One WordPress mistake I see very often:
People keep adding plugins to fix problems that should have been solved in the build.
Need speed? Add a plugin.
Need SEO? Add a plugin.
Need security? Add another plugin.
Need design control? Add even more plugins.
The problem is that every extra plugin adds more weight, more updates, more conflict risk, and sometimes more confusion for the client.
A better WordPress website is not always the one with the most features.
It is usually the one that is built clean from the start.
Before I install any plugin, I ask myself:
Does the website really need this?
Can this be done with cleaner structure or custom CSS?
Will the client understand how to manage it later?
Will this slow down the website?
Will this create future maintenance issues?
A good WordPress site should be:
Fast enough that users don’t wait.
Simple enough that the client can update it.
Flexible enough to grow with the business.
Clean enough that another developer can understand it later.
Secure enough that basic issues do not become emergencies.
My advice to business owners:
When hiring someone for a WordPress website, don’t only ask, “Can you design it?”
Also ask:
How will you keep it fast?
How many plugins will be used?
Will it be easy for me to edit later?
What happens after the website is launched?
Will the site be built for SEO structure from the beginning?
A website is not just a design project.
It is a business tool.
And if it is built properly, it should save time, bring trust, and support growth — not create new problems every month.
That is the difference between just making a website and building a website the right way.