This was actually a bit of a shill from someone I didn’t know, asking to help him with his own ’roundup’ of various experts. I didn’t reply, mostly because I was super busy and favors like this from random people are low on my list of things I’ll ever reply to. But the question is interesting.
Which WordPress plugins do you use most in the following categories: Seo, Social Media, Commenting, Performance, Captcha and Payments.
Answer to all: None.
Seriously, though. The only ‘Social Media’ plugin I use is Jetpack, and that’s just to push my content to Twitter and Facebook reliably. I don’t use any SEO plugins though when I do, I use WordPress SEO because I trust Yoast. Most of the time, my themes handle SEO for me just fine.
Captcha I never use. I won’t. I hate captcha. Captcha isn’t accessible, as I’ve been saying for four years. Similarly I don’t use commenting plugins because I don’t need them, and I like owning my content. When you put up barriers to comments, you get fewer comments.
Performance plugins are a weird area. Yes, I use plugins for that, but it’s got to do with what I installed on my server. I have memcached and ZendOptimizer, so I use a couple things for that. Zach Tollman’s memcached object-cache.php plugin and Batcache. But really most of the work is on the server already having the backend required for those. That’s the same reason I have Google Pagespeed on the server.
Payments… I don’t know how I could answer this. I use Easy Digital Downloads for sales, and I handle payments through Paypal and Stripe right now. But that isn’t so much a plugin question as a who do I trust with my money question. I’d be using them regardless of if I used EDD or not.
Asking me what I use ‘most’ is a very weird question since I use what’s right for the job I’m facing. If that answer is ‘Not WordPress’ then I don’t use WordPress. So with that in mind, I rarely blanket recommend any plugin out there. I listen to people, what they’re asking, what they mean, and how they sound, and I try to recommend based on all to those aspects. There’s rarely one perfect answer for everyone.
If you think I’m joking, read Chris Lema on the perfect WP shopping cart plugin. There are a lot of choices and decisions and options out there, but you’ve got to know what you really need before you make a choice.
Of course for me, when the choice is between two equally well written plugins, I pick the one where I’ve worked with the developers before hand.