Yayımlamadan önce adımları barındırıcıya bağlıysa en az iki markada. değilse aynı yığında iki farklı günde çalıştırırız. Konsol hatalarını, bölgesel arayüz kaymalarını ve taşınan düğmeleri not edip anında güncelleriz. Yollar ve ekran görüntüleri üç ayda bir kontrol edilir. DNS/SSL/ödeme için kurtarma seçeneklerini doğrular ve resmi belgelere bağlarız.
Wix wins for beginners. The drag-and-drop editor requires no technical knowledge. you can have a professional site live in under an hour. WordPress has a steeper learning curve: you need to choose a host, install WordPress, pick a theme, and configure plugins. However, page builders like Elementor and Divi have narrowed this gap significantly. For non-technical users who want the simplest path: Wix. For users willing to invest a few hours learning: WordPress.
WordPress wins comprehensively. With over 11,000 free themes and unlimited customisation via CSS and page builders, WordPress can produce any design imaginable. Wix has 800+ templates and offers genuine design flexibility within its editor, but you cannot switch templates after launch without rebuilding. WordPress allows theme changes at any time.
WordPress edges ahead for serious SEO. Plugins like Yoast SEO and Rank Math give granular control over meta tags, sitemaps, structured data, and technical SEO. WordPress also gives you full control over URL structure, page speed optimisation, and core web vitals. all critical for rankings. Wix has improved significantly with Wix SEO Wiz, but still lags on technical SEO depth and site speed optimisation flexibility.
WordPress with WooCommerce wins for serious stores. WooCommerce handles everything from simple digital downloads to complex multi-currency, multi-warehouse operations. It's free to install, with thousands of extensions. Wix's eCommerce (Wix Stores) is excellent for smaller shops. clean product pages, easy management, built-in payments. But WooCommerce scales further and offers more customisation for mid-size to large stores.
Wix is cheaper upfront. plans from $17–$35/month include hosting, SSL, and some apps. But costs escalate quickly with premium apps and eCommerce features. WordPress hosting costs $2.99–$10/month, but premium themes ($30–$80), essential plugins (SEO, security, backup: $0–$200/year), and page builders ($49–$99/year) can add up. For a comparable professional site: both typically cost $100–$300/year total. WordPress offers more value per dollar at higher complexity.
WordPress wins decisively. Your WordPress site and all its data are portable. you own everything and can move to any host. Wix is a closed platform: you cannot export your site to another host. If Wix raises prices, changes terms, or you outgrow it, your options are limited. This lock-in risk is the strongest argument for WordPress for serious long-term projects.