Articulate Marketing Blog

11 reasons why you should choose HubSpot over WordPress

Written by Matthew Stibbe | 28 October 2021

Today, we're talking about the differences between HubSpot CMS and WordPress for hosting a website. We have our clear preference, but we welcome differences of opinion as long as they're delivered politely and not on threat of fisticuffs at dawn.

First of all, this blog is based on our webinar. So if you're more of the audio-visual sort, you can watch the webinar and download the slide deck, here:

Our experience with WordPress and HubSpot

We've spent the best part of 20 years building WordPress websites and writing content for them both for ourselves and for clients. In fact, Articulate Marketing was on WordPress for longer than it's been on HubSpot CMS. We still run one or two legacy sites on WordPress.

WordPress works for a lot of people. We're not saying otherwise. In fact, four out of ten websites on the internet use it. But that doesn't mean it's the only game in town or perfect for everyone.

We made a different decision, for example.

After careful evaluation of the options, Articulate now exclusively designs, builds and maintains websites on HubSpot CMS (content management system - a.k.a. the system that drives your website).

Articulatemarketing.com is on HubSpot today, and we've built dozens of websites and migrated many clients' sites to the platform. One of the sites we built this year for a client, won a HubSpot Impact Award for design. Read the case study here, or check out the site: htg.co.uk.

For more information about migrating from WordPress to HubSpot, check out our article.

Why choose HubSpot CMS for you site?

1. It's easy to update

The HubSpot editor makes building new pages or publishing new articles on your blog quick and easy. It's a drag-and-drop experience and is very intuitive, especially if you've seen similar things with Squarespace or Wix.

Although WordPress out of the box is also somewhat WYSIWYG (what you see is what you get), and you can get things like Gutenberg, the interface is often clunkier.

Most of the sites that we see coming into Articulate from clients tend to be pre-Gutenberg sites, meaning building page layouts requires coding or old-fashioned page builders. They're hard to edit. And if you want to change the layout, you have to go back to a developer. With HubSpot, you don't; there's a separation between coding the site and using it.

This is a screenshot from our own site in the editor:

Some modules have elements like graphics, or you can put smart rules or other clever things like embedded controls. So, you can also build sophisticated reusable modules that you then give people a lot of control over them. For example, coders or not, pretty much everybody in Articulate can create landing pages, web pages and blogs without having to bother the development team.

2. CRM integration

In its heart, HubSpot is a CRM. It's a customer relationship management database. It's built on contacts, companies, lists and data. That is, everything you need to use marketing automation and communicate with prospects.

If you build the website on top of that layer, you can do things like personalisation. To see what this looks like, if you go to Articulate Marketing's contact page - and if you've filled in a form on our site and we've dropped a cookie on your computer - we probably know enough that we can personalise your experience in a fun, trivial way that isn't too intrusive but is interesting. (If we don't know your details, there's a default "Hi there.")

That's the tip of the iceberg, because you can use the database to drive smart modules. For example, if you are tracking by lists, when they visit the homepage, you can show customers one banner, and you can show sales prospects a different banner. Or if a lead has expressed an interest in a particular product you can personalise on that basis. Rather clever, right?

3. Built for marketers

Marketing managers want to know - and are often asked - what's the return on investment for your marketing activity? How do we know your marketing strategy is working?

With a HubSpot site, because it's integrated with the CRM, you get loads of information, such as:

  • traffic to contact submissions
  • form fills and then subsequent form fills, in sequence
  • how many leads became customers, and the deal value of those customers

That's just an example of the thread that runs from the first visit to the site, through to closed won deals in HubSpot. You need to set the systems up, but HubSpot facilitates that activity. Then, you can attribute ROI to certain pieces of content. This blog has £6,007 attributed revenue, associated with 3 deals. Not bad for an afternoon's writing.

4. A/B testing

A/B testing is at the centre of conversion rate optimization (CRO). By running a test, you can serve half the people who visit a page one version and half the people another version, then check which version converts best. In HubSpot, you can A/B test things like pages, CTAs and emails. It's possible to A/B test in WordPress with plugins, but it's not nearly as easy.

5. Analytics and reporting

HubSpot provides reporting about traffic sourcing, time on page, device type, bounce rate and so on. You can split these reports by dashboard, so you get one dashboard for sales and one for marketing, and more, for example.

In addition to those dashboards, it's got a built-in native integration with Google Tag Manager, Google Search Console, and Google Analytics. You plug in your codes for those tools and HubSpot's cookie control functionality switches them on and off depending on what people have opted for. So yes, it plays well with others. But really, most of the website reporting you need comes straight out of HubSpot.

6. Mobile-responsive by default

Google is doing mobile-first indexing. Mobile experience matters. If you build a site in HubSpot, it's going to be mobile responsive automatically. Here's the (shareable) preview inside the editor:

It shows the page on various devices, and you can preview as a specific person as well to see personalisation in action.

Related to this, you can also stage your pages, so they have a place to live before they get published. Most WordPress sites we see don't have this kind of sophisticated preview and staging environment, although again, there are some options like WPEngine - but nothing built-in like HubSpot.

7. Security

30,000 websites are being hacked, daily. At Articulate, we've responded to a few serious website hacks where hackers had targeted a WordPress site. In one case, it was an unpatched contact form plugin. This is a real issue on WordPress, given most of the sites in WordPress that we see have 10, 15, 20 plugins written by 10, 15, 20 different people, who may or may not have considered security, testing or the cleanliness of their code.

It's a massive security risk with WordPress.

As HubSpot's a software-as-a-service application, in a nutshell: it's their problem. With HubSpot, you get:

  • Denial of Service protection run through CloudFlare.
  • 24/7 monitoring.
  • An SSL certificate by default (unlike WordPress where - again - you have to configure it yourself).
  • A web application firewall to prevent hackers.
  • Security-certified data centres.
  • Infrastructure hosted on big league cloud platform providers.
  • Good GDPR compliance tools like the ability to permanently delete contacts on request.

We have a lot of IT clients, so if you're in IT, this metaphor's for you: Going into HubSpot is a bit like moving your on-premise Exchange Server - where you had to do the updates and you were responsible for security - to Office 365. Suddenly, all that stuff is Microsoft's responsibility.

8. Maintenance

Maintenance and security are closely linked. For example, here is a screenshot showing 38 unapplied updates to plugins on a site. If you have a WordPress site this situation may be familiar.

Each of these unapplied updates is a security vulnerability. And also they're running an old version of PHP as well as an old version of the WordPress core. This company is in the IT world, telling other people how to keep their businesses secure.

If you've got a WordPress website, you need to be updating it constantly, at least once a month. You can switch on automated updates, but, often enough to be a problem, when something is updated it breaks something else. Some sites depend on plug-ins for their appearance and functionality and updates just break the site. If you're not looking at it, you might not see the problem until it's a big issue.

Unless you do the updates with proper regression testing and QA validation, there's a real risk that at some point your site will just stop working. We've seen this happen.

In HubSpot, it's all automatic. Even when you use an app in HubSpot or a theme, they have thoroughly tested it before they will put it on the marketplace. So you just don't get the same issues.

9. Support included

HubSpot comes with genuinely fantastic support. They will call you or email you if you send them a message. Their support ticket service is built into the platform. And they offer real fixes - not just 'go to our FAQ'. If you need help with a technical issue, they will find the expertise to resolve it for you.

Depending on your hosting and service tier, WordPress offers phone support. But most WordPress sites aren't on Wordpress.com, they're just self-hosted on some server somewhere. So in that case, you're on your own.

10. Performance

Performance is challenging. It gets more challenging as Google is cracking down hard on sites that are slow to load. But by default, a well-architected HubSpot theme will outperform an average or poorly-architected WordPress theme with a lot of plugins. Most WordPress sites that we see fit into this category. For some reason hosting WordPress on Azure is a recipe for performance disaster.

We use GTmetrix to measure performance. Looking at our Articulate Marketing's homepage. The largest contentful paint (LCP) is under a second and it's greens across the board:

As a developer, getting a site to this point is hard work. For the average website builder, as long as you don't put large images (250kb+ is large) and videos on there, you will get a fast high-performance site out of the box. But it's keeping that under control over time that's the trick. It's harder to keep a handle on WordPress compared to HubSpot.

11. Good for developers

If you're a developer of WordPress or you have in-house coders, HubSpot is a really good development environment:

  • Built-in staging and developer environment
  • Works with version control if you use GitHub
  • Offline development
  • You can publish these user-editable controls
  • HubDB database to build database-driven sites

You don't have to care about this bit if you're not a developer, but if you are then this stuff may appeal to you:

Have we persuaded you?

We're HubSpot nerds. We're not going to deny it. But then again, you'd expect us to be, given we are HubSpot Diamond partners who built our own HubSpot theme: Nucleus. That's geekery at its finest.

We hope our enthusiasm has proven catching. If you're considering HubSpot but you want the minimum disruption to your business and services, and a fast turn-around on a new website, this is the right place for you. Talk to our consultants about upgrading your website.