WP Engine Review
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How I found out about WP Engine first?
I first learned about WP Engine long time ago.
Back when the company first started in 2010, I did an online interview with its cofounder Jason Cohen (href="http://www.webhostingsecretrevealed.net/blog/interviews/interview-with-wp-engine-co-founder-jason-cohen/">you can read it here). Not many have heard about the name “WP Engine” (what a weird name, by the way) back then, but the company was growing exponentially. Many well known bloggers and businesses (including HTC, FourSquare, Balsamiq, Sound Cloud) were switching over.
A year after the interview, I got a free basic account and moved WHSR over. The migration process was very smooth and my site load time was halved instantly. Needless to say – I was very happy and stayed for more than 2 years.
Shortly after Google Penguin (which WHSR took a big hit), I decided to change and started rebuilding everything from ground zero. The idea was to grow WHSR into a web service provider, build a community around ourselves, and rely less on Google traffic. That was the time when WHSR Uptime Monitor was made and we switched back to conventional VPS hosting environment.
The year was 2013.
Today’s WP Engine
Over time, WP Engine has grown into an extremely popular web host. Many things have changed since WHSR shifted out. Various new features were added as technology advances, the company is funded by a large group of investors including Automattic (the folks behind WordPress.com), and many bloggers and WP experts regard them as one of the best managed WordPress hosting (there were also some who go against them, more about that later).
To give you better accuracy on WP Engine, I did a new round of study in October/November 2015 and brought you this brand new review.
But first – special discount.
Exclusive Discount – Save 20% on First 3 Months
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[Update Nov 2015] Coupon Code: WPE20 / 20% Discount on First 3 Months
Latest discount – use promo code WPE20 when you order WP Engine and you’ll get 20% off for your first 3 months. Personal plan starts at .20/mo after discount; .20/mo and 9.2/mo for Professional and Business respectively.
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My Experience With WP Engine (2012 – 2015)
2012 – 2013 Period
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My experience with WP Engine during the early days was nothing but WOW.
In brief –
- Hassle-free site migration The migration process from Hostgator (WHSR’s old host) was ultra smooth. All I did was provide some login details and Jeremy (WP Engine tech person) sorted everything out for me.
- Hosting speed Site load time halved instantly (see image) and scored 100% uptime in most period. As you can see from the chart – WHSR’s response time improved almost 100% (as measured by Pingdom) right after the site migration (no other fine-tuning was made when measured).
- Save money As daily backup and malware scan were provided, I canceled my Vault Press subscription on the second month. Seeing that VaultPress charged /mo back then, switching to WP Engine actually saved me money even if it wasn’t a free account.
2013 – 2015 Period
Ever since I moved out, I work with a friend who’s hosting his site on WP Engine. The following are some of the uptime scores we recorded.
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class="wp-caption-text">WP Engine hosting uptime score for the past 30 days (Sept 2015). Note that site has not down for 1757 hours.
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class="wp-image-11109 size-full" src="http://whsr.webrevenueinc1.netdna-cdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/wpengine-hosting.jpg" alt="wpengine hosting" width="750" height="283" srcset="http://whsr.webrevenueinc1.netdna-cdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/wpengine-hosting.jpg 750w, http://whsr.webrevenueinc1.netdna-cdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/wpengine-hosting-300x113.jpg 300w" sizes="(max-width: 750px) 100vw, 750px" />
class="wp-caption-text">WP Engine hosting uptime score for the past 30 days (September 2014).
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class="wp-caption-text">WP Engine hosting uptime score for the past 30 days (August 2014)
Must Know: My Recent Study in 2015/2016 – Why WP Engine is back as my 5-star Host?
Looking at the charts and all the positive reviews – I believe there’s no doubt that WP Engine has one of the most reliable and fastest WordPress host in town. So instead of beating the dead horse again, I dug into the two issues that some bloggers complained about – visit counts and customer support.
WP Engine Hosting Uptime (Feb 2016) – 99.97%
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class="wp-caption-text">WP Engine Hosting uptime scores (Feb 2016), test site went down for a brief minute on Feb 17th, 2016.
WP Engine Hosting Uptime (Nov 2015) – 100%
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class="size-full wp-image-16823" src="http://whsr.webrevenueinc1.netdna-cdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/06/WP-Engine-uptime-scores-nov-2015.jpg" alt="WP Engine Hosting uptime scores (Nov 2015)" width="750" height="283" srcset="http://whsr.webrevenueinc1.netdna-cdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/06/WP-Engine-uptime-scores-nov-2015.jpg 750w, http://whsr.webrevenueinc1.netdna-cdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/06/WP-Engine-uptime-scores-nov-2015-300x113.jpg 300w" sizes="(max-width: 750px) 100vw, 750px" />
class="wp-caption-text">WP Engine Hosting uptime scores (Nov 2015)
1. Visit Counts (Issue Solved)
One of the biggest complaints on WP Engine is how they charge their customers – as a user, you will be charged based on visit. WP Engine entry plan, for example, allows up to 25,000 visits per month. If you blog attracts more than 25,000 visits in a month, you’ll need to pay more.
So, more visits = more CPU resources usage = higher host fees. Fair? No, not fair. According to Harsh from href="http://www.shoutmeloud.com/wpengine-cons-picing.html">this Shout Me Loud post (last updated April 2015) – Because WP Engine is also charging on bots visits and has not implemented any measures to block bad bots (unlike conventional hosting, users can’t setup their robots.txt to block bad bots at WP Engine). Users were forced to pay overages due to bots visits.
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Solution
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class="size-full wp-image-16820" src="http://whsr.webrevenueinc1.netdna-cdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/06/wp-engine.jpg" alt=""No more bots", - says WP Engine." width="750" height="312" srcset="http://whsr.webrevenueinc1.netdna-cdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/06/wp-engine.jpg 750w, http://whsr.webrevenueinc1.netdna-cdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/06/wp-engine-300x125.jpg 300w" sizes="(max-width: 750px) 100vw, 750px" />
class="wp-caption-text">“No more bots”, – says WP Engine.
WP Engine href="https://wpengine.com/blog/bot-traffic-removed-from-overages/" target="_blank">removed bot visits from their billable visits calculations starting October 13, 2015.
Problem solved.
2. Customer Support
WP Engine supports was top class during my first stay (2012 – 2013). Every support single staff that I spoke to was a WordPress wizard. And they were so passionate with their job – that you can tell from how quick they reply your emails – their ticketing support system was like a live chat where I got almost instant responses every time.
However if you search around and you’ll noticed that here were quite some complaints on WP Engine customer support in 2014, including this href="http://www.matthewwoodward.co.uk/reviews/webhost-trusted-wp-engine-hijacked-business-avoid-them/">lengthy review by Matthew Woodward. The complains, generally speaking, focus on two things –
- Uninformed / inexperienced support staffs,
- Slow responses (some even said their requests were ignored), and
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Solution
Mounting criticism of the company has prompted the response by WP Engine founder Jason Cohen in this blog post in May 2014 – href="https://wpengine.com/blog/growth-hard/">Growth is Hard. To address the issue, seven immediate actions were taken, including hiring new support staffs (they have increased the support team by 50% since then) and allow customers to reach out the company’s engineer directly (read quotes below).
- Hiring. We closed our Series C financing in January and immediately put it to work in hiring in the Support Team. We’ve increase the team by 50% since then. It’s very hard to hire quickly and yet maintain our standards of both attitude (culture) and aptitude (ability). We’ve even hired additional internal recruiters to help us accelerate this process.
- Direct-to-Engineer. Some of our customers are highly technical, so whenever they contact us, it’s with difficult, interesting problems—not ones that can be solved with a knowledge base article or a simple, obvious response. Therefore, we started creating pathways for those customers to get to engineers faster—people who can work on the mind-bending stuff. Of course we don’t have that 24/7 yet, like we do with regular support. Fortunately, those problems are usually OK to be solved during normal business hours, so overall this approach has been effective.
By looking at these response from the company top person, I think this explains why there were a lot less complaints and outrages customers in 2015. I do not consider this as a solved case; but I am convinced that WP Engine users are much better supported today compare to 2014.
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The Pros: What I like about WP Engine
Here are the main things I like about WP Engine –
- Premium managed WordPress hosting – Extremely reliable and fast hosting; user satisfaction in server performance guaranteed since 2011. And, not to mention that WP Engine’s uptime is backed by SLA – you get refunds if the host is not serving you enough uptime.
- Worry-free – Daily backup and malware scan. Plus, they will fix everything if your site is hacked.
- Cost efficient / cheap – Yes, WP Engine is in fact cheap if you factor in the features that were built directly into the hosting. For examples – VaultPress costs /mo, Blog Vault Plus costs /mo, Sucuri (for Malware scanning) charges .66/mo for one site, MaxCDN costs /mo (free MaxCDN if you go with WP Engine Professional Plan and above) – you can forget about all these add-on costs if you go with WP Engine.
- Staging Sites – A staging site is like a playground for your blog. The feature allows you to test stuffs, find bugs, and redesign your site without jeopardizing your current site operation.
- LargeFS – A feature where you can sync all your files with a nominated Amazon S3 bucket so theoretically you have unlimited storage for your site.
- Evercache – WP Engine’s in-house caching technology for massive scalability and speed.
- 1 –click Restore – Forget about cron. WP Engine supports instant backup plus 1-click restore with easy Snapshot Backups.
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Important: Three Things You Need to Know about WP Engine
Before you get hooked, there are a few issues with WP Engine that you should know. We don’t live in a perfect world, so there are always pros and cons.
1. WordPress Sites Only
Keep in mind that WP Engine is a WordPress-only hosting. This means if your site is not WordPress base, then you can’t host your site at WP Engine.
You may ask, “Isn’t dumb to limit your market and focus only on WordPress users?”.
Truth is – I was equally surprised when I first found out about this (WordPress is not as big as today back in 2011) and I asked Jason about this during our interview session:
When asked “How has the strategy of solely focusing on WordPress users affected the business?”
Jason answered: “Focusing only on WordPress means we can do a fantastic job. For example we hire WordPress experts only, so everyone at the company is helpful and knowledgeable when you call into tech support.
Lots of hosting companies answer the phone on the first ring and call that “good service.” Of course if the person on the other end can’t debug the WordPress problem, at the end of the day it’s not helpful. We know what we’re good at — and what we’re NOT good at! — and we do only the former.”
“That’s how it affects you — the customer. How it affects the back-end business is that we can be more profitable because we don’t have to diversify technology or talent. American Airlines can’t make money because they service 20 kinds of planes; Southwest and JetBlue are profitable and run only a few models. We’re like the latter; most hosting companies are the former.”
2. WP Engine can be costly for multi-sites owners
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Referring to the image above – WP Engine hosting plans, Personal (/mo), Professional (/mo), and Business (9/mo), support 1/10/25 domains respectively. If you are running a number of low traffic sites then it is much better to host them with the usual shared hosting that normally cost to per month.
But bear in mind that I am not saying WP Engine is costly. They are not.
WP Engine Price Comparison
Here’s a quick comparison on WP Engine pricing with two other similar hosts.
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| scope="col">Features / WP Host | scope="col" align="center" width="150">WP Engine | scope="col" align="center" width="150">Pressidium | scope="col" align="center" width="150">Pressable
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Plans | | align="center">Personal / Professional / Business | align="center">Personal / Professional / Business | align="center">A / B / C
Number of Sites | | align="center" width="150">1 / 10 / 25 | align="center" width="150">3 / 10 / 25 | align="center" width="150">5 / 10 /20
Monthly Visits | | align="center" width="150">25k / 100k / 400k | align="center" width="150">30k / 100k / 500k | align="center" width="150">15k / 50k / 100k
Storage | | align="center" width="150">10GB / 20GB / 30GB | align="center" width="150">10GB / 20GB / 30GB | align="center" width="150">–
CDN | | align="center">+.99/mo / Free / Free | align="center">+/mo / +/mo / Free | align="center">Free / Free / Free
Trial | | align="center">60 days | align="center">60 days | align="center">15 days
Exclusive Discounts | | align="center">WPE20 – 20% discount on first 3 months | align="center">– | align="center">–
Monthly Price | | align="center" width="150">.55 / .05 / 6.55 | align="center" width="150">.90 / .90 / 9.90 | align="center" width="150">.83 / .50 / .00
3. No Email Hosting
WP Engine does not provide email or webmail features. This means if you want an email address ending with your domain name (something like email@mydomain.com), you will need to host your own email accounts.
Yes, I know you can always go with Gmail as Google provides free email hosting services (as recommended by WPEngine); but not all website owners want their data to be hosted with the big G (me included!).
However, stay no fear. I have tried a few different solutions when I switched my host to WP Engine and written this lengthy article on overcome the issue – href="http://www.webhostingsecretrevealed.net/blog/featured-articles/email-hosting-guide/">What to do when your web host does not provide email hosting services – so… no big deal with that.
WP Engine Special Discounts
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[Update October 2015] Coupon Code: WPE20 / 20% Discount on First 3 Months
Latest discount – use promo code WPE20 when you order WP Engine and you’ll get 20% off for your first 3 months. Personal plan starts at .20/mo after discount; .20/mo and 9.2/mo for Professional and Business respectively.
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