Business Websites

Can a Flash-based website easily/cheaply be “ported” to HTML5/WordPress?

Business Websites

Ah, poor, poor Flash-site owners.

Flash sites were so popular during the early 90s when business owners thought that flashy, motion-y and pizazz meant sales.

Nope, nope and nope.

And now with Flash removing support for mobile device, the platform is in a free fall, leaving business owners who have all Flash sites scrambling to build something new.

Something that is visible in search engines. Something that can act as a publishing platform. Something that shows up in search engines.

Google released a cool tool named Swiffy that is supposed to convert Flash files (swfs) to HTML. But it’s, at best, experimental. The same goes for Adobe’s pre-release tool, Wallaby

Even if it works flawlessly, you’re still going to have to have someone turn that HTML into a WordPress theme, which isn’t trivial.

So, can a Flash-based website easily/cheaply be “ported” to HTML5/WordPress?

It’s best to just bite the bullet and pay a company to set you up with a WordPress CMS site.

About Cody Swann

Cody Swann is an entrepreneur, developer, strategist, banged up ex-football walk-on, retired body builder and former journalist born and raised in South Florida. He currently splits his time between his hometown of Stuart, FL and Los Angeles, CA. Cody founded Gunner Technology, a highly sought after digital agency, specializing in helping companies maximize profits through custom web development, technology efficiencies, social media strategy and search engine marketing.

As a manager and developer at ESPN for nearly six years, Cody led development and vision for two of ESPN’s most popular online features: Sports Scoreboards and GameCasts. Additionally Cody oversaw all aspects of MyESPN and ESPN’s social network, ESPN Fan Profiles. Cody worked with Technology, Editorial, Sales, Marketing and relevant business stakeholders to mold ESPN’s social media strategy, develop custom applications for it and execute it. Under his direction, ESPN successfully ported large portions of its core product from a proprietary Java stack to an open source Ruby on Rails stack, capable of standing up and performing under the tremendous load world's most popular sports site delivers.

Cody began forging his technological knowledge more than 10 years ago, developing and designing websites in college. His development work has included web development, web design, content writing, digital photography and digital video production for award-winning sites like Gainesville.com, GatorSports.com and ESPN.com. He has helped set digital strategy and direction for companies in the New York Times Regional Newspaper group, ESPN, ABC and Disney.

He is a recognized expert in web development, social media strategy, search engine optimization, conversion optimization, analytics tracking and business planning. He has worked with large interactive media companies to small and medium sized businesses. Cody motivates and inspires creative teams to deliver superb, polished work under tight deadlines.

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