Yeah, you can pick up a theme to bolt onto your WordPress website just about anywhere these days.
But why would you go just about anywhere to find something that’s so vital to your work? This is 2011 after all.
Your website should be stunningly designed.
It should make performing the basics of good SEO very simple.
You shouldn’t have to worry about things like state-of-the-art security, hassles with manual updates, or wondering if the underlying code of the theme you’re using is silently undermining all your work.
Oh, and it’d be cool if all of the above was found in one place. In 49 unique variations to choose from. Right?
Well, check this out …
Our StudioPress team has done the heavy lifting for you when it comes to website design, search optimization, and security.
Between our in-house StudioPress themes and our newly-built, StudioPress-approved, Theme Marketplace, we’ve got 49 stunning WordPress themes for you to lay on top of our rock-solid Genesis Framework for WordPress.
And, as always, there’s more going on over there than I can keep up with.
I’ll write more later about all the powerful plugins, the free (and growing) graphics library, etc.
For now, check out these two hand-made theme designs from the StudioPress.com workbench:
Scribble down a little note, or much more
Sometimes it’s personal.
Sometimes it’s business.
Either way, you need a place that’s yours to get it down.
Click here to straighten out your website with the Scribble theme.
Every company is a media company
Small business or large, you’re in the game.
Suburban, exurban, urban, or rural, you’ve got the opportunity to speak to the world.
We talk a lot around here about content and media. Take a step toward dominating your industry with this killer 21st century printing press.
Click here to setup your publishing empire on the Magazine theme.
Meanwhile, over at the StudioPress Theme Marketplace …
We introduced the StudioPress Theme Marketplace to you last month, and have since doubled the number of approved third-party themes available.
Ummm, there’s going to be no stopping this little shop.
Below is just a taste of what’s going on (and what’s coming) over at the StudioPress Theme Marketplace …
What will your grandchildren say?
We often think about the Internet (and what we do with it) as ephemeral. What if you thought different?
You may not be writing War and Peace, but you definitely want your best stuff out there in the wild.
Click here to leave your mark with the Legacy theme.
Legacy was designed by Wes Straham.
Style is the answer to everything
Come on, it’s time your content got the same treatment as those folks in the fashion industry.
You may not be in a professional makeup chair for three hours every morning, but your website can be in the equivalent. Ready for your closeup?
Click here to get your style on with the Fashionista theme.
Fashionista was designed by The Genesis Ninja.
56,459 people take WordPress further with StudioPress
OK, here’s the short version:
Our Genesis Framework from StudioPress empowers you to quickly and easily build incredible websites with WordPress.
With search-optimized code and functions, 49 turn-key designs, and unlimited support, updates, and websites you can build, Mashable calls Genesis the “best of the best” among premium WordPress themes.
56,459 online publishers trust Genesis to provide a solid foundation for their sites.
Whether you’re a novice or an advanced developer, Genesis provides you with the rock-solid infrastructure to take WordPress places you never thought it could go.
Get Genesis (and one, or all of the 49 themes) right here.
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Beware of fake Matts leaving comments
by Matt Cutts on December 11, 2011
A lot of the time, I dispel misconceptions by leaving comments on blogs. That works great, except for the rare occasion when someone pretends to be me and leaves a rude, fake, or otherwise untrue blog comment. Over the previous decade, I’ve only seen 4-5 times where someone impersonated me. But in the last month, I’ve seen at least three nasty comments written by “fake Matt Cutts” impersonators.
The first fake-Matt comment I remember was over Marketing Pilgrim around November 14th, 2011. When Frank Reed checked out the fake comment, it came from 74.120.13.132, which is an exit router for Tor. That means someone went to some trouble to hide their tracks.
The second not-Matt comment was on November 18th, 2011. The impersonator wrote:
The tone (and content) of the comment was so far off that Matt McGee questioned whether it was really me, and I was quickly able to clarify that I never wrote that comment.
The third one I’ve seen was just a few days ago on Search Engine Journal, and included gems like
The claim that “Google ranks AdWords advertisers higher in our search results” is fake and untrue; it was one of the first myths I debunked when I got online.
The web isn’t built to prevent impersonation. On many places around the web, anyone can leave a comment with someone else’s name. So if you see a comment that claims to be from me, but makes crazy claims (e.g. that we preference AdWords advertisers in our search results), let me know. I’m happy to verify whether I wrote a comment, e.g. with a tweet. Thanks.
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