DEV Community

Cover image for I Tracked 24 WordPress Plugins Across 5 Review Sites. Here's What Paid Promotion Actually Does.
Rafał Groń
Rafał Groń

Posted on • Originally published at queryra.com

I Tracked 24 WordPress Plugins Across 5 Review Sites. Here's What Paid Promotion Actually Does.

I was about to pay $500 for a sponsored review on one of the big WordPress blogs.

Before I did, I decided to check whether they actually move the needle.

I spent three weeks pulling Wayback Machine snapshots for 24 plugins across 5 WordPress review sites — tracking active install counts before and after each review published.

The results were not what I expected.

Methodology

For each plugin I followed the same process:

  1. Find the exact publication date of the review
  2. Pull a Wayback Machine snapshot of the WordPress.org plugin page from just before the review
  3. Pull snapshots from 2–4 weeks after, then 2–6 months after
  4. Compare install counts

Same process. 24 plugins. 5 blogs.

WP Mayor — 6 Plugins

Paid placements range from $250 to $750. All content is disclosed as paid — that transparency is commendable.

Results: 4 zero impact, 1 possible small bump (~120 installs), 1 no change.

I contacted WP Mayor CEO Mark Zahra before publishing. He responded in detail. His main point was fair: their clients usually sell premium plugins where conversions happen through direct sales, not WordPress.org installs. The free install count isn't a metric they track or promise. I included his full response in the original article.

Barn2 — 2 Plugins

Sponsored content starts at $499. But the most interesting data comes from Barn2's own transparency reports — sponsored content revenue dropped 82% in one year ($4,883 to $894). They've since removed the advertising page from their site.

Results: 1 zero impact, 1 decline.

ThemeIsle — 5 Plugins

They explicitly refuse paid reviews: "We do not interfere with their work and cannot accept sponsored review/link requests."

Results: organic listicle, some plugins showed modest consistent growth.

The only site with any positive signal — and they don't sell reviews.

WPExplorer — 5 Plugins

Results: 3 zero impact, 2 declined.

One declining plugin hadn't been updated in 4 years — so that's a plugin problem, not a review problem.

LearnWoo — 3 Plugins

Operated by WebToffee, a company that also sells its own plugins on the same blog.

Results: 2 zero impact, 1 growing — but growth started well before the review published.

Summary

Blog Tracked Zero impact Possible bump Declined
WP Mayor 6 4 1 0
Barn2 2 1 0 1
ThemeIsle 5 5 0 0
WPExplorer 5 3 0 2
LearnWoo 3 2 0 0
Total 21 15 1 3

Why Doesn't It Work?

Most WordPress users discover plugins through WordPress.org search or the admin dashboard — not blog articles. WP Mayor has ~16k monthly visitors. WordPress.org gets millions. The path from "reading a review" to "installing" has too many steps and too much friction.

What Does Work?

Based on building Queryra — an AI search plugin for WordPress and WooCommerce:

  • WordPress.org readme.txt SEO — this is where most installs come from
  • Organic mentions in curated lists — ThemeIsle's data backs this up
  • Direct community presence — Reddit, Facebook groups, developer forums

Paid editorial placements don't appear in the data.

Full Research

All individual plugin data, methodology details, and Mark Zahra's full response are in the original article:

👉 AI-powered WordPress search plugin — full research

Top comments (0)