Quick Platform Comparison
Quick Comparison:
1) Squarespace Courses
What it’s like: Courses are a native Squarespace feature—course pages can be sold via pricing plans and paywalls.
Best for: simplicity, cohesive brand, fewer moving parts.
Tradeoff: less flexibility; plan-based transaction fees + video limits may matter as you scale.
2) WordPress + MemberPress Courses
What it’s like: Your website is the platform. Courses and memberships live inside WordPress.
Best for: long-term scalability, customization, SEO-led growth, integrated content library.
Tradeoff: more maintenance + setup complexity.
3) Ruzuku (3rd party)
What it’s like: A simpler, creator-friendly course platform that is 3rd party so that we can use it on Squarespace or WordPress
Best for: low-tech overhead, quick launch, friendly teaching experience.
Tradeoff: less “custom brand universe” than a fully owned site.
Stay on Squarespace
Option A — Stay on Squarespace
(Website + Courses in one place)
Best for: fastest launch, simplest tech stack, minimal maintenance, cohesive branding.
Squarespace now supports building and selling courses directly on your site (on any website plan), using course pages + pricing plans to paywall your content.
Pros
All-in-one simplicity: website, course pages, paywalls, and checkout live together.
Brand consistency: your marketing site and course experience feel visually unified.
Lower technical overhead: fewer plugins, updates, and hosting variables.
Built-in SEO foundation: automatic sitemaps/robots.txt, structured data markup, and solid indexing support out of the box.
Cons
Less flexibility/control than WordPress for custom functionality and deep technical SEO.
Digital product transaction fees can apply depending on plan (and video storage limits vary by plan).
Course feature set is intentionally streamlined (great for simplicity, limiting for complex learning experiences).
Move to WordPress
Option B — Move the Website to WordPress
(Courses + Membership with MemberPress)
Best for: maximum flexibility, stronger customization, more scalable “content engine” (blog + SEO + landing pages + funnels), and long-term ownership.
WordPress paired with MemberPress + MemberPress Courses creates a single integrated platform where you own the site, the content structure, and the student experience. MemberPress Courses supports building lessons and can include features like quizzes and completion certificates.
Pros
Most flexible option (design, functionality, integrations, data portability).
SEO ceiling is higher because you can fully control technical SEO, content architecture, and advanced on-page tooling via plugins (e.g., Yoast offers schema + real-time guidance; Rank Math emphasizes meta, sitemaps, schema, redirects).
Unified brand + content marketing: ideal if the long-term plan includes lots of articles, resources, lead magnets, and landing pages feeding course/retreat sales.
Integrated membership model: bundles, tiers, gated libraries, subscriptions, etc.
Cons
Ongoing maintenance: hosting, updates, backups, security, plugin compatibility.
More decisions up front (hosting, theme, plugin stack) and a little more complexity for staff/admins.
SEO: Squarespace vs WordPress
Squarespace SEO
Squarespace includes a strong baseline: it automatically generates sitemaps and robots.txt and outputs structured data markup (schemas like blog posts, events, local business, etc.), but that structured data is not editable.
You can also add per-page SEO descriptions in the editor.
Strengths
Great “SEO hygiene” out of the box (minimal setup).
Easier for teams who don’t want to manage plugins or updates.
Limitations
Less control over advanced technical SEO and structured data customization (not editable).
More constrained when you want to build complex content architectures, advanced schema strategies, or custom functionality.
WordPress SEO
WordPress is “SEO-flexible” because you can add best-in-class SEO tooling. For example:
Yoast SEO provides real-time guidance and schema support.
Rank Math highlights handling meta, sitemaps, redirects, and schema.
Strengths
Highest customization and scalability for SEO (especially for content-heavy strategies).
Easier to implement advanced schema, redirect strategies, and structured internal linking at scale (with the right stack).
Tradeoff
Requires upkeep (updates, plugin management, performance tuning).
Simple Decision Guide
Choose Squarespace (all-in-one) if:
You want the fastest path to launch with the fewest moving parts
Courses are relatively straightforward (modules + videos + worksheets)
You’d rather trade flexibility for simplicity
Choose WordPress + MemberPress if:
You want the most control over brand, user experience, SEO, and integrations
You plan to grow a content engine (blogs/resources) that feeds course + retreat sales
You want a robust membership/library model long-term
Choose Thinkific/Ruzuku if:
You want a dedicated course-learning experience with minimal setup time
You want to keep the marketing site simple and separate from “school” delivery
You expect to iterate quickly on course formats without rebuilding your website