What do you look for in a “premium grade” WordPress theme?

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… Is it an advanced fea­ture set? Is it a cut­ting edge design? Is it a com­bin­a­tion of both with a sprink­ling of pixie dust for extra magic? What do you look for in a “premium grade” WordPress theme? I use the term “premium grade” as I’m not refer­ing spe­cific­ally to paid-​​for or “premium” WordPress themes, but rather to themes of a high standard.

With such a vast array of free (and paid-​​for) WordPress themes on the mar­ket today, it’s easy to get lost, wad­ing through the thou­sands of themes avail­able. As many of the themes are user cre­ated, and not every­one has exper­i­ence or train­ing as a web designer or developer, users get presen­ted with many sub-​​par WordPress themes. In con­trast to this, the themes mar­ket is becom­ing more and more advanced on a daily basis, open­ing doors for users to exper­i­ment with more advanced, theme spe­cific, func­tion­al­ity, enhan­cing their themes and mak­ing them unique and personalised.

With this advance­ment in the “premium grade” themes mar­ket, users are also becom­ing more expect­ant, and crit­ical, of the themes which they are presen­ted. It is becom­ing more com­mon and expec­ted for a theme to have a clever design hook of sorts, some nifty Javascript or an addi­tional “unique” cus­tom fea­ture, if not all three.

So my ques­tion is; “What makes a theme ‘premium grade’ in your eyes?”

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16 Comments

  1. Posted 27th March, 2009 at 9:13 am (532 days ago)

    Thats an inter­est­ing ques­tion because I am look­ing to change my WP theme soon because I will be adding the Shopp plu­gin to my self-​​hosted WP blog. In that case, I will be look­ing for some­thing that can sup­port my exist­ing blog and Shopp, but I’m not quite sure what all I will need yet.…

    • Posted 27th March, 2009 at 1:50 pm (532 days ago) in reply to Carla

      Thanks for your reply, Carla. :)

      Yeah, find­ing a theme that us robust enough to accom­mod­ate vari­ous plu­gins is very important.

      A simple theme usu­ally does the trick. :)

  2. Posted 27th March, 2009 at 2:26 pm (532 days ago)

    First up, I can offer a little bit of user feed­back from the WooThemes sur­vey that we ran last year… The two most import­ant fea­tures of our themes (in the eyes of our users) — which were ranked as *extremely import­ant* — were Customizability & Easy-​​to-​​use Theme Options.

    So based on that, I’d stick to my man­tra that the code-​​base of the theme should be super­ior. Because not only are the value-​​added options built onto that base; but that also highly influ­ences the cus­tom­iz­ab­il­ity of the theme!

    • Posted 27th March, 2009 at 2:30 pm (532 days ago) in reply to Adii Rockstar

      Hey Adii. :)

      Agreed re: the code base. A solid base leads to solid addi­tions on top of that base.

      Also agreed re: the cus­tom­isa­tion and options panel. Considering the user from all angles is extremely import­ant. Handing over con­trol of the theme, where neces­sary, is also an import­ant fea­ture, in my opinion.

      Do users, in your opin­ion, focus more on the design or on the func­tion­al­ity and unique addi­tions the theme offers?

  3. Posted 27th March, 2009 at 2:28 pm (532 days ago)

    I have paid a for a lot of themes recently but none of them really meet the grade. Most are miss­ing the simple things I would expect in a free theme like CSS com­ments. I would really love to see some themes with min­imal HTML markup all the cur­rent themes seem bloated and uncommented.

    • Posted 27th March, 2009 at 2:33 pm (532 days ago) in reply to Daniel

      Hey Daniel. Thanks for your com­ment. :)

      I agree. A nice simple code struc­ture, with a few com­ments (where neces­sary), is very important.

      I’ve learned a lot from look­ing through code struc­tures of vari­ous themes. Comments would def­in­itely help users to learn and to even­tu­ally get to design­ing and devel­op­ing their own themes, wid­gets and plu­gins, should they wish to do that. :)

  4. Posted 27th March, 2009 at 2:31 pm (532 days ago)

    In a premium theme I look for some­thing that sets it apart form the rest. That is easy to use (noob proof wid­get­ized) and has SEO, and all other essen­tial fea­tures built in.
    A theme that I almost bought some time ago was http://www.premiumthemes.com/preview/?theme=perfection the prob­lem here is that the cre­ator has free ver­sions of themes that almost look the same. Only if i’m really lazy to modify those into this clean 2-​​col ver­sion with cat­egor­ies menu, then id still buy it.. So the premium ver­sion really needs to ad value. In this case the added value could only be seen by me if the price would be much lower +-30$.
    For the price of 70$ for a premium theme I’d like to have some cus­tom­iz­a­tion sup­port, I think most sellers are offer­ing this. A premium theme that can eas­ily be cus­tom­ized (own col­ors) is a plus I think.

    • Posted 27th March, 2009 at 2:37 pm (532 days ago) in reply to Antonio Thonis

      Thanks Antonio. :)

      I agree. When you step into the “premium themes” mar­ket, value becomes very import­ant. Users’ defin­i­tions of what adds value and what doesn’t add value can be dif­fer­ent, though. Hence, many themers try to add as much value as pos­sible from all angles, and the theme chances becom­ing bloated and over­flow­ing with func­tion­al­ity. This can be neg­at­ive for both the user and the developer, as man hours have been used for very little return and the user gets con­fron­ted with large amounts of extras, which could be con­fus­ing or just too much, at times.

      SEO fea­tures are a def­in­ite value adding addi­tion. If the user’s exper­i­ence is easy and pleas­ant, I believe the developer and designer have done their bit… extra bells and whistles or not. :)

      In some cases, less is more. :)

  5. Posted 27th March, 2009 at 2:37 pm (532 days ago)

    For me it is a theme which has cus­tom­iz­able options which actu­ally work as well as clean code. There is noth­ing I can­not stand more than a CSS file which has not got doc­u­ment­a­tion or tag­ging. Freaks me out.

    And of course the theme has to look good :P

    • Posted 27th March, 2009 at 2:39 pm (532 days ago) in reply to David Perel

      Thanks Dave. Totally agreed re: clean and doc­u­mented code. Can be invalu­able. Even a readme.txt file would be cool, just to get an idea of how the theme works. :)

      The ques­tion is, does form fol­low func­tion or visa versa? ;)

  6. Posted 27th March, 2009 at 2:50 pm (532 days ago)

    Yeah I know what you mean a theme should be per­fec­tion­ized for one object­ive. I kinda feel like there is a lack of simple, but eleg­ant look­ing out of the box premium themes for hard­core 2-​​columns blog­ging (with cat­egor­ies as header menu).

    Shades of blue gets close http://www.studiopress.com/demo/shades/ (no cat­egor­ies menu) and the Perfection theme in my last post (col­ors need edit­ing), but both aren’t eleg­ant, amaz­ing, apart look­ing out of the box. That’s why I’m kinda wait­ing for Meta-​​Morphosis theme to be released. (Luckily its free even).
    Maybe there is some mar­ket for 2column hard­core simple blog themes.. Dunno, do you know any more themes that look like this?

    • Posted 27th March, 2009 at 3:42 pm (532 days ago) in reply to Antonio Thonis

      Yeah, I like a simple yet eleg­ant theme as well.

      In terms of two-​​column blog­ging themes, I quite like “Typebased” by Woothemes. A nice clean theme, with a few simple design ele­ments and a solid 2 column layout.

      I tried to go for a clean, two column lay­out as well. I’ve always been a fan of simple, clean, even min­im­al­ist web designs. :)

  7. Posted 27th March, 2009 at 3:57 pm (532 days ago)

    Like adii men­tioned. I look for the cod­ing and features.

    when I pay or look for a premium I want to see the fol­low­ing:
    1. Professional Coding (most import­ant)
    + this means the Css, Html, and php code is clearly labled and used prop­erly. If you include the Psd the lay­ers should be labelled.

    –The worst ones are those who use an image for the main lay­out. Sure it looks great on the sur­face but the minute you want to change or expand a para­graph the whole thing col­lapses. (thank­fully I have seen less of this lately)

    2. Unique usage and design
    + Give me some­thing that I can­not find in a free­bie. Something like auto­matic image res­ize included in your theme is a good start. Makes my life easier. Big fan lately of using jQuery effects to help set it apart.
    + Areas that include easy place­ment of widgets

    3. Graphics
    + This is the sprinkles on the top. It can be hard for someone like me who is not graph­ic­ally intune. This will catch my atten­tion to even look into a premium theme. Being a premium and meet­ing the first two I know I can imple­ment the graph­ics I may need to change.

  8. Posted 27th March, 2009 at 4:25 pm (532 days ago)

    A simple theme, with a neat align­ment, well-​​thought typo­graphy hier­archy, and a grid-​​based lay­out. That makes a theme premium. To my eyes :)

  9. Posted 27th March, 2009 at 5:43 pm (532 days ago)

    @DailyPush : Thanks for your com­ment. :) So it’s essen­tially code struc­ture and neat­ness first, unique/​creative design and then the graph­ics, in your opin­ion. Is that correct?

    I agree that the user exper­i­ence is import­ant (auto­matic res­iz­ing of images, etc). This makes the user want to use your theme and to try out what it can do. Attention to the flow of your theme is also import­ant, in my opin­ion. What the user’s eye reads first, etc.

    @Daus : Thanks Daus. What you say is exactly on the point, in terms of the lay­out. Simple, neat and well con­sidered in all it’s aspects, is a theme that would work for me as well. A bit of extra fun­citon­al­ity to enhance the user exper­i­ence wouldn’t hurt either. ;)

  10. wppowered's Gravatarwppowered
    Posted 28th March, 2009 at 12:43 am (532 days ago)

    In my eyes, like Daus said simple, clean, neat typography.

    But what might make a premium theme in my eyes, might not be in other peoples eyes.

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