Are WordPress theme designers balling outta control?

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The majority of the themes with that many sales have been available for 2-3 years. Then TF takes their 30-50% cut. And on top of all of that, you have to provide support to the people who buy these themes.

It's still decent money *if* your theme becomes really popular, but it's a lot more work than you'd probably like to believe.

edit: Oh, and taxes, don't forget taxes.
 
You guys sure have your finger on the pulse of content management, setting your sights on this up-and-coming Word Press thing. With the razor-sharp business acumen and online publishing savvy evidenced here, as well as the deep, deep, deep, deep, deep technical knowledge WF members are famed far and wide for success is assured.
 
You guys sure have your finger on the pulse of content management, setting your sights on this up-and-coming Word Press thing. With the razor-sharp business acumen and online publishing savvy evidenced here, as well as the deep, deep, deep, deep, deep technical knowledge WF members are famed far and wide for success is assured.

Can't tell if serious.
 
You guys sure have your finger on the pulse of content management, setting your sights on this up-and-coming Word Press thing. With the razor-sharp business acumen and online publishing savvy evidenced here, as well as the deep, deep, deep, deep, deep technical knowledge WF members are famed far and wide for success is assured.
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From Wikipedia:
WordPress first appeared in 2003...
 
The majority of the themes with that many sales have been available for 2-3 years. Then TF takes their 30-50% cut. And on top of all of that, you have to provide support to the people who buy these themes.

It's still decent money *if* your theme becomes really popular, but it's a lot more work than you'd probably like to believe.

edit: Oh, and taxes, don't forget taxes.

^^
That's true. The most sold themes have been showcased for over 2 years. Of course there're exceptions.

I wanted to create a business around WordPress Themes. I can design (have decent skills in Photoshop/Fireworks), know about color theory and UI design, usability and of course, SEO. I produce my own themes and I was very excited to start a business in that niche. But after sites like NETTuts started to publish tutorials on how to create WP Themes, the competition started to become fierce. A lot of people start making their own themes: some were good, some were a POS but they were being sold anyway.

If you would like to make money in this niche, you would need themes nowhere seen before. It's tired to browse ThemeForest and find the same jQuery slider in almost all themes. They lost creativity and started copying popular themes.

I've bought 4-5 themes in ThemeForest and I wasn't satisfied with any of them. Maybe because I'm a developer and was expecting more, or maybe because their onpage SEO is awful.

It'd be interesting to see an alternate marketplace developed. I don't know anything about business, so maybe my idea is not factible. I just told you my POV from a designer/developer. Hope it helps in some way.
 
Actually I think it's the other way round, more sales = higher cut.

Yes, once you hit $75k in sales they only take 30% from there on out. You could hit that goal with just 1 or 2 really successful themes. There's more and more competition on Themeforest every day though. There are a lot of people who see the opportunity to make a decent income there.

Themeforest takes a big cut. Envato is a huge company, one of my friends works for them and their overheads are kind of ridiculous for the type of company they are running.

As far as these marketplaces go Envato is one of the more generous. iStock for example (Getty) starts at only 15%-25% payout and the max you can earn with them if you sell exclusively and hit approximately $1.5 mil in sales is 45%!

This dude's their top earner:

Actually as Tangy said, it's Kriesi who is their top earner by far. He hit $50k in sales in one month not long ago as well. He lives in Vienna.


Quite amazing really, but he has many themes and from what I can tell employs support staff to help his customers. His themes run on a framework and have a lot of customization options in the WP admin. Not a small undertaking.

It would certainly be possible to start a new Theme company or marketplace and be successful if the offerings are quality, but Envato is attractive because of it's reach and exposure and the infrastructure they've set up. You only have to worry about building quality themes and providing support for them as an author there whereas you would have to worry about 10 times as much stuff starting up your own company. As Subigo put it, it's a lot of work either way.
 
I've been seriously contemplating designing a theme / releasing it on themeforest the past few days.. The *only* thing holding me back is creating custom tabs for the theme so that people can easily modify certain aspects without touching the custom editor with html/css.. It seems like that's what most themes do now'adays, and I have no idea how to do that..

Any guys here have experience with the backend/coding end of custom WP themes? I'd be up for a joint venture with a single theme just as a case study.
 
You're looking at this all wrong. The market for WP themes has passed the fast growth stage, where anyone jumping in can make easy money.

It's now in the maturing stage, as evidenced by the fact most of the big money makers are theme companies, or people selling frameworks like Genesis and Thesis.

The barriers to entry for the pure themes market are now very low. Anybody with some graphic design skills and a buddy who's halfway decent at PHP can build one. That can mean only one thing: commoditization is approaching.

If you want to make real money now, stop trying to leap onto a bandwagon that's already slowing down, and look at solving a specific business problem with your skills.

For example, photography. Check out:

ProPhoto Blogs - Buy $199 for a wordpress theme

and

WordPress Photography Themes by Photocrati the "cheap" version at $89

Both offer a total solution to the need photographers have for a website. Compare that to photography wordpress themes which are selling for $30 on Themeforest.

I've been looking for a few hours (building a website for my dad for Xmas), and I can't find any others that do the same thing. You think there's room for another two or three in that market? You betcha.

And once that market's full.... look at who else uses wordpress a lot. Build something that's specific to their needs. I have a few more ideas, but I'm not gonna share 'em because I'm planning to do something with them myself. ;)
 
You guys sure have your finger on the pulse of content management, setting your sights on this up-and-coming Word Press thing. With the razor-sharp business acumen and online publishing savvy evidenced here, as well as the deep, deep, deep, deep, deep technical knowledge WF members are famed far and wide for success is assured.

fuckin lold
 
Host themeforest files on offshore server.
Give out 90% Discounts.
?????legal????
Profit
 
So I usually buy my themes from ThemeForest, which I find awesome for its large selection and quality themes. It was never really a problem for me to shell out $30-$50 for quality theme since I believe the designer should be rewarded for their good work.

Today though, I've been looking at the amount of downloads (sales) each theme has, and thought to myself: Why the fuck am I NOT in this business?

elegant - files | ThemeForest

Most themes have over 1,000 sales, with many of them having more than 10,000 muthafuckin sales! I just bought one that has 7,841 sales (the top one in the above link) at $35 each, that's $274,435 right in the theme designer's bank account. How much do you think this theme costs to develop? $5,000 AT MOST? Do you see the mothafuckin profit here? Madness.

Oh... and I'm only counting people like me buying the regular license at $35... god knows how many people are buying the extended license at $1,750

MY MIND = BLOWN

Look at their alexa ranking. No different from templatemonster.
 
As with many industries you have a very small % making a fortune and the vast majority making nothing or just a small side income. The fact that maybe one guy made $50k/month is not an indication that there is easy money to be made. It always amuses me that people will see someone doing very well, and automatically assume that their business could be easily replicated.
 
Easy there, bro, you just see the "happy ending" where people made the big money. Those designers have worked very hard to get where they are now. I'd bet most gave up.
 
You guys sure have your finger on the pulse of content management, setting your sights on this up-and-coming Word Press thing. With the razor-sharp business acumen and online publishing savvy evidenced here, as well as the deep, deep, deep, deep, deep technical knowledge WF members are famed far and wide for success is assured.
lololoool
hilarious!