WordPress
Looking for a top WordPress expert in Namibia? Here's what "top" should actually mean
Anyone can call themselves a WordPress expert. Here's what to ask before you hire one, and the work that proves it.
LM
Linus Moses
Products Manager · December 5, 2022 · 4 min read

Looking for a top WordPress or WooCommerce expert in Namibia is a small search with a lot of bold claims. We're going to skip the bragging and tell you what to actually look for — and then, yes, why we think Linusite fits the description.
What "WordPress expert" should mean
- Builds custom themes. Not just installs Elementor or Divi. A real expert can hand-code the markup and CSS when the page builder gets in the way.
- Writes PHP fluently. Hooks, filters, custom post types, REST API endpoints. The plugin ecosystem is huge but every serious project needs a custom touch.
- Knows the database. Can SSH in, fix a corrupted options table, optimise a slow query without panicking.
- Hosts what they build. Anyone who builds and then hands you off to "wherever you want to host this" hasn't seen the production stack break at 3am.
Ask these four questions
- Show me a custom WordPress plugin you wrote. If they can't, they're integrators, not engineers.
- Walk me through a site you rescued from a malware infection. Recovery work tells you a lot about depth.
- How do you back up sites you run? If the answer is "the host does it", keep looking.
- Can I see a live site you built six months ago that still loads under 2 seconds on mobile? Performance has a half-life.
What Linusite ships in this space
- Custom-themed WordPress sites, hand-built, no page builder lock-in.
- WooCommerce stores with real payment integration (DPO, Stripe, Adumo, Paystack).
- WordPress recovery work — malware cleanup, performance audits, plugin-conflict triage.
- Managed hosting on our own multi-tenant infrastructure (Sitesox).
Tell us what you need built. We'll come back with a written quote within 24 hours.
Reference images

More on WordPress
Locked out of WordPress? Change your admin password through phpMyAdmin
Lost admin email, broken SMTP, hacked account — when the WordPress reset link won't work, you can update your password directly in the database. Here's the safe way.
1 min read
Restrict WordPress media library to each user's own uploads (no plugin)
By default every WordPress user sees every uploaded file. Two lines in functions.php restrict the media library so each user only sees their own.
3 min read