 42.2% of all websites and 59.6% of websites with a known CMS, as of 30 April 2026.

wp.market_share / all_websites
42.2%
All websites running WordPress Across the entire indexed web - measured by W3Techs across the global website footprint.
wp.market_share / known_cms
59.6%
Of all sites with a known CMS Among websites where the CMS is detectable, WordPress remains the dominant content platform globally.
WordPress usage across traffic-ranked websites Source - W3Techs - 2026
Overall - known CMS 59.6%
Top 1,000,000 49.3%
Top 100,000 52.1%
Top 10,000 50.9%
Top 1,000 45.5%
The higher the stakes, the more the build quality matters. WordPress is present across every traffic tier, but successful projects depend on architecture, hosting, governance, and support.
63k+ Plugin ecosystem Free plugins - WordPress.org directory
10M+ Page builder ecosystem Elementor - active installs
10M+ SEO tooling Yoast SEO - active installs
10M+ Form tooling Contact Form 7 - active installs
7M+ Commerce layer WooCommerce - active installs
unlimited Custom development REST API - custom plugins - blocks
// 03 trusted at scale

Big platforms do not use WordPress because it is simple. They use it because it can be shaped.

WordPress is often misunderstood as a small-business website tool. That view misses the range of real usage: publishers, enterprise teams, media organizations, universities, government-related sites, ecommerce teams, brand newsrooms, and high-volume content operations.

WordPress.org Enterprise positions WordPress as a dominant CMS leader for large brands, with use cases spanning media and publishing, ecommerce, content marketing, and higher education.

High-traffic publishing

TIME.com

Handled more than 100k requests per second during peak Swift traffic.

via WordPress VIP
Marketing enablement

Salesforce

Moved 2,000 marketers to digital with flexible content tools.

via WordPress VIP
Distributed editorial

Al Jazeera

Built a digital experience for 70+ worldwide bureaus.

via WordPress VIP
Multisite / multilingual

Capgemini

Published 20,000+ pages in 10+ languages across 38 sites.

via WordPress VIP
Speed-to-launch

Meta

Launched a secure custom ecommerce experience in under 30 days.

via WordPress VIP
Public sector

NASA

Featured in WordPress Showcase - public agency content at scale.

via WordPress.org Showcase
// 04 myths vs build reality

Most WordPress problems are build problems.

A weak WordPress site can be slow, messy, fragile, and hard to manage. That is real. But those problems usually come from the implementation: poor hosting, bloated themes, plugin drift, uncompressed media, unclear content models, weak maintenance, and no ownership after launch.

RTW approaches WordPress as a system: content model first, templates second, plugins with discipline, integrations with purpose, performance with a budget, and support with ownership.

Myth 01 SLOW

WordPress is slow.

Reality

Not automatically slow. Slow sites usually come from overloaded themes, ungoverned plugins, poor hosting, large media, third-party scripts, and missing performance budgets.

RTW answer

We plan performance before launch: theme decisions, image strategy, caching/CDN, plugin review, script control, Core Web Vitals, ongoing monitoring.

WordPress runs an official Core Performance Team and ships the Performance Lab plugin.
Myth 02 BLOGS

WordPress is only for blogs.

Reality

Powers business sites, publishing platforms, ecommerce, communities, resource hubs, portals, networks of sites, and applications.

RTW answer

We model the site around the business: services, case studies, locations, teams, resources, products, forms, dashboards, integrations.

WordPress.org lists business, government, magazine, community, multisite networks, and applications as supported use cases.
Myth 03 ISOLATED

WordPress cannot integrate with serious systems.

Reality

WordPress acts as a connected CMS - sending and receiving data through APIs, integrating with CRMs and marketing tools, and exposing content to other frontends.

RTW answer

We define the integration map early: forms, CRM, analytics, email, scheduling, payments, search, dashboards, automation, external APIs.

The WordPress REST API exposes JSON endpoints for custom apps, admin tools, and external languages.
Myth 04 MESSY

WordPress always becomes messy.

Reality

It becomes messy when no one defines the content model, plugin rules, editor experience, update process, or ownership.

RTW answer

We build with structure: custom post types, taxonomies, fields, reusable sections, role permissions, plugin governance, handoff documentation.

WordPress developer docs treat custom post types as the foundation for organizing complex content beyond posts and pages.
Myth 05 UNSAFE

WordPress is not secure enough.

Reality

Security depends on architecture, hosting, updates, access control, plugin quality, monitoring, and maintenance. Popular platforms attract attention - discipline matters more, not less.

RTW answer

We treat security as an operating habit: least-privilege access, trusted plugins, update process, backups, monitoring, hardening, support after launch.

WordPress.org Enterprise documents strict security standards used by enterprise WordPress deployments.
Myth 06 DISPOSABLE

A WordPress site is done at launch.

Reality

WordPress sites need ownership after they ship. Updates, fixes, content changes, monitoring, integrations, and improvements all need a clear path.

RTW answer

We retain the build context after launch: support retainers, monitoring, plugin and core updates, security checks, and continuous improvements.

A site without an owner is a site quietly drifting toward the next emergency.
// 05 what we build

WordPress development beyond the theme layer.

A serious WordPress project is not just a homepage and a few plugins. It is a content system, editing experience, frontend, integration layer, performance plan, and support model working together.

01 WordPress discovery & site audit
02 Page map & content model
03 Role planning & integration scope
04 Custom page design
05 Component & section system
06 Service page templates
07 Custom blocks (Gutenberg)
08 Reusable editorial sections
09 Custom post types & taxonomies
10 Custom theme development
11 Template hierarchy & responsive layouts
12 Accessibility baseline
13 WooCommerce setup & checkout flow
14 Payment integrations & order notifications
15 CRM, analytics & tag manager
16 Plugin audit & media optimization
17 Caching strategy & Core Web Vitals
18 Content migration & redirect plan
19 QA, forms testing & analytics verification
20 DNS / go-live support
21 Updates, monitoring & backups
// 06 cms model

The CMS should match the way the business thinks.

Many WordPress sites are hard to manage because every important page is treated like a blank canvas. That gives editors freedom at first - then creates inconsistency, broken layouts, duplicated content, and pages no one wants to touch.

RTW plans the content model before the build expands. Services, case studies, locations, people, resources, FAQs, products, and landing pages each get the right fields, templates, relationships, and editing rules.

Content Type

Service

  • Service title
  • Short promise
  • Buyer problem
  • RTW approach
  • Deliverables
  • Related case studies
  • FAQs
  • Primary CTA
Content Type

Case Study

  • Client / project name
  • Industry
  • Challenge
  • Solution
  • Stack
  • Results
  • Related services
  • Testimonial
Content Type

Location

  • City / region
  • Local service intro
  • Proof points
  • Relevant services
  • Local FAQs
  • Contact CTA
Content Type

Resource

  • Topic
  • Audience
  • Summary
  • Author
  • Related services
  • CTA
  • SEO metadata
// 07 connected wordpress

A WordPress site can be the front door to the whole business stack.

The website is rarely alone. Leads need to reach a CRM. Forms need routing. Analytics need clean events. Ecommerce needs payments and notifications. Marketing teams need email tools. Operations may need dashboards, exports, automations, or API handoffs.

RTW plans those connections before they become fragile patches.

// 08 performance discipline

Fast WordPress is planned, not wished into existence.

Performance is not one plugin. It is a chain of decisions: hosting, theme weight, image handling, font loading, scripts, third-party tags, caching, database health, editor choices, and monitoring.

RTW builds WordPress with a performance budget and tests the parts visitors actually feel: loading speed, interaction responsiveness, and visual stability.

Google / web.dev defines Core Web Vitals as LCP, INP, and CLS - with "good" thresholds at LCP <= 2500 ms, INP <= 200 ms, and CLS <= 0.1, measured at the 75th percentile.
LCP - target 2.5 s 2500 ms

Largest Contentful Paint. Main content loads quickly - the moment users feel the page is "there".

INP - target 200 ms 200 ms

Interaction to Next Paint. Page responds quickly to clicks, taps, and keyboard input - interaction feels live.

CLS - target 0.1 0.1

Cumulative Layout Shift. Layout stays visually stable - no late-loading elements jumping under the user's finger.

01

Theme weight

Avoid bloated multipurpose themes when the project needs a custom system. Light, scoped, intentional.

02

Plugin governance

Use plugins for the right reasons, not because every feature needs another dependency.

03

Media strategy

Compress, resize, lazy-load, and prioritize images before they become the performance problem.

04

Script control

Third-party scripts, trackers, embeds, chat widgets, and marketing tags need rules - and a budget.

05

Caching & delivery

Plan page caching, object caching, CDN behavior, and hosting fit around the site's actual traffic.

06

Monitoring

Performance is checked after launch - content, plugins, tags, and traffic patterns all change.

// 09 project shapes

Most WordPress projects fit one of six shapes.

Shape - 01

New WordPress Platform

For teams starting fresh with a custom WordPress build - clear page structure, editable sections, forms, analytics, and launch support.

A strong first version, without inheriting old technical debt.
Shape - 02

WordPress Rebuild

For existing WordPress sites that need a cleaner structure, better design, safer templates, improved editing, and a more maintainable backend.

The current site has useful content, but weak architecture.
Shape - 03

CMS Architecture Cleanup

For sites where the front end may be acceptable, but the backend is confusing, inconsistent, plugin-heavy, or hard for the team to manage.

The team avoids editing the site because every change feels risky.
Shape - 04

Performance & Plugin Audit

For WordPress sites that feel slow, fragile, overextended, or dependent on too many plugins.

The business wants speed, reliability, and maintainability before a larger rebuild.
Shape - 05

WooCommerce / Commerce Build

For product catalogs, checkout flows, payment integrations, order notifications, subscriptions, or commerce content connected to WordPress.

Commerce flexibility without separating content and selling.
Shape - 06

Headless / API-Connected

For teams that want WordPress as the content backend while another frontend, app, dashboard, or system consumes the content.

Editors need WordPress, the product needs a custom frontend.
// 10 how rtw works

Scope the system before building the pages.

We start with the content model and the integration map, not a pretty homepage. Every step that follows - design, build, QA, launch - is easier when the system underneath has been thought through first.

01

Audit & Discovery

We review the current site, business goals, content, users, forms, integrations, performance issues, plugin stack, and what must survive the rebuild.

02

Content Model & Page Map

We define the page structure, navigation, content types, editing needs, service paths, landing pages, and the relationships between content.

03

Design System & Templates

We create the page patterns, reusable sections, responsive behavior, and interface rules before every page becomes a custom exception.

04

WordPress Build

We build the theme, blocks, templates, fields, forms, integrations, permissions, and backend experience with maintainability in mind.

05

Performance, Security & QA

We test mobile behavior, forms, content editing, redirects, analytics, speed, scripts, plugin dependencies, and core workflows before launch.

06

Launch & Handoff

We support go-live, verify tracking and forms, document key workflows, and show the team how to manage routine content safely.

07

Support & Improvement

After launch, we can support updates, backups, monitoring, fixes, new pages, integrations, performance checks, and ongoing improvements.

// 11 why rtw

WordPress without the usual mess.

001

System thinking, not theme thinking

We do not treat WordPress as a skin over content. We plan the structure underneath: pages, content types, fields, templates, integrations, roles, and support.

002

Editor experience matters

The backend is part of the product. If the team cannot update the site safely, the build is incomplete.

003

Plugin discipline

Plugins can be useful. Plugin drift is expensive. We choose dependencies carefully and avoid turning the site into a stack no one wants to touch.

004

Performance before panic

Speed is easier to protect when it is planned early - theme weight, media, scripts, caching, hosting, and third-party tools all considered before launch.

005

Support after launch

A WordPress site needs ownership after it ships. Updates, fixes, content changes, monitoring, integrations, and improvements should have a clear path.

// 12 good wordpress

The difference between "installed WordPress" and "built WordPress".

Weak WordPress setup
RTW WordPress setup
Multipurpose theme patched into shape
Custom theme or disciplined component system
Every page is a blank canvas
Templates and reusable editable sections
Plugin added for every request
Plugin governance + custom development where needed
Forms send to one inbox
Structured lead routing & CRM handoff
Content is hard to reuse
Custom post types, taxonomies & relationships
Performance fixed after complaints
Performance budget from the build phase
Editors are afraid to touch pages
Clear backend experience & handoff
No one owns updates
Maintenance & support path defined
Analytics added at the end
Events & conversion paths planned early
Redesign loses SEO value
Migration, redirects, metadata & structure planned

bad_wp.stack

theme + plugins + panic

rtw_wp.stack

model + templates + integrations + support

// 13 capabilities

A practical checklist of what RTW can help with.

Strategy / audit

  • WordPress site audit
  • Plugin and theme review
  • Content inventory
  • Business goal mapping
  • Page map & navigation planning
  • Integration discovery
  • Performance & risk review

Design / UX

  • Homepage design
  • Service page design
  • Landing page systems
  • Resource hub design
  • Ecommerce interface planning
  • Mobile responsive behavior
  • Component & section system

CMS / backend

  • Custom theme development
  • Custom blocks (Gutenberg)
  • Custom post types
  • Taxonomies & relationships
  • Advanced fields (ACF)
  • Editor experience planning
  • User roles & permissions
  • Content governance

Integrations / connect

  • CRM integrations
  • Contact & intake forms
  • Scheduling tools
  • Email marketing tools
  • Analytics & tag manager
  • Payment & checkout flows
  • Search integrations
  • API connections & dashboard handoffs

Performance / SEO

  • Core Web Vitals review
  • Image optimization
  • Caching strategy
  • Script & tag review
  • Redirect planning
  • URL structure
  • Metadata & schema foundations
  • Internal linking support

Commerce / Woo

  • WooCommerce setup
  • Product & category structure
  • Cart & checkout flow
  • Payment gateway setup
  • Order notifications
  • Subscription / membership flows
  • Product landing pages

Migration / launch

  • Existing site review
  • Content migration planning
  • URL & redirect map
  • Form testing
  • Analytics verification
  • DNS / go-live support
  • Post-launch review

Maintenance / improvement

  • WordPress updates
  • Plugin updates
  • Security checks
  • Backups
  • Monitoring
  • New pages & bug fixes
  • Performance improvements
  • Ongoing support retainer
// 14 fit

Good fit for teams that need WordPress to stay usable.

RTW is a good fit when WordPress has become important enough that casual fixes are no longer enough. Maybe the current site is hard to edit. Maybe plugins keep piling up. Maybe the design looks acceptable but the structure is weak. Maybe the site needs to connect with sales, marketing, analytics, ecommerce, or operations.

The right answer is not always a full rebuild. Sometimes the better move is an audit, cleanup, content model reset, performance pass, integration fix, or focused page system. We will say that if it is the better path.

common situations
  • Your WordPress site is hard to update without breaking layout
  • Your backend is messy and only one person understands it
  • Your service pages don't explain the offer clearly
  • Your site relies on too many fragile plugins
  • Your forms, CRM, analytics, or email tools are disconnected
  • Your site is slow and no one knows whether the theme, hosting, plugins, or scripts are the cause
  • You need WooCommerce or commerce functionality without losing content flexibility
  • You want WordPress to act as a CMS for a larger digital system
  • You need a rebuild that keeps what works and removes what blocks growth
  • You want support after launch, not another abandoned handoff
// 15 straight answers

Straight answers to the WordPress questions buyers ask first.

Obj 01

Is WordPress the right choice for our business?

It depends on what the site needs to do. WordPress is a strong fit when content control, flexible page structures, integrations, SEO foundations, ownership, and long-term maintainability matter. If another platform fits better, the scope should say that early.
Obj 02

Will WordPress be slow?

It can be slow when the build is careless. It can also be fast when theme weight, hosting, images, plugins, scripts, caching, and content structure are handled with discipline. We plan performance as part of the build, not as a panic fix.
Obj 03

Can our team update the site ourselves?

That should be part of the project definition. We build editor experiences around the people who will use them: reusable sections, controlled fields, clear templates, role permissions, and handoff support.
Obj 04

Custom theme or page builder?

It depends on the project. Builders can be useful for some teams, but custom themes and custom blocks are often better when performance, consistency, design control, and long-term maintainability matter.
Obj 05

Can you rebuild without losing everything?

Usually, yes. We review what is worth keeping: content, URLs, media, SEO value, forms, integrations, and backend logic. A rebuild should protect what works and replace what creates drag.
Obj 06

Can WordPress connect with our CRM or other tools?

Yes, if the integration is scoped correctly. We define the data flow, fields, routing, authentication needs, error states, and ownership before the connection becomes a fragile patch.
Obj 07

Is WordPress secure enough?

Security is not just a platform choice. It is a maintenance and architecture habit: trusted plugins, updates, access control, hosting, backups, monitoring, and responsible support. We build with that reality in mind.
Obj 08

Can WordPress support a larger content operation?

Yes. WordPress can support structured content, custom workflows, multiple roles, multisite needs, API-connected frontends, and enterprise publishing patterns. The important part is designing the CMS model before the content grows around weak defaults.
// 16 faq

Ten FAQs from WordPress intake conversations.

01 Can you build a custom WordPress website from scratch?
Yes. RTW can plan, design, build, launch, and support a custom WordPress site with the page structure, templates, CMS setup, forms, integrations, and performance considerations the project needs.
02 Can you rebuild an existing WordPress site?
Yes. We can audit the current setup, identify what to keep, remove what creates drag, rebuild the structure, migrate content, protect important URLs, and improve the editing experience.
03 Do you work with WooCommerce?
Yes. RTW can help with WooCommerce setup, product structure, checkout flows, payment integrations, notifications, and commerce pages when WordPress is the right fit for the business.
04 Can you improve WordPress performance?
Yes. The exact work depends on the current theme, hosting, plugins, media, scripts, database, caching, and third-party tools. We start with review before promising a magic fix.
05 Can WordPress be used with a custom frontend?
Yes. WordPress can act as the CMS while content is delivered through APIs to another frontend, app, or system. That architecture should be planned carefully.
06 Will our team be able to edit content?
That is part of the build. We can create reusable sections, custom fields, role permissions, and documentation so routine updates are safer and clearer.
07 Do you use page builders?
Sometimes, when they fit the project. For more controlled, performance-sensitive, or design-specific builds, custom themes and custom blocks are often the better path.
08 Can you connect WordPress with HubSpot, Salesforce, analytics, email, or scheduling tools?
Yes. We can scope and build integrations with CRMs, forms, analytics, email platforms, scheduling systems, payment tools, and other APIs depending on the project requirements.
09 Can you help after launch?
Yes. RTW can support updates, monitoring, backups, fixes, new pages, performance checks, integrations, and ongoing improvements.
10 How do we know whether we need a rebuild or cleanup?
We start with review. If the current site can be improved through cleanup, performance work, or backend restructuring, we will say that. If the foundation is creating too much risk, a rebuild may be the better long-term option.
// ready when you are

Build WordPress like a system your team can trust.

Whether you need a new WordPress platform, a careful rebuild, a cleaner CMS, WooCommerce, integrations, performance cleanup, or support after launch - RTW can help define the right first move before the project grows in the wrong direction.