Title: Stability
Last modified: December 28, 2020

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# Stability

 *  [sellingsvibe](https://wordpress.org/support/users/sellingsvibe/)
 * (@sellingsvibe)
 * [5 years, 5 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/stability/)
 * Hi. I am running the multi-vendor website like amazon and eBay in Hong Kong. 
   As my site will only grow bigger and bigger in the future. I start to worry: 
   Will the WordPress crack in the way the server is overload or something like 
   that? Once the users reach, let’s take it critically, 100,000 or the products
   in the site more than 100,000. Will the site malfunction/become seriously slow
   or something like that? What will be the suggestion? I was advised to change 
   a platform from WordPress to laravel but don’t know anything about this.
 * The page I need help with: _[[log in](https://login.wordpress.org/?redirect_to=https%3A%2F%2Fwordpress.org%2Fsupport%2Ftopic%2Fstability%2F%3Foutput_format%3Dmd&locale=en_US)
   to see the link]_

Viewing 8 replies - 1 through 8 (of 8 total)

 *  [George Appiah](https://wordpress.org/support/users/gappiah/)
 * (@gappiah)
 * [5 years, 5 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/stability/#post-13838239)
 * Laravel is not a content management system (CMS), let alone aready-to-run
    e-
   commerce platform. It’s a PHP framework, so you need a programmer who knows PHP
   and is very experienced with building e-commerce applications to use it to build
   whatever application you need. Think of this as building your own version of 
   WordPress/Woocommerce from scratch.
 * To your specific question, yes and yes and yes and yes…. your website is going
   to “crack” and get “overloaded” and “malfunction” and “become slowly”… IRRESPECTIVE
   OF WHATEVER SOFTWARE YOU USE… if you have hundreds of thousands of products with
   a proportionate amount of traffic and orders, and it’s sitting on a tiny little
   server, or god-forbid, on a shared hosting account.
 * Whatever software you use, you need the right infrastructure to run it.
 * And whatever software you use, beyond a certain point, you’re going to have to
   tweak the application to better handle the load you’re throwing at it.
 * WordPress.com uses the same WordPress software to run millions of websites (including
   some very large e-commerce and news websites. But you can safely bet that their“
   WordPress” has a lot of customizations and optimizations, along with a massive
   infrasture and dozens of full-time engineers working around the clock to keep
   the ship afloat.
 * I’m NOT in any way saying WordPress and it’s leading e-commerce plugin, Woocommerce,
   don’t have their flaws.
 * I’m just saying you should put things in their proper perspective: a growing 
   website will surely have growing pains, irrespective of what software you use.
   Some software may surely be able to handle those growing pains better than others,
   but you’ll still need the appropriate infrastructure and expertise to keep the
   boat afloat.
 * I’ll also want you to consider other options before building your own e-commerce
   application from scratch with Laravel.
 * 1) Consider using other free and opensource applications specifically made for
   e-commerce (WordPress is a general-purpose publishing software, and e-commerce
   is just an add-on): eg Magento, OpenCart, Prestashop, ZenCart, etc.
 * 2) Consider using a hosted e-commerce platform. Eg Shopify, GrooveKart, Volution,
   BigCommerce, Ecwid, Squaresapce, etc. You’ll have limited features, but you’ll
   never have to worry about the software itself. And you’ll surely be paying more
   and more as your site grows!
 * Good luck!
 *  Thread Starter [sellingsvibe](https://wordpress.org/support/users/sellingsvibe/)
 * (@sellingsvibe)
 * [5 years, 5 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/stability/#post-13838396)
 * Whatever software you use, you need the right infrastructure to run it. >>> The
   infrastructure refers to Server?
 * If WordPress could support the scale-like Amazon/eBay, there are no reasons for
   me to leave.
 * I will hire a professional developer team and expand my server capabilities accordingly
   while my site is growing. As long as my server is powerful enough, it should 
   keep my site running alright?
 * I am also aware that the security of WordPress seems not good. It’s horrible 
   as there’re lots of transaction going go during a day and customer information
   stored in my site.
 * I want to stay WordPress as I built a lot of custom works already. And everything
   runs smoothly.
 *  [George Appiah](https://wordpress.org/support/users/gappiah/)
 * (@gappiah)
 * [5 years, 5 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/stability/#post-13838435)
 * > I am also aware that the security of WordPress seems not good. It’s horrible
   > as there’re lots of transaction going go during a day and customer information
   > stored in my site.
 * If are “aware”, AND you believe it, then why bother building your empire on a
   foundation that you believe to have “horrible” security as you say?
 *  Thread Starter [sellingsvibe](https://wordpress.org/support/users/sellingsvibe/)
 * (@sellingsvibe)
 * [5 years, 5 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/stability/#post-13838446)
 * I got this info yesterday. Not knowing if it’s true or not.
 * Also, I used WordPress for 3 years and I only know WordPress.
 *  [Olga Gleckler](https://wordpress.org/support/users/oglekler/)
 * (@oglekler)
 * [5 years, 5 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/stability/#post-13838571)
 * The weakest point of most sites no matter of the system are users passwords, 
   if they are weak (or leaked out), it’s only a matter of time when the site will
   get problems. The other possible source of the problems – plugins with vulnerabilities.
   Big problems are rare and usually, from this point, there needs to be a whole
   combination of circumstances to get damage. With WordPress itself all security
   fixes, even smallest, ones are not only applied to the current version but also
   are backported to older versions (to a reasonable amount of versions) and this
   minor updates are automatic, so, if no one force system turned off auto-updates,
   WordPress itself is safe.
    Any system has risks, but in case if writing from 
   scratch, there is a much higher risk to get holes in the system and WordPress
   is supported by a big community and any change got many looks and tests before
   becoming a part of the Core.
 *  Thread Starter [sellingsvibe](https://wordpress.org/support/users/sellingsvibe/)
 * (@sellingsvibe)
 * [5 years, 5 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/stability/#post-13838741)
 * I see.
    I have many plugins installed (above 70+), they play an important role
   in my site’s functionality. I encountered many plugins issues before and luckily
   I got all fixed.
 * If users passwords were leaked, it lies on their responsibility to pay the consequences.
   
   When my site growing bigger and more functionality/customization work implemented,
   I worry the WordPress system will malfunction.
 * What I want to know is that, will WordPress powerful enough to handle all the“
   Files” and “custom works implemented” while there’s a lot of users using the 
   website?
 * Let just assume that I have hired a team of developers and I am using the best
   service from hosting company, let’s say, cloud hosting, 12 CPU Cores, 40 GB RAM,
   50 GB SSD Space (from hosting company). In this case, will the WordPress handle
   all the request/traffic/workload easily and smoothly?
 * Sorry I don’t know anything about the relationship between WordPress and “Hosting
   company”.
 *  [Olga Gleckler](https://wordpress.org/support/users/oglekler/)
 * (@oglekler)
 * [5 years, 5 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/stability/#post-13838884)
 * I meant users with privileges to edit content, install plugins etc, not customers.
 * [https://make.wordpress.org/marketing/tag/case-studies/](https://make.wordpress.org/marketing/tag/case-studies/)–
   there are some examples what can be done on WordPress. Right now it’s even better.
   And there is an ability to third party integration and very rich API.
 * At some point, you may want to optimize some functions and order plugins made
   by your own purposes and there are also other possibilities for optimization.
 * The ability to handle all transactions isn’t only about CPU and RAM, it’s much
   more complicated but completely possible, look at wordpress.com, it’s a huge 
   service.
 * You can predict the growth of your service, make a staging site and order load
   simulation with fake transactions to see the limitation.
 *  Thread Starter [sellingsvibe](https://wordpress.org/support/users/sellingsvibe/)
 * (@sellingsvibe)
 * [5 years, 5 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/stability/#post-13838954)
 * Well, thanks for the info.
 * I will stay in WordPress. Go through all the hard times with you together!
 * Because I just love WordPress.

Viewing 8 replies - 1 through 8 (of 8 total)

The topic ‘Stability’ is closed to new replies.

 * In: [Developing with WordPress](https://wordpress.org/support/forum/wp-advanced/)
 * 8 replies
 * 3 participants
 * Last reply from: [sellingsvibe](https://wordpress.org/support/users/sellingsvibe/)
 * Last activity: [5 years, 5 months ago](https://wordpress.org/support/topic/stability/#post-13838954)
 * Status: not resolved

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