---
title: From WordPress Workarounds to a Purpose-Built Community Platform | TimeBank Ireland
description: WordPress helped us publish, but it could not become the living timebank, volunteering network, and community platform we needed.
canonical: https://hour-timebank.ie/blog/from-wordpress-workarounds-to-a-purpose-built-community-platform
generated: 2026-05-14T19:03:17.629Z
---![From WordPress Workarounds to a Purpose\-Built Community Platform](https://api.project-nexus.ie/uploads/posts/from-wordpress-workarounds-to-a-purpose-built-community-platform-hero.jpg)

Platform Story

# From WordPress Workarounds to a Purpose-Built Community Platform

![Jasper Ford](https://api.project-nexus.ie/uploads/2/avatars/811a27e192bc90737b10c04fcf4f36d3.jpg)

Jasper Ford 30 December 2025 3 min read 0 comments

WordPress is a remarkable publishing tool. It helped countless community organisations get online, and it helped TimeBank Ireland keep a public presence while we searched for the right platform. But a timebank is not only a website. It is a living system of members, offers, requests, hours, trust, volunteering, communication, and community proof.

For years, that difference kept catching us. We could publish pages and news. We could explain the idea. But we could not easily make the site behave like a modern timebank without layers of plugins, compromises, and manual work.

## The problem was not WordPress

The problem was fit. WordPress was designed first for content. TimeBank Ireland needed a community operating system. Members needed to log in, browse activity, post offers, make requests, message, join groups, volunteer, record hours, and feel that the site was alive.

Trying to force that through a traditional publishing setup meant too much friction. Every extra step gave members another reason not to come back.

## Why purpose-built matters

A purpose-built platform can treat time banking as the centre rather than an add-on. It can understand tenants, members, time credits, volunteering opportunities, jobs, listings, events, groups, safety, translations, and accessibility as connected parts of one community.

That connection matters. If someone volunteers, that should be visible to the same community where they exchange time. If someone discovers a community job, that should sit near the skills and relationships they are already building. If someone posts in the feed, it should feel like part of local life rather than a disconnected page.

## The decision to build

In mid-December 2025, we reached the point where another workaround no longer made sense. We had learned enough from the tools that did not quite fit. The next step was to build something designed around the reality of community exchange.

That decision was not a criticism of earlier timebanking platforms or of WordPress. Those tools carried the movement through an earlier era. But technology has moved on, and community platforms can now be more responsive, more accessible, and more useful.

## The goal

The goal is not to build software for its own sake. The goal is to help people log in because there is something worth doing: a feed that feels familiar, a volunteer opportunity, a job, a marketplace item, a request for help, a group conversation, a credit to record, or a story to share.

A timebank should feel alive. That is what a purpose-built platform gives us the chance to create.

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