Our story
Plugin sprawl is a tax. We wanted it gone.
PowerSuite started as a frustration shared by anyone who builds on WordPress for a living: too many plugins, doing too little each, all demanding attention.
The problem we kept hitting
A typical production site collects plugins the way a desk collects cables. One for redirects, one for a contact form, one to send mail reliably, one to convert images, one to limit login attempts. Each is small. Together they’re a maintenance burden, a dozen update cycles, a dozen changelogs, and a dozen chances for two of them to disagree.
The cost isn’t only your time. Every active plugin ships its own scripts and styles, registers its own hooks, and adds weight a visitor’s browser has to carry. The more you install, the slower and more fragile the site becomes.
The idea: one plugin, many modules
PowerSuite collapses that drawer of single-purpose plugins into one library of 147 self-contained modules. The crucial part is the architecture: a module that’s switched off does nothing at all. It registers no hooks, enqueues no assets, runs no queries. You pay only for what you turn on.
That means you can install the equivalent of a security plugin, an SEO plugin, an image optimiser and a backup tool, and still keep your site leaner than the multi-plugin version, because everything you don’t need stays dormant.
How we build
Who it’s for
Freelancers who maintain a handful of client sites. Agencies standardising a stack across dozens. Site owners who simply want fewer moving parts. If you’ve ever audited a site and thought “why are there nineteen plugins here,” PowerSuite was built for you.
Fewer plugins. Faster sites. One thing to maintain.
That’s the whole pitch. The rest is just deciding which modules to switch on.
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