Will Joomla Mean The End Of WordPress?

Joomla or WordPress? Which one is better?

The Internet is an arena of innovation, and is constantly seeing changes which make the experience more interactive, more diverse and more user-centered. The trick in the world of the Internet is to keep moving because you can be relevant one day and obsolete the next.

There has been no shortage of people claiming that because of Joomla’s greater range of applications, it will supersede WordPress and make the older system unnecessary, but is that true? While no-one could deny that Joomla is more versatile and powerful, surely WordPress has enough to hold its own?

What Joomla has in its favor is that it is certainly more adaptable for the dedicated user. If you want to put together a website for business purposes, the wide range of components and modules allow you to take it in pretty much any direction you want. However, there is a certain danger to this for a user who is not as technically-minded as others. If you found yourself at the seat of a rocket ship with a dashboard full of flashing lights and buttons, you would have to ask yourself if you could get it off the ground without causing a lot of damage – and this is similar to a novice using Joomla.

One might say that the benefit Joomla has over WordPress is that you can do more with it, while the disadvantage to Joomla is that, well, you can do more with it. The more you can do with something, the more you can do wrong – and that is more responsibility than a lot of people want. When things go wrong with Joomla, they are harder to fix. WordPress, for its part, is staggeringly user-friendly. Joomla is more adaptable, but WordPress is certainly more of a sensible option for plug-and-play purposes.

WordPress is fantastically easy to maintain. If you just want to blog, then you can be set up and working in a matter of moments – as long as it takes to register, create a title for your blog and start writing. With the huge range of widgets available – which are almost uniformly simple to install – you can add to your blog and make it easy to find online, as well as being easy to navigate. Joomla may be more adaptable, but it is one thing to say that and quite another to say that WordPress is rigid and fixed.

This is not any kind of attack on Joomla. It is a fantastic content management system – and that’s the point. Joomla and WordPress can easily co-exist because they have enough things making them different to appeal to separate markets, as well as being beneficial for different things in the same market.

WordPress is not going to shrivel up and die because Joomla is here and more adaptable. All that is going to happen is that the content management market will expand. Bloggers will still need a tool that lets them plug and play – if they want more features, they will go to Joomla, but there is still a need for WordPress.

Creating an Article in Joomla

Probably the most popular usage of Joomla is by content creators – particularly writers – who know what they are good at and know that it is not web design. There has for some time now been a wide range of blogging platforms which allow good writers to create content and display it in a way which makes it easier on the eye. However, up until now that has rather been the problem. There is a certain amount of (largely unjustified) snobbery directed at blogging which has had the effect of discouraging some people from reading and others from writing blogs.

Although some people view Joomla as a blogging platform – and it certainly can be if you want it to be – it does have the advantage over a wide range of other sites in that it is really a lot more than just a blogging platform. Although the stigma attached to blogging is an unfair one, if you are capable of writing informative and interesting articles, you may find that they are better displayed in another way. Joomla allows this kind of versatility and is, for that reason, very popular among content creation experts.

When creating an article in Joomla, the first place to go to is – unsurprisingly – the “Add Article” button. This will take you to the “article composition” screen, where you will be presented with a range of options for your article. On a step-by-step basis, you create your article as follows:

  • Enter The Title: This will be the heading for your article, and will show in bold at the top of it. Search engines give titles more prominence than the body of the article, so it should be a relevant title. You may also add an “alias”, which will not be seen by your readers but will be used by search engines.
  • Select A Category: You have the option here to choose a “section” and a “category” for your article. This is helpful for navigation (for your readers) and for categorization (important for search engines).
  • Type Your Introduction: When you look at articles written online, you will note that often, after a paragraph or two, there is a link saying “Read More”. This allows the display of your site to be tidier, while still making it easy to find and read longer articles. Your introduction is everything that is included before that point.
  • Write The Rest Of The Article: A major point in Joomla’s possibility is its ease of use. When you want to move from the introduction to the main article, you click the “Read More” button. In the text box this will be illustrated by a red line underneath the intro text, so you know what is in the open and what is under the link.
  • Say Who Wrote The Article: On the right-hand side of the screen there will be a section for information about the author. Into this you can type an author alias (which may be your real name, if you wish). If you leave this blank you will be identified as “Administrator”.
  • Update Metadata Information: This is not an obligatory step, but allows you to include keywords and a description which will get you a better search engine ranking.
  • Save Your Article: It won’t display unless it is saved.

That’s it! You have created your first article in Joomla.