Transitioning from Drupal to WordPress

Several years ago, I spent many hours, possibly hundreds, learning to use and customize the Drupal content management system and several of its most popular contributed modules, such as Views and CCK, in order to develop and operate a local events website. In the process, I learned a lot about HTML, CSS, PHP, templates, servers, FTP, GIMP, and how to solicit and regularly post content as well as how to market a website, including through word-of-mouth and e-mail subscriptions. I enjoyed the experience, but it was a lot of work and I was doing it voluntarily.

Now, a few years later, I’m starting over with a new system, WordPress, which is more well-known as a blogging platform. Since I once briefly had a WordPress blog, I’m not completely new to it, but this time I hope to learn more about its capabilities, particularly as a content management system. I’d like to see how much it can be customized. For example, I wonder: Will WordPress allow me to add a certain block of a certain type of content in a certain position?

Based on what I’ve seen so far, WordPress doesn’t seem as customizable as Drupal, at least not at first, and I’m not sure if it has the same big community of contributed modules. However, WordPress seems a lot easier to use in many ways and is certainly more well-designed in terms of being aesthetically pleasing.

Besides now using WordPress for my personal website, my wife and I are planning to use it to launch a local website, possibly as soon as April. I’ll let you know that turns out.