Raising Personal Standard for Paid WordPress Themes

Keep in mind that the information below is a personal list. I didn’t put it together to say what everyone else should do.

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Recently, I’ve been reading quite a few articles about what makes a premium theme… premium.

First, let me say that the word “premium” bothers me. Mainly, it’s misleading because other theme authors use it liberally to label non-free themes. Like someone said in one of the discussions that I read, premium at this point is simply a marketing term. There’s no higher level of quality to back it up across the board for all themes and all theme authors.

Second, from now on for every paid theme, I’ll aim for the following features:

(For the beginners, the following will look like mumbo-jumbo. If you’re a theme developer, you’re welcome to improve this list through the comments.)

Multiple Custom Templates

  • Default Templates: index, archive, category, page, 404, stickied w/ excerpts and asides index, tag, author
  • Magazine/Portal: Allows room for growth or in case you want to turn your start-up blog into a multi-author or user-generated magazine.
  • Gallery Template: For all the photos and portfolios.
  • Custom Archives: Crucial for old blogs with tons of archive links.
  • Custom Links Page: For the promiscuous linkers ;)
  • About Template: Very important, but often neglected
  • Advertising Template: Should include a table for advertising options and pricing
  • Multimedia Template: This is top secret.
  • Contact Template: Contact page with integrated contact plugins and other options.
  • Subscription Template: Just in case you want to guide new readers through subscribing and using RSS or email subscription.

Multiple Skins - Simply multiple color schemes and styles.

Unique Design - I’m still learning and trying to stay away from using too many gradients. It’s too bad top designers have better things to do. Really top notch designs are what the WordPress themes market is missing. Here’s my new list of elements to keep in mind while laying out a new theme…

  • Header: logo/title, search form, horizontal navigation, subscription link
  • Post: date button, post title, categories, comments link, author link
  • Entry-content: paragraphs, headings (h2, h3, h4…etc.), custom text styles, blockquote, blockquote within blockquote, code, image aligned left, image aligned right, image aligned center, unordered lists, custom variations of unordered lists
  • Next and Previous links
  • Stickied posts
  • Asides
  • Sidebar: regular and widgets
  • Plugin styles for integrated plugins
  • Alternating post backgrounds
  • Alternating comment backgrounds

Efficient Codes - Of course, it’s not all about design. I always try to code everything with the least amount of codes, not because I’m trying to become a good coder and programmer, but because I’m lazy hehehe.

Thorough Documentation - This is another very important area I think we should focus on. A good read-me file can go a long way. Not only does it reduce stress for the users, it also helps reduce theme support time :) .

Flexibility - It’s a little bit harder to design for potentially… everyone. I try to keep the designs and codes as flexible as possible because I never know what you’ll use it for.

Plugin Integrations - This area should be easy if you have the last step down to a science. Flexibility and plugin integrations go hand in hand. For myself, I’m trying to take it a step further and pre-style the plugins. In my own themes, you’ll typically find the following integrated plugins:

  • WP-Sticky
  • WP-PostRatings
  • WP-PageNavi
  • Comment License (more important people realize)
  • FlicKrRss
  • Share This
  • Author Highlight
  • Contact Form

Other Features

  • Cross-browser compatibility
  • Banner switcher and other theme options
  • Print Stylesheet
  • Dynamic Tabs
  • Social Bookmark Integration
  • Slideshow
  • Multimedia Integration
  • Translatable

To all loyal small potatoes: Sorry for the recent silence on this blog. I’m working hard on the themes club so I can take a break and make it in time for the Thailand water festival in April. Then, hopefully, I’d be able to hop from Thailand to Korea by May.

That’s it. I’ll be back with some new stuff for the themes club next time. Peace out small potatoes!

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Nic:

I dont know how difficult they are to add, but an author page would be a welcome standard feature. Keep up the good work.

[…] Potato has written a really interesting post listing the things that he intends to include within his paid WordPress themes from now on. I want to consider what free themes should […]

edy:

for header title, can you make it not-uppercase?
and also full feed plugin integrated?

Shireen2007:

great ideas, SP, as usual looking forward to your next themes. I am currently using three of them on 3 of my blogs

@SP: Not sure if you read my article, check it out: What does Premium in Premium Wordpress Themes mean?

I’d also like to mention that while this list of standard features are a great start and all (and something I talked about in my blog post too), I think that these standard features will only apply to one type of Premium theme.

I’m thinking big. Super out of the box type big. IMO, Premiumn has gotten so big now, there’s multiple audiences you’ll need to address. A Premium news/magazine theme will have a different audience and uses compared to a premium theme made for a blogger. A blogger might only need to feature one article on the front page and display maybe a couple of pictures, rather than a news/magazine theme needs to address multiple featured articles and galleries of pictures that need to be managed (a feature in itself).

So while I think that this is a good start for some set of standards, I don’t think it’s going to cut it for everything premium theme designer/developer.

Premium in my eyes tend to lead towards features that those different types of users will need, not just one.

About Template… Advertising Template… Multimedia Template… Contact Template… Subscription Template

Interesting, I don’t think I’ve seen a theme with any of these Templates. Smart Idea.

Ptah - Bulkiness is definitely a concern. But with custom templates being optional, I’m more concern about not intimidating the novice users.

Like design, all features have to be a bit generic to cover almost all bases for individual bloggers, groups, and user generated blogs, regardless of the needs, features, and functions relative to the blog’s main subject.

Along with the basic standards, each of my niche-focused theme will have its unique features that aren’t going to be present in other themes.

Wrote about my take on the whole Premium Wordpress theme deal here:

http://www.twigged.net/scourge-of-…

Check it out if you get time. Otherwise have a good trip to Thailand - the spiritual motherland…

“Along with the basic standards, each of my niche-focused theme will have its unique features that aren’t going to be present in other themes.”

Thats all I wanted to know, thanks.

g:

gettexted wordpress

I still want your babies!

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[…] also hoping to follow along with some of Small Potato’s personal standards for paid WordPress themes (except this will be a free theme). He earned a reputation for a reason. His personal standards are […]

STICKY Posts Great Great Great, Also, I didn’t see this anywhere up there but being able to make posts for different Pages (with sticky’s) would be awesome. ( I know this is starting to sound like a forum ) but i always have several main topics to blog about it would be very cool.
I particularly Like the “clean-ness’ of these blogs here. To me this is an important function of “Premium” blog templates. I am truly sick of #FFFFFF (white) as a default page color for clean. Or #91B8CE (pale Light blue).

I have recently cleared all my web sites and am starting from scratch. (Now) A contractor reporting blog, A video exchange site, and a good old fashion (So to speak) Blog, Word press is a nice cms which does very well for the down to earth basics. (as always there is some little feature id like to have but it suites me well as is .

Drive On
Rick (Cappy)

Sounds good with all these kind of templates. What about landing page for companies who use AdWords. I need an AdWords landing page template. Do you know where I can find that?

I’m just revisiting this post by SP and I’m wondering if these great-sounding plans will move forward. Any thoughts?

tell me about the cost of this.

SEO ZONE is a search engine optimization(seo) firm, provides seo, seo article, seo tools,seo news and seo related informations,helping companies leverage the internet to increase revenues and profits.

people would find it hard typing even with two hands on the Eee PC but the point of having the device is to have a secondary notebook instead of lugging around a huge laptop. While the Eee PC may have all the basic laptop functions, and then some, it is still primarily for quick document editing, Internet browsing and chat. Nevertheless, there are still some advanced functions that it could do. One in particular is video editing. Using software such as SolveigMM AVI Trimmer and MPEG Streamclip, I was able to edit and convert videos on the Eee PC. However, there was a noticeable lag but it was not enough to cause concern. In fact, while I was splicing videos together, I was already uploading one of them to a media sharing site.

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