Filed in: Authors, Editors, Featured, Web Design — April 5, 2026

Choosing the best website platform as an indie author, book editor, publisher, or literary agent can feel overwhelming. There are seemingly endless website platforms to choose from, and you may feel like you’re drowning in too many options, opinions and conflicting advice.
Should you go with Wix because it’s easy or Squarespace because it has great templates? What about WordPress (WP)? It seems like everyone in the bookish world is a WP fan. Or what about investing in Showit because so many creatives rave about it? The comparison list can feel never-ending 😵💫
As a website designer, let me share a little secret with you: there actually isn’t a single “best” website platform for everyone in the book industry. The key is to find the best platform for YOU based on your business model, technical comfort level, and what you actually need your website to do.
In this guide, I’m breaking down the five most popular website platform options so you can make a decision without the paralysis that always seems to come with it.
Before we dive into the platform specifics, let’s talk about what actually matters in a website for literary professionals.
First things first, you can’t create a good website without a well-developed brand. If you don’t have clarity on your brand positioning, know your ideal reader or client, or have any visuals, a website won’t save you my friend. And if you’re not sure if your brand is setup to support a new website, I’ve got more support for that later in this post.
When I create a website, I like to go through four different phases, or what I call My 4 S’s of Website Design. These elements should also guide your platform choice:
Here’s a quick overview of every platform we’ll discuss along with fast facts you can reference in the future.
| Platform | Best For | Starting Price | Design Flexibility | SEO Capability | Learning Curve |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Showit | Established creatives who want full design control | $27-47/mo | Highest | Excellent (due to WordPress connection) | Hard |
| Squarespace | Authors & editors who want beautiful templates fast | $25-36/mo | Medium-High | Very Good | Easy |
| WordPress | Tech-savvy pros who want total customization | Free on .org, $10-20/mo on .com | High (with plugins) | Excellent | Very Hard |
| Shopify | Literary pros selling a lot of books/merch directly | $39/mo or $5/mo for starter | Medium | Very Good | Medium |
| Wix | Budget-conscious beginners testing the waters | Free-$29/mo | Medium | Good | Very Easy |
| Canva | Ultra-beginners who need something up TODAY | $15/mo | Low-Medium | Poor | Extremely Easy |
*Prices listed are estimates and reflect pricing as of February 2026.
What It Is: A drag-and-drop website builder designed specifically with creative professionals in mind. It runs on WordPress for blogging and search engine optimization (SEO) enhancement, but you have complete visual control over your design through Showit’s interface.
Best For:
Pros:
Cons:
If you want to read more specifics on Showit, check out my article on Showit Pros & Cons for Authors & Editors here.
Pricing: $27-49/month depending on if you need a blog and plug-ins or not.
My Honest Take: Showit is my current bread and butter where I design all of my client websites. As a self-certified right and left brain baddie (😉), it was one of the easier platforms for me to learn and allows me to bring my clients’ brand vision to life without compromise.
If you’re an established editor or author who’s ready to be seen as the expert professional you are, Showit is worth the investment.
It’s a favorite among creatives for a reason. And as mentioned above, you can embed almost anything into the site, which is great if you want to use very specific tools that would otherwise be duplicative with another platform. But if you’re just starting out or want to go the DIY route, it may be overkill and not worth the learning commitment.
When To Skip: You’re brand new to your business, you don’t have a strong brand identity or professional brand photos, or you need to sell more than 20 books or products directly from your website.
If you know Showit is the right website platform for you, my Season Two offer can help you launch in just one week. We’ll create a semi-custom Showit website that matches your established brand. Learn more here.
What It Is: An all-in-one website builder known for stunning templates and user-friendly design.
Best For:
Pros:
Cons:
Pricing: $25-36/month depending on if you want to use code on your site. Plans that have lower transaction fees cost a bit more.
My Honest Take: I’m adding Squarespace to my design toolbelt later in 2026. I think it’s a genuinely solid platform for literary professionals that want something beautiful & functional without the learning curve & management hassle after the site is up and running. The fact that it’s all-in-one is also a great contrasting option to Showit for clients that just want everything under one roof.
When To Skip: You have a very specific design vision that doesn’t fit any templates, you want complete creative freedom, or you have other tools you love and don’t want to duplicate use of.
What It Is: If you’ve even remotely looked into a website before, you’ve heard of WordPress. It’s the world’s most popular content management system (CMS) that utilizes themes and plugins to bring your website to life.
Best For:
Pros:
Cons:
Pricing: Free on .org, $10-20/month on .com for hosting, but like I said, the themes and plugin use can quickly increase your monthly expenses.
My Honest Take: WordPress is a beast, but it’s really overkill for most literary professionals unless you’re running a really content heavy site like a large publishing house. If you love blogging or want to maximize your search engine capabilities, I’d recommend Showit instead since it uses WP for the blog OR make the investment in a proper WP designer & developer.
When To Skip: You’re not tech-savvy, you want something low maintenance, or you need a simple site that still looks professional.
What It Is: The top e-commerce platform designed to sell products online.
Best For:
Pros:
Cons:
Pricing: $39 for the solo plan for a full website, $5 for the starter plan to use Shopify Buy Buttons
My Honest Take: If you’re an author, publishing house, or literary agent whose primary business model involves selling books, courses or merch directly to readers, Shopify is a strong contender and worth considering. But if you’re mainly a service provider or an author with a smaller product suite, a full Shopify site may be too much. I’d say if you have more than 20 products to sell, go directly to Shopify.
When To Skip: You’re selling less than 20 products, are a service-provider, or want a platform that has more all-in-one functionality.
What It Is: A beginner-friendly website builder with tons of templates to get you started.
Best For:
Pros:
Cons:
Pricing: Free-$29/month for most features
My Honest Take: From design standpoint, I’m not a fan of Wix at all. The platform is slow, feels buggy, and makes it really hard to create something that feels elevated and professional without a lot of manipulation and patience. That being said, I completely understand why authors use it. It’s a good starter platform and is very low commitment while you get your sea legs in the publishing space. But I’d make plans for an upgrade once you’re more established.
When To Skip: You’re already established in your business, you care deeply about design differentiation, or you want strong SEO performance from day one.
What It Is: You’re probably very familiar with Canva, but they also have a website feature that lets you build a simple one-page site in a drag-and-drop fashion.
Best For:
Pros:
Cons:
Pricing: $15/month via the Canva Pro subscription
My Honest Take: Okay I know it sounds like I absolutely hate Canva. I don’t! I love it for literally everything but a website 😂 I create ALL of my brand and marketing graphics in Canva along with presentations, client templates, and even mockup website designs there. But using it as your true website platform? Can’t recommend.
I totally understand the appeal, and like Wix, it’s fine to start with if you need a placeholder while you decide what you really need out of a website. And if all of your graphics are there, why not build your website there too, right? But Canva screams temporary. Your website should be your online HOME. It’s where people come to decided if you’re worth spending money on, spending time with, or coming back to. It doesn’t allow you to showcase your bingeworthy brand or tell a story with your website the way a traditional builder can. It will push people away instead of inviting people in, which is exactly the opposite of how your website should function.
Use Canva Websites For:
Don’t Use Canva Websites For:
Okay so now you have a rundown on some of the most popular (and unpopular) website platforms, but which one should you go with? Here are five things you should consider to help you choose:
Now I know we’ve just spent this entire time discussing website platforms, but but what no one tells you is this: the platform doesn’t determine conversions — your brand does.
The platform doesn’t matter if your brand is non-existent. And if your brand isn’t clear, your website won’t convert.
I’ve seen the most gorgeous Showit sites get zero inquiries because the messaging is basic. I’ve also seen some pretty standard Squarespace websites sell products with ease because the positioning of the brand is sharp.
So before you spend hours comparing platforms, make sure you have a strong brand FIRST. In this Atelier, that looks like:
🏠 A strong Brand Core: what you’re about, where you’re going, and what you value
🫱🏾🫲🏾 A clear Brand Connection: who you serve, how you communicate, and why you’re different, and
🖌️ An intentional Brand Character: a set of logos, fonts, colors, and photos that make you recognizable.
Your website and marketing are vehicles, but they won’t run well without the engine that is your brand. A platform doesn’t fix unclear positioning. It doesn’t clarify who you serve. It doesn’t explain why you’re different. And it definitely doesn’t create authority.
That’s Brand Core → Connection → Character.
The platform simply amplifies what already exists.
If you’re an established author, book editor or other literary creative who has your branding down but are still working off the website you DIYed when you first started — Season Two is my standalone website design service for book brands that need a website to match the business they’ve built. We’ll create a 5-page Showit site in a single week that will reflect your quality of work and support you in gaining opportunities you’ve only dreamed of until now.
→ Explore Season Two: Website Design
Not sure your brand is developed enough to support a new website? Snag a free Bingeworthy Brand DM Audit instead. I’ll review your current brand across your Instagram and/or current website and shoot you a series of short, actionable voice notes via IG direct message covering what’s working and what could be tweaked to serve you better.
→ Get Your Free Brand DM Audit
Choosing a website platform for your book business can be overwhelming, but I hope you now have more guidance on which platform would best suite you. And that’s the key right? You have to choose the best platform for YOU, not just the one that every other author or editor is using. And that looks like a platform that:
For most established literary professionals, that’s either going to be Showit (for unique design & storytelling) or Squarespace (for all-in-one functionality). If you’re a beginner, Wix or Squarespace will get the job done. For product sellers, Shopify. For tech lovers, WordPress.
And Canva? Only if you need something up in the next hour and plan to upgrade within a month. Otherwise, I’d skip it entirely.
But remember: the platform is just the front man. Your brand is the true foundation that turns visitors into clients or readers into buyers. So choose the platform that gets out of your way and lets your expertise shine ✨
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