Templatic Themes Review
One of the first lessons I learned about making money online is you better use a premium worpress theme to make any serious progress. Enter Templatic Themes.
Don’t think for an instant you will make money online if you code and design your own websites. I just won’t happen. Consider this, if your average site generates $10-$20 a month, you will need at least 50-100 websites to generate $1000. Granted some sites will make far more than $10-$20, but I use this as an approximation. So unless you’re a complete expert in coding websites don’t waste your time. It didn’t take me long to know that using wordpress templates is the only way efficient way to make money on the internet. But not just any theme will do and unless your using a premium WordPress theme you sites are going to look amateurish at best.
Do You Need to Know HTML to Make Money Online?
The short answer is no, but it is helpful. If you’re into DIY projects, you know there is only so far you can go to creating a professional looking job. To do the job right it takes experience, the right tools and alot of situational “know-how”. Coding HTML or any other web designing language takes the same level of expertise if the job is going to look great. Now, I do recommend getting familiar enough with the language. You don’t have to become a coding ninja, just under what the code is saying, even if you don’t know how to “speak it”.
What is the Best WordPress Theme to Make Money?
This all depends on your money making strategy. For example, I have a site that relies heavily on user participation, so I use a theme that allows users to interact with one another. I have an article directory site that uses a a theme specifically designed for article submission. Templatice designed both of the aforementioned themes and they work really well. So let me answer the question this way: find a money making niche, determine the functionality needed, find a reputable theme builder such as Templatic.
What Should I Look for When Selecting a Premium Theme?
There are so may crappy theme designers out there it is hard to decide who to go with. Here is my quick guide to selecting a good theme designer.
- Stay away from gimmicky vendors. If they insinuate they can make you a ton of money online, stay away. SEO good content and a well defined niche market make you money, not a the theme.
- They must support their product and have a support link on their website. I also like to see a phone number just for kicks. Many premium theme designers offer clubs, I happen to like them since they update existing themes and rely on subscription revenue to update and develop new themes. I like when a company is committed to their product.
- Easy to install. I’ve downloaded a few themes and had the most difficult time installing them. Themes designers like Templatic are the closest to one-click install I’ve seen on the market.
- The theme must be lightweight in terms of coding. Having clean code will not only give you a better performing site, but also give you better load times, which Google likes to see.
- You get what you pay for, so avoid free themes. There are many free themes and they have their merits, but you should avoid if possible. Many have outgoing links and some even have coding that is suspect at best. The good new is many of the premium themes you purchase will allow you to install them on unlimited sites.
- Whatever theme you select, make sure it is SEO optimized, or at least make sure you’re using a wordpress plugin that help your SEO efforts.

