Hey everyone — I run getbutterfly.com, where I build & sell WordPress plugins. It’s been over a decade in this business now, and I wanted to share some thoughts + data (because I love numbers) on the WordPress/plugin ecosystem, what’s changed, and why I’m still bullish. Would love to hear others’ experiences too.
A bit about me
I’ve been developing WordPress plugins for 10+ years, covering various niches (security, optimization, UX, etc.).
Over time I’ve seen major shifts: in how people build sites, what they expect from plugins (performance, compatibility, security), how they buy, etc.
Changes over the past 10 years & things I’ve learned
Here are a few patterns I’ve noticed, plus what they mean for someone building plugins:
Expectations on performance & compatibility have escalated
What was acceptable 10+ years ago in terms of speed, code design, plugin conflicts, etc., is no longer working. Users expect lean, well-architected, fast plugins that don’t bog down a site.
Security matters more than ever
With so many sites running WordPress, and so many plugins in play, vulnerabilities (in plugins/themes) are a big risk. Keeping up with security best practices, regular maintenance, and good support is essential, not optional.
Plugin visibility is harder
With tens of thousands of plugins out there, standing out is tough. Good documentation, clean UX, solid marketing, responsive support — all of that makes a big difference.
Freemium / licensing models have become standard
Many plugin users expect at least a free version; premium or paid upgrades must justify their cost clearly (features, stability, support). Licenses, update frequency, add-ons: these all play into what people will pay for.
User expectations around updates / compatibility
WordPress core evolves, PHP versions evolve, hosting environments evolve. Plugins must maintain compatibility and be tested across environments.
What makes getbutterfly.com different / what I focus on
Here are a few things I try to do to stay relevant and deliver value:
I aim to make plugins that are modular and lightweight, so users can activate only the features they need, avoiding “feature bloat.”
- Rigorous testing (especially with WP core updates, PHP version changes, conflicts with popular themes/plugins).
- Good support/documentation — reducing friction for users.
- Transparency on updates and roadmap.
- Listening to user feedback & using it to shape future features.
Challenges & what I’m working on
No startup/plugin business is without its struggles. Some of the ones I’ve faced:
- Discoverability: Being found in a huge plugin market is hard. Good SEO, marketplace relationships, content & marketing help, but it’s a long game.
- Maintenance vs innovation trade-off: spending time fixing bugs, ensuring compatibility takes away from new features sometimes.
- Pricing pressures: Many customers are price-sensitive; some expect a lot for free. Balancing what you offer for free vs premium, without devaluing the product, is tricky.
- Fragmentation: different hosting, different environment setups, PHP versions, themes — ensuring broad compatibility is tough.
Why I’m still bullish (10 years in & counting)
The massive install base of WordPress means there will always be demand. Even as things evolve, new plugin needs emerge (e.g. performance, SEO, AI, security).
New challenges = new opportunity: as hosting improves, as users demand better speed / mobile performance / security / AI integrations — plugin makers who adapt well can thrive.
The barrier to entry (at least for basic-level plugins) is relatively low compared to building a full app; but the upside (if you build something good, well-supported, and with a loyal user base) remains high.
Community matters: WordPress has a big user/developer community. WordCamps, forums, groups — those help spread the word and improve best practices.
Open question / for the community
- What are your go-to strategies for plugin discovery (especially in the crowded free + freemium space)?
- How do you balance pricing vs value vs free version limitations?
- Anyone else with decade-long plugin experience: what has changed the most for you (in dev tools, user expectations, marketing, etc.)?
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