This is Part 2 of our series shining a light on the realities of WordPress as a content management system and website platform.
In Part 1, we covered how WordPress wasn’t built to be a CMS. One of the clearest signs of that? Its plugin problem.
Plugins are everywhere in WordPress — and for most site owners, they’re not optional. But what seems like flexibility often turns into fragility.
There are over 60,000 plugins in the official WordPress directory. Most sites use 10–20 just to cover basic needs.
Every plugin adds:
Common issues:
And they don’t always fail loudly — your site could break in subtle ways you don’t notice for days, weeks, or longer.
Turning on automatic updates sounds smart — until something crashes. And with multiple plugins involved, it’s often hard to tell what broke what.
Examples of what can go wrong:
The result?
A site that’s non-functional until you notice — or a customer does.
Infinitus CMS doesn’t rely on plugins at all.
Everything is:
For more complex features, we carefully integrate trusted third-party services — directly, and only when appropriate.
With Infinitus, you get:
It just works — and keeps working.
In Part 3, we’ll explore what it’s like to actually manage content inside WordPress — and how Infinitus makes that experience cleaner, simpler, and way less stressful.