Should I use WordPress or go custom?

I’m taking on a relatively small freelance project and my client would like to update several portions of their site; photo gallery, calendar list, about page, and some event links.

My gut tells me to use something like WordPress and use “Pages” for these sections, but I’m worried about my client maintaining the formatting. Especially something like calendar dates and links.

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They won’t be doing any blogging – this is just so they can update those sections when needed (obviously).

But then I thought, what if I just roll my own CRUD for these portions, but I’m not sure if that would be necessary for a project like this.

So what would people out there use in a situation like this? How much control does one have over the formatting of content in WordPress? I’d like not to have to teach my client on when to call certain CSS classes.

Any help is more than appreciated.

EDIT:
Any idea how the top carousel of BungoBox was made in WordPress? Or don’t you think it’s possible and that is done manually?

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4 comments

  1. I would stick to wordpress or similar CMS system. It will be a pain-in-the-arse, to take care of formatting (WYSIWYG for client), take care of security, make the administation pages nice and functional, and so on.

    You will find a LOT of information on wordpress as a cms on the web, for example see here

    Have you considered any other cms system?

  2. From the description this is a site that would consist of just a few pages that the client would want to update? if so, I’d stick with wordpress myself. There’s a ton of pre-written modules and themes already out there, and there’s no sense “re-inventing the wheel”. Also I’ve found in my travels that WordPress leads the pack in being able to manipulate content to your will of all the CMS’s and the available WYSIWIG plugins they have. Remember, if they cant’ get their document to look just right, guess whose getting the call, and who will be expected to fix it on your dime if you didn’t specify that in your contract (you are offering maintenance as an additional feature right?)

    Now if the client is looking for a more robust system, a larger site then I interpreted in your writeup, then I’d look into more of a CMS system such as Drupal or Joomla. Avoid the trap that seems to nail PHP coders that it’d be faster to do it yourself; it’d have to be a lot of custom functioanlity to start looking at building it yourself from the ground up (and even then, there’s enough frameworks to help)

  3. Definatly go with wordpress, drupal is just too heavy for the job and will take you much longer to configure.

    If you are worried about your client ruining design with a WYSIWYG editor, just don’t give them access.. keep them on a need to know basis for their own good.

    Working with wordpress will free you from maintaining security issues and many other unpredictable-at-this-point cases of reinventing the wheel.