Tag Archives: google-fonts

The Top Mobile-Friendly WordPress Themes—and What Makes Them So Good

The post The Top Mobile-Friendly WordPress Themes—and What Makes Them So Good appeared first on HostGator Blog . When it comes to getting traffic, building an audience, and making sales, mobile is basically everything now. More than half the traffic on the web comes from mobile devices, Google now uses mobile-first search indexing, and the value of purchases made on smartphones and tablets this year will total $117 billion. If you plan to build a website , you need to choose a mobile-friendly WordPress theme from the thousands available. That can be a bit overwhelming. To narrow the field and get a better understanding of what makes a great mobile-friendly WordPress website theme, we looked at a few of the most popular ones— Astra ,  GeneratePress ,  Hestia , and  Sydney —to see why so many WordPress users choose them. What to Look for in a Mobile-Friendly WordPress Theme As you shop for a mobile-friendly theme for your WordPress website, keep an eye out for these key features.     1. Responsiveness is a must Whatever theme you choose must be responsive in order to display properly on mobile devices. That’s because a responsive template adjusts to the visitor’s device type by, for instance, changing from a two-column desktop layout to a single-column format for smartphones and resizing page elements to make them fit. This is a basic requirement for any mobile-friendly website . You can see how the Sydney theme adjusts from desktop to tablet to smartphone by reducing margins and, on phones, moving from three columns to one. However, responsiveness alone isn’t the only thing to look for in a mobile-friendly theme. Many other elements go into a truly mobile-friendly site design, and a good theme will support most or all of them.   2. Appearance matters for usability The best mobile site designs keep smartphone and tablet use conditions in mind. Think about how many times you’ve had to find a patch of shade to read something on your phone’s screen while you’re outdoors, or maybe you’ve had to adjust your device brightness or zoom in because the text was hard to read. Readable mobile design is clean web design , with uncluttered backgrounds, enough contrast between background and text for easy reading, and fonts that are large enough and simple enough (think sans serif, not script) for users to scan on a phone, even outdoors on a sunny day. Look for a customizer tool that will show you what your changes look like as you make the edits. Each of the themes mentioned in this post has a customizer utility and/or is compatible with Elementor, a popular free front-end page-builder plugin for WordPress that includes tools specifically for mobile design editing.   3. Google Fonts compatibility helps in several ways Astra and Sydney both support Google Fonts. This matters for typography options, because there are more than 800 font families in the Google Fonts directory. It also matters for your budget, because Google Fonts are free. And it matters for that all-important mobile page speed . Google uses caching and compression to deliver its fonts fast in the smallest files it can , so your typography won’t slow down your site and cause visitors to get impatient and leave.   4. Navigation is key to a good mobile user experience Good themes make it easy to get around your site on a mobile device with taps and touches, instead of relying on mouse and keyboard input. They also have a relatively flat site architecture with as few sub-levels as possible so visitors can go from your homepage to whatever product or post they’re looking for in as few taps as possible. Hestia and Sydney offer the simplest design approach, with a single-page site layout for mobile. That means visitors can find what they want without having to navigate between pages. Great mobile-friendly themes also include features that encourage visitors to stick around and interact more with your site. For example, Astra’s Pro version makes it easy for shoppers to find what they want in a WooCommerce store —sales bubbles, dropdown cart, and quickview tools all reduce your visitors’ need to move from one screen to another as they gather information and shop.   5. Performance is critical for search results and user experience Google says 53% of mobile users will bounce if a site takes longer than three seconds to load, but the a  average mobile site load time is an agonizingly long 15 seconds. So even the most elegant, simple mobile theme has to be fast and lean to be worth using. Bigger files take longer to load, which is why the best themes proudly proclaim how few resources they need. GeneratePress takes up less than 30KB with a default WordPress installation, while Astra uses less than 50KB and loads in half of one second. Both of these themes use Vanilla Javascript rather than jQuery to avoid render-blocking issues that slow down load times.   6. SEO friendliness helps your site get found Google’s moving to a mobile-first index for search results, but having any old mobile site isn’t good enough. The best themes for mobile are designed with SEO in mind and make it as easy as possible for search engine crawlers to find their way around. Hestia has an SEO-friendly structure, while GeneratePress and Astra have built in the schema.org structure that’s required for rich snippets to display in search results . All three of these themes as well as Sydney follow best practices for coding, which also helps with SEO.   7. WooCommerce compatibility helps you optimize your store WooCommerce is one of the most popular plugins for WordPress , and most popular themes are designed to be WooCommerce0compatible. Mobile-friendliness is crucial for online stores now because, by the end of 2018, half of all online orders will come from mobile devices , and more than 60% of all e-commerce traffic already comes from phones and tablets. Creating a mobile-friendly shopping experience for your customers can reduce cart abandonment , increase revenue, and encourage customers to keep coming back to your store. The Pro version of the Astra theme includes a WooCommerce module with grid view, gallery, and infinite scrolling options for your product catalog. Hestia and GeneratePress are also WooCommerce compatible.   Choosing Your Mobile-Friendly WordPress Theme As you’re searching for your ideal mobile-optimized WordPress theme, ask yourself how each one you look at stacks up in each of these areas. Take your time, read user reviews, explore each theme’s demos, and download a few and try them out before you make your decision. Find the post on the HostGator Blog Continue reading

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4 Best Free WordPress Themes for Your Small Business Website

The post 4 Best Free WordPress Themes for Your Small Business Website appeared first on HostGator Blog . If you want your small business to thrive, you need to make sure local customers can find you —especially if you have local competition. One way to get found more easily is to revamp your business website using the latest best practices from Google and other search engines: schema markup to deliver rich snippets, an SEO-friendly site structure, and fast load times even on mobile browsers. This sort of overhaul can be as complex and costly as hiring a developer to redesign your small business website . Or, it can be as easy and cost-effective as installing a free WordPress template that follows these best practices. If you’re interested in that second option, here’s a look at some of the best free themes for small businesses now.   1. Astra Brainstorm Force’s Astra WordPress theme is highly rated because of its built-in schema markup and its speed , with a page load time of 400 milliseconds, both of which can help your site rank better in search results. Astra is unusually customizable for a free theme, with real-time preview tools so you can see how your chosen colors, fonts, page layouts, and headers look before you publish them. Not sure what you want your site to look like? You can import one of thousands of Astra-based websites from Astra’s library in one click. Astra has a pro version ($59 and up) with many more customization options, WooCommerce integration for selling products online, and LifterLMS and LearnDash integration that’s useful if you teach online classes.   2. Blossom Consulting Consultants, coaches, attorneys, therapists, and other solo practitioners can use Blossom Consulting from Blossom Themes to stand out in search results, build an email list, demonstrate expertise through blog posts and testimonials, and sell products on the site. Blossom Consulting features an email opt-in/content giveaway header at the top of the homepage, followed by contact information, menu tabs, a hero image with room to explain what you do, a call-to-action button, a “trusted by” section for client logos, and a large “about us” section where you can help prospects get to know you. Blossom Consulting is fast-loading, SEO-friendly, and schema markup optimized. It also includes WooCommerce integration and a Back to Top button, which is often a premium theme feature. Blossom Coach Pro ($49) adds Google Fonts, more color and layout options, and sections for podcasts, case studies, and events.   3. Schema Lite Schema Lite from MyThemeShop is very popular because of its schema markup integration, fast page loads, and SEO-friendly structure. Schema Lite’s default appearance on laptops is clean and minimalist, with a menu tab bar followed by an above-the-fold post and a sidebar featuring social media icons, post tags, and latest post summaries and thumbnails. On smartphones, a single column of content and an off-canvas menu for sidebar categories maintain Schema Lite’s clean design. The theme allows for unlimited color and background customizations, so you can rebrand it with your business’ colors and logo. The paid version of Schema ($59 license for up to five WordPress sites) delivers page load times of less than one second. If you’re in a competitive local market and want to work your way up in local search results, this may be an investment worth making.   4. Medical Spa Rara Themes’ Medical Spa WordPress template can work for all kinds of local service businesses, especially photo-friendly ones like (yes!) spas and beauty salons, home décor and gift boutiques, bakeries and caterers, and event planners. Like Schema Lite, Medical Spa is responsive and incorporates schema markup, page speed optimization, and SEO support for a site that loads quickly—even with lots of images–and performs well in search results. On laptops and phones, your logo and contact information appear at the top of the homepage so customers can get in touch right away. They can scroll past the full-width banner image to the category images, about us section, services, call to action button, and testimonials to learn more about your business. Medical Spa also gives you room to list your business hours for each day and to display a map of your store location. The parent theme of Medical Spa is Spa and Salon Pro ($59). It keeps the same basic layout as Medical Spa but replaces the full-width homepage banner image with a banner slider. Spa and Salon Pro also adds online booking capability, supports WooCommerce, and gives you Google Fonts access and extensive customization options.   Picking the Best WordPress Theme for Your Small Business Take your time exploring schema-markup friendly themes for your business—changing your site’s appearance and function is a major step. As you’re creating your shortlist of possible new themes, ask yourself if they support the functions your business needs, such as online booking, an email list opt-in box, or a blog. Then think about how potential customers will find your site. Most searches are now done on mobile devices, and people often do “near me” searches on their phones when they’re ready to buy, so make sure your “contender” themes do a great job of putting your most important business information up front on small screens. What looks great on the publisher’s demo pages may look different with your content. Once you’ve narrowed your list to a couple of strong options, download those themes and use the live preview tools to see how your content will look in each one. After you’re satisfied that your chosen theme works with your site, then you can update to show your new look to the world. How will you know if your new theme is delivering the improved search performance you want? Metrics. It’s a good idea to set a baseline before you update your theme so you know your traffic sources, traffic volume, bounce rate, time spent on your site, and click-throughs or conversions. These numbers should improve in the weeks and months after you install your new theme. If they don’t, you may need change your site content, upgrade your web hosting, or upgrade your theme. Even with all these steps, using a new theme to get more customers is still much, much easier than relocating a brick-and-mortar location—and with so many high-quality free themes, it’s a bargain, too. Find the post on the HostGator Blog Continue reading

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Today’s 5 Best Free WordPress Themes for Freelancer Websites

The post Today’s 5 Best Free WordPress Themes for Freelancer Websites appeared first on HostGator Blog . Every freelancer needs a website for one major reason: Clients can’t find you if you don’t show up in their search results. Other reasons freelancers need websites are to show your work to prospective clients, to let prospects know which kinds of services you provide (and which you don’t), and to give people an easy way to get in touch with you. To make the most of your website, you’ll need a theme that loads fast, looks good and is easy to use on phones and computers, and establishes your professional brand . Here are five free WordPress themes that work well for different types of freelance businesses. 1. Bootstrap Journal Bootstrap Journal from Bootstrap Themes describes itself as feminine, but perhaps a better word is fun. The fonts are what give this image-heavy theme a slightly whimsical look, which can work for freelancers in businesses that require an outgoing personality, like wedding and event planners, independent travel agents, stylists, makeup artists, and hair stylists. This theme is best for freelancers who have a strong visual portfolio to display. On my laptop, the full-width header image fills the space above the fold. Beneath it are page navigation tabs and a 5-image grid with post titles over the images. Post excerpts with large images follow, and there’s a subscription box to encourage visitors to join your email list. On a smartphone, everything converts to one column. Bootstrap Journal is responsive, fast, SEO friendly and WooCommerce compatible. The pro version ($49) adds ad management tools, multiple design customization options, and an editable copyright text option.   2. Clean Fotografie Clean Fotografie from Catch Themes , as you might guess from the name, is a good choice for freelance photographers. It’s also useful for freelancers in other businesses whose portfolio is mainly visual, like makeup artists, fine artists, interior decorators, and landscape designers. Clean Fotografie’s responsive design puts images front and center on computers and phones, gives you hero image options for your home page or the entire site, a portfolio feature, full-screen HD image capabilities, and Instagram compatibility. The free version also includes customization options for text excerpts, menus, header media, and layouts. On a laptop screen, the header media includes a call-to-action button to get visitors moving through the site. Beneath the header, a three-column row of images for categories is followed by a header image and text block, featured images in another three-column row, and news items with large featured images. On a smartphone, the content shifts into a single column but keeps the focus on images rather than text. Clean Fotografie’s pro version ($55) is WooCommerce ready and adds more customization options,  featured slider tools, and font families.   3. Experon Experon from ThinkUp Themes looks like a good option for freelancers who work in a field that requires precision and a sense of understated style, thanks to the hexagonal category icons below the slider banner. Because of the design, the above-the-slider-banner tabs for pages and social media, and the three-category row just beneath the banner, Experon is a good option for a freelance agency or solo freelancer that offers multiple services they want to describe in depth on the site. Experon’s free version loads quickly, is SEO friendly, and is optimized for HD screens. It’s compatible with WooCommerce for selling on the site and Elementor for drag-and-drop page design. The free version also gives users access to regular security and feature updates. The pro version of Experon ($35) adds full-width and boxed layout options, more than 100 shortcodes to add features to the site fast, hundreds of Google Fonts, and unlimited color and sidebar options.   4. Life Coach Life Coach from Blossom Themes is a great choice for freelancers who are serious about building their email list through content marketing. Designed for—you guessed it—life coaches, this theme also works for writers, teachers, and speakers. On both laptops and smartphones, there’s a sign-up section where visitors can enter their email in exchange for a free info product (a checklist, e Book , or some other marketing content). Next comes page navigation tabs and a hero image with another subscription section. Next, there’s a social proof section for the logos of media outlets, websites, and events where your work has been featured. About, services, learn more, testimonials, and articles are next, followed by contact information and a contact form. Life Coach’s free version is fast, SEO friendly, Schema.org optimized, responsive, and WooCommerce compatible. Coach Pro ($49) adds more layout and design options as well as sections for case studies, pricing, podcasts, and events.   5. Ryan Grid Ryan Grid from ThinkUp Themes has a black-and-white palette and a focus on text blocks that’s good for writers , editors, tutors, transcription, and other freelancers whose work is based on text. On a laptop, Ryan Grid is similar to Experon, with two unobtrusive menu headers for social media icons and pages, followed by a slider header, then three category text blocks. On a smartphone, that first text block is where you’ll want to put your most important information, because it’s the most prominent element on the smartphone-screen homepage display. If you do have images to include, Ryan Grid is HD Retina-ready. The free version has an options panel for easy customization of the design and it’s Elementor-compatible for drag-and-drop page building. It’s also WooCommerce compatible, which is helpful if you have information products you want to sell on your site. Ryan Grid’s pro version ($35) adds unlimited color and sidebar options, Google Fonts, and more than 100 shortcodes for easy customization.   Choosing a WordPress Theme for Your Freelance Website Once you’ve decided on a couple of themes you like, download them and try them out with your own content to get a sense of which one will work best for you. After you make your choice, ask for feedback from your peers, clients, and prospects about how easy it is for them to find what they need on your site. If you need to make changes to your theme, or pick another theme, you’ve got lots of good free options. Find the post on the HostGator Blog Continue reading

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How to Add Google Fonts to Your WordPress Website

The post How to Add Google Fonts to Your WordPress Website appeared first on HostGator Blog . Is Your Site Using the Right Font? Thanks to the growing number of mobile internet users, finding the right font has become a big project for site designers, publishers, and retailers. The BBC and the Guardian have recently debuted new bespoke fonts designed to be easier to read on phones—and save the companies money on licenses for commercial fonts. Even if you don’t have a flagship-media budget, there are ways you can update your site fonts for better readability, a more consistent appearance across browsers and devices, and faster page-load times to help your SEO. What Fonts Are Best for Your Site? Whether you’re a design fan or someone who likes to consider all the options, it’s really easy to fall down a rabbit hole of fonts. There are thousands of open-source fonts that anyone can download and use, and thousands more available for purchase. Because you want fonts that make your website easier to use and faster, it’s probably best to limit yourself to Google Fonts , a repository of open-source fonts that are easy to read on small screens and which cache quickly to speed up page load times. At this writing, Google Fonts offers a mere 848 font families, 823 of which work for English-language copy. To narrow down your 800-plus choices, you’ll need to apply some basic font choice principles , like those described by Janie Kliever at Canva. Two to three fonts is the ideal number for most sites. If you stick with only one, your site may look sterile and visitors may have a hard time figuring out which text is a headline and which is your main copy. More than two or three fonts can make the site look chaotic and amateurish. Choose fonts that have some contrast so that they create a visual hierarchy. For example, you could use a bold or serif font for your headlines so they stand out and a simple sans serif font for body copy so it’s easy to scan, even on a smartphone. Google Design gives a broader overview of typography, fonts, and how to find the best fonts for your site in their Choosing Web Fonts: A Beginner’s Guide . Among the things the authors say you should consider are: Are you designing your site for the long-term or short-term? Long-term projects often need font families with many style options. How long will your text blocks be? Even on-screen, serif fonts are a good idea if you’ll feature five or more paragraphs at a time. What size will your type be? Simpler fonts are easier to read at small sizes, but they may not stand out enough in headlines. Will your visitors translate your site into other languages? If so, you’ll need to choose a font family that supports multiscript characters so those translations display properly. The guide recommends a few fonts for specific situations to help you get started. You can also browse the entire Google Fonts library here .   Finding Google Fonts for Your Site When you’re ready to explore Google Fonts, it can be a bit of a challenge to navigate the somewhat clunky directory to find the right typefaces. As an example, let’s walk through looking for a serif font to use for headlines on a site for a petsitting business—something bold and businesslike but a bit playful. In the Google Fonts search filter sidebar, you can select the serif category and decide how you want the results presented—by age, popularity, or alphabetized by name. Under languages, you can narrow your results to typefaces that support English by selecting ‘Latin’ (confusing, but we do use the Latin alphabet). Next, you can check the boxes to open slider menus and fine-tune your options for number of styles (variations on the font, like lighter, bolder, or italic), thickness, slant, and width. By choosing ‘serif’ and ‘Latin,’ you get 174 options for your petsitting website headline font. Bree Serif looks like it could work. To see how your copy will look, you can replace the dummy copy with your text by inserting the cursor, clearing out the dummy text, and entering ‘Our Petsitting Service Menu.’ (You can also click ‘apply to all fonts’ so we don’t have to retype it.) You can use the slider menu to resize the text anywhere from 8 to 112 points. You can also use the dropdown menu on the left to see how your copy looks in a sentence or paragraph or the alphabet and numerals in that font. Clicking the + button adds Bree Serif to a tray at the bottom, where you can collect all the fonts you want to use. When you’re ready to install them, click the black tray bar and you’ll see HTML and CSS code to embed the font in your site. (More on this below.) You can download as many fonts as you like, but Google recommends that you don’t download everything “just in case,” because of the time and space it would take. How Can You Use Google Fonts On Your Site? If you’re comfortable adding code to your site, you can use the Get Started with Google Fonts API guide to using stylesheets to specify the font families and styles you want on your site. You’ll also find out how to drastically reduce the font file size for headings and logos by optimizing font requests. For anyone who’s not comfortable editing their own site code, there are several plugins for WordPress that can install and manage Google Fonts for you. One of the most popular options, with more than 300,000 installations, is Easy Google Fonts . With this plugin, you can avoid editing the code for your site’s theme and you get a menu of all Google Fonts without having to manually select and download any of them. The plugin adds a typography menu in the WordPress Customize section of the dashboard, where you can select font families, styles, color, and other text elements for each type of header and text in your site theme. You can see a realtime preview of what each change you make will look like; visitors to your site will only see your changes if you save and publish them. To change text elements that aren’t part of your theme’s default controls, Easy Google Fonts allows you to create your own font controls that will show up in the Typography menu. After you choose the Google Fonts you want to use and make sure they look right in the preview, you’re ready to save and publish to update your site.   Update Your Fonts, Upgrade Your Site By updating your site’s fonts, you’re not only giving it an updated look, you’re also building a better user experience. Faster-loading fonts that are designed for on-screen readability are the key to keeping visitors coming back, especially as more people do their browsing on their phones. Find the post on the HostGator Blog Continue reading

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