Until late last year, I had a thriving business building and maintaining sites for a number of membership-driven organizations. I set these organizations up with a variety of open source content management systems—all the while, preaching the virtues of open source: It was flexible. They could easily teach web novices to update and maintain their sites. And they wouldn’t be “held hostage” to licensing fees or to developers who used indecipherable code.
I was sure that Worpress, Joomla, Drupal, and DNN were landmarks on the path to enlightenment.
Then Expression Engine shattered my world view. One of my customers casually asked me if I had heard of it—and if it was worth using to upgrade their Wordpress-built site. I had only heard that it was a blogging system—one where you string together a bunch of “weblogs.” But when I saw how enamored with it people seemed to be in the Forums, I was game for giving the Core version a try.
First, I went through tutorials groused about the “learning curve.” Then, I bumbled through building some test pages with the core—and wondered why particular tags worked or didn’t. Then came the moment…
I’m talking about the moment when I suddenly managed to make everything work in sync—and actually found myself saying “Cool” outloud!
... I soon realized that EE could do darned-near anything I wanted—and more than a few things I wasn’t smart enough to know I wanted. I realized just how limited my “prized” open source systems are. And most importantly, I realized that EE would enable me to build sites that would truly improve my customers’ ability to collaborate and communicate with their membership.
Now, I am trying to talk every darned one of them into letting me convert their sites to EE. I’m SO convinced that it’s the right move that I have offered to split the cost of the licenses with them: They’ll more than save it in updating costs and hassle factor.
In two short months, I have gone from open source zealot to drooling EE Fanboy. Has anybody else experienced this same phenomenon?