Why We Kept Gutenberg for the Blog and Elementor for Everything Else

We stopped trying to force every page into the same editing model. The blog belongs to Gutenberg because it is editorial. The product and funnel pages belong to Elementor because they are conversion surfaces.

Why the split works

Gutenberg is efficient for structured writing, articles, and documentation-style content.

Elementor is stronger for landing pages, feature grids, pricing blocks, hero sections, and CTA-heavy layouts.

Why it matters commercially

Buyers can tell when a site was built with the right tool for the job.

A mixed content model signals that the product understands how WordPress actually gets used.

What the split protects

The blog remains easier to maintain, while the marketing pages stay design-controlled and conversion-oriented.

That separation keeps product pages from becoming editorial clutter and keeps the blog from becoming over-designed.

Implementation lesson

Pick the editor that matches the content model instead of forcing one system everywhere.

That decision improves both usability and commercial clarity.

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