You've made some interesting claims for the plugin you've been developing for at least 6 months now. Quite why Google is ranking this web site so high therefore I do not you can see the internet often contains sites that look 'too good to be true'. If you have installed the Plugin, you can make a first Test with this Page. The testimonials on the site are also from people who supplied them in 2015 so based on my research I'd say this service probably doesn't do 'what it says on the tin' but instead does seem like a great way to capture all the hard work done by someone else in designing a web site. There's also a GitHub repository for this package from someone called Harri Heljala (Finish?) who looks to be the author of this package. Note sure if this is how you are going about it but based on my recent experiences these are the steps that are problem, As a software developer I'm always skeptic when I find a service that looks too good to be true so I've done a bit more Googling and found this entry on Quora You'd need to ensure that this SQL script is then run as part of the 'saved WordPress theme' after its uploaded to the Wordpress themes folder and prior to activating this new theme. Create an SQL script that will populate the Wordpress tables with data for menus and page content contained within the Mobirise. Create a functions.php file that includes PHP code to enable menu items, widgets areas etc for parts of the footer etc.ĥ. page_1.php from page1.html, page_2.php from page2.html etc.Ĥ. Well Wordpress is pretty good to know for developers but Mobirise can be cleaned. Create other php files for the other 'pages' e.g. Create header.php, footer.php and index.php files from the projects index.html fileģ. Create the 'common' stylesheet file as style.css in the root theme folder (this could contain statements are the top of the CSS file to import the numerous other third party stylesheets Mobirise uses)Ģ. this save to Wordpress theme option) needs to do isġ. Atop our directory of WordPress options is Mobirise, a desktop application. For example if you has a Mobirise project that had files called index.html, page1.html, page 2.html etc which all share common header/footer and stylesheet (which most Mobirise projects are likely to) then it ( i.e. It's become clear to me that the best way to get from Mobirise to Wordpress would be if Mobirise has a 'save as Wordpress theme' option. I've recently been converting a number of Bootstrap HTML5 templates to Wordpress themes and so now know quite a bit about whats required. Good to hear that you are still working on a an Mobirise to Wordpress interface.