TrustRadius Insights for Umbraco CMS are summaries of user sentiment data from TrustRadius reviews and, when necessary, third party data sources.
Pros
Flexible and Customizable Design: Several users have praised Umbraco for its design layout flexibility, allowing for easy customization of the website's appearance. This feature has been mentioned by a significant number of reviewers, highlighting Umbraco's ability to meet diverse design requirements.
High Level of Control: Reviewers appreciate the high level of control offered by Umbraco, enabling them to customize various aspects of their website such as data management, product pages, and entities. This capability has been consistently highlighted by multiple users, emphasizing Umbraco's versatility and adaptability to different business needs.
User-Friendly Interface: The simplicity and ease-of-use of Umbraco's user interface have received positive feedback from many reviewers. Users find it intuitive and straightforward to navigate through the system, assign different roles to team members, and keep the site updated with the latest information. Multiple customers have commended Umbraco for its user-friendly interface that promotes efficient content management.
We used Umbraco CMS for a customer who wanted to move from WordPress to Umbraco. We used Umbraco to migrate existing blogs, also built modules to create product marketing pages. We also leveraged Umbraco's multilingual capabilities to create localized versions of the website for customer's European and Asian markets.
Pros
Custom page management with document types and templates
Excellent razor support for scripting
Multilingual support
Easy-to-use WYSIWYG editor
Fast page load times and efficient in-built caching
Role-based access control
Cons
Umbraco hosting on AWS cloud and containers
Official support with Amazon S3 for media management
Quality (dive deep) tutorials on YouTube
Likelihood to Recommend
Umbraco CMS is best suited for developing content-rich websites that require dynamic pages with extensive customization options. It's even great for .NET developers who want to use their existing expertise rather than learning WordPress or other CMS platforms.
Would not recommend Umbraco for small business websites with simple content needs where the complexity of Umbraco might be overkill.
VU
Verified User
Engineer in Professional Services (Computer Software company, 10,001+ employees)
At Attityde ApS, Silkeborg we develop all our customer solutions with Umbraco. If the customer demands anything else, we send them away! From giant to tiny companies, and through the use of Umbraco, our projects are always a success thanks to the flexibility of Umbraco. 500+ Umbraco sites and counting... Even our own website, intranet, and special products are based on Umbraco. We would be able to provide the same fantastic solutions if it wasn't for Umbraco... and we wouldn't want it any other way.
Pros
Content Hierarchy/tree
Media section
Plugins (Custom made)
Cons
Out of the box web-templates
Likelihood to Recommend
Umbraco is well suited if you want to host the website yourself or if our customers want them on their own server. It's easy to get started though our own instance-system were we can spin-up customer sites within 4 minutes.
If you just want to have a borring-wp-a-like site that looks like everything else on the internet, Umbraco is not the best solution. It's more time consuming to get a proper website up and running.
Umbraco is really what it says, a friendly CMS.
It is nice and easy for developing web sites and has many very good features.
Pros
The ease to use compositions (= interfaces)
Media handling, Image scaling
The user interface
Cons
Umbraco Heartcore is too expensive
Likelihood to Recommend
Whenever there is a need for a small/medium-sized web site Umbraco CMS is a good choice. For larger multi-language sites there are probably better choices.
We are a web development company and we set clients up with Umbraco.
Pros
Templating
Code editing
Back office usability
Cons
The update process is HORRIBLE!
Every release has bugs. NOT ONE release is BUG FREE!
Fixing issues quickly. We often have to wait over 30 days are months for something as simple as a media picker to be updated.
Likelihood to Recommend
I like using Umbraco, but the update process is a PIA compared to WordPress. We have clients on WordPress and try to sell them on the idea of switching, but the maintenance to update Umbraco is a road block. Our clients don't have to pay to have their WordPress site updated. There are bugs in every release and the release schedule is mind numbing. Almost every other week there is a new release and with 20 web sites in Umbraco, it is IMPOSSIBLE to keep up with the maintenance and bill our clients for something that should have worked to begin with. Umbraco is more like a hobbyist CMS and is not quite ready for prime time. I would pay for a CMS to be bug free. The cloud option for Umbraco is not an option for us and honestly I find it impossible for the cloud option to be updated "automatically" while professional developers have issues with simple updates.
VU
Verified User
Professional in Corporate (Internet company, 1-10 employees)
We create our website, so it is used by the whole organization and all our potential customers. We manage Umbraco CMS by a person in the marketing department, and a little work is done by developers. We also change Umbraco a little to suit the needs required by the marketing department as very important.
Pros
customization
good prepared SEO
integration with other software
Cons
a little more ready templates
e-commerce integration out of the box
easier URL configuration
Likelihood to Recommend
As I write, Umbraco is very good in customization, also customization by programmers, but sometimes it needs quite a lot of knowledge to develop something. It is also very scalable and it is the best CMS framework in .net programming. There is not too much competition in this area, though maybe I would like to have a little bigger community
We currently use Umbraco to build our company company website. It's a great tool and very easy to use, it allows me to [have] different roles from editor through to admin. The CMS is simple to use, each employee has been able to use it independently with very little training.
The system has allowed us to integrate our digital marketing into web pages, so for the end user, the process of completing forms is seamless.
We have been so impressed with the umbraco CMS that we currently use this tool to deliver [our] website to our customers.
The main reason we chose this tool was we wanted a site that could be updated and maintained by anybody, and we wanted to avoid having to wait for the development team to make a simple change to the site.
Pros
Simple to use
Different people can be assigned different roles
Easy to keep the site updated with the latest information, no technical knowledge needed
Accessibility features can be turned on
Cons
If you miss an update on the software, issues can happen if you jump to far ahead of where you are
Search could be improved on the site
Likelihood to Recommend
Umbraco CMS is the perfect tool for a company that is looking to keep their website updated. The simple to use tools and templates means updating and creating new pages is easy. The WYSIWYG editor is a nice feature, however, for accessibility, there should be some more guidance on what is suitable to be used on the CMS.
Currently we have one client that uses Umbraco CMS. It filled their need of moving off of static HTML pages to a .NET CMS system that did not have prohibitive costs/licensing fees. The client only has one developer on hand, so this provided a way to democratize content updates across a larger user base.
Pros
Data architecture
Templating System
Permissions/Workflow
Updating system files from CMS admin
Cons
Migration of data between servers. There are tools that you can pay for that help facilitate this, but like any CMS system, there are still some tricks to getting it to work correctly.
Running as a Web Project instead of a Web Site. Umbraco does not run compiled code, but instead compiles it on the fly. I find this to cause some performance issues that would otherwise be resolved with a compiled code base.
Likelihood to Recommend
Umbraco CMD is well suited for users looking for a .NET based CMS system without the high licensing fees that come with a system like Sitecore. It allows the developer to easily get up and running, model data, create front end templates, and get a framework of a site out quickly. It is also easy to extend the built in functionality with your own .NET libraries. For enterprise level users, Umbraco might not have quite enough juice to model and deliver content efficiently.