More on WordPress Premium Standards and Features
In my debate about What Premium in Premium Wordpress Themes mean, I mentioned that WP theme designers need to have some level of premium status and standard feature set in order to be even considered premium.
Small Potato tackles this by Raising Personal Standard for Paid WordPress Themes. In that article, he gives his personal opinion about his aims for what should be included in his “default paid theme.”
While the idea is going in the right path, I commented on his blog post stating that he shouldn’t get too specific with standards. He mentioned some specific plug-ins, custom Page templates and design elements such as “stickied posts” that he’d integrate into all his paid themes. Standards shouldn’t limit the designers ability to be creative and think outside the box.
Besides that, I think he’s doing a great job setting some level of standard for his paid themes. After reading this, I’d assume all WP premium theme designers will have a higher standard for premium themes soon, if not already, but most likely it’ll be in their own way.
With all the possibilities that WordPress offers, I don’t think that there will/should be one list of official standards and features every designer should follow since different themes have different purposes.
Adii, WP premium theme designer posted earlier a screen shot of his Theme’s Option page for his PNT (Premium News Themes) product line that shows his competitive advantage over other competing premium themes. While the idea of having a theme’s option page for WordPress themes aren’t exactly cream of the crop, I haven’t come across any other premium themes that highlights on this particular feature… Not even PNT until today.
Giving users the option to edit fields from an options page to manage all their ad slots, change settings like their flickr id and the option to display their video feature certainly beats having to search and edit the source code. Now thats what I call Premium.
I’m glad to see progress going forward towards really making WordPress themes premium status.
