Author Archive

  • Emanuel Blagonic: P.S. I Love You

    WordCamp Sofia 2016Speaker: Emanuel Blagonic

    December 23, 2016 — We often don’t think about people with disabilities when designing websites. They are the minority of our visitors and our budget is not that big, right? In this talk I will explore how people with disabilities use the web and will give you some guidelines that will help you create better user experiences for everyone.

    Presentation Slides »

  • Ilia Markov: Content Marketing for Beginners

    WordCamp Sofia 2016Speaker: Ilia Markov

    December 23, 2016 — Everyone is talking about it, thousands of blogs produce content on a daily basis and you’re still not sure what content marketing is? This panel is for you!

    Presentation Slides »

  • John Eckman: WPDrama, The Four Agreements, and the WordPress Community

    WordCamp US 2016Speaker: John Eckman

    December 23, 2016 — The WordPress community is wonderful, but working with and in it can be a very frustrating experience. You can come to feel that no good deed goes unpunished, that no one listens to your opinions, or that all the hard work you’ve done just gets ignored. This is true whether you’re a multi-year core contributor, a business owner, or just a passionate user trying to make your site do things which feel like they ought to be simple, but turn out to be unexpectedly complex or confusing.

    Often in such situations we fall into bad patterns of miscommunication and misunderstanding, faulting others in the community for ignorance, rudeness, or outright hostility.

    The Four Agreements, a self-help book published to great acclaim nearly 20 years ago, actually offers a surprisingly helpful and accurate set of tools for helping you navigate your way through these waters. Matt Mullenweg himself recently called it “an excellent book” and said he had “enjoyed it.”

    We’ll review the four agreements:

    1. Be Impeccable With Your Word.
    2. Don’t Take Anything Personally.
    3. Don’t Make Assumptions.
    4. Always Do Your Best.

    We’ll also cover how to operationalize these in the context of working with an open source community.

    Presentation Slides »

  • Michele Mizejewski: Pagebuilder Plugins – You’ve Come a Long Way Baby!

    WordCamp US 2016Speaker: Michele Mizejewski

    December 23, 2016 — If you’ve scoffed at using a page builder plugin in the past, it may be time to reconsider. Over the last year or two, we’ve seen the emergence of some players that prove drag-and-drop page builders *can* be well coded and fast. See some of the pros and cons of creating layouts using a page builder plugin, and learn how these plugins can be a real boon for small teams or solo web designers.

    Presentation Slides »

  • Nicole Kohler: How to Overcome Your Fears and Start Sharing Your Knowledge

    WordCamp US 2016Speaker: Nicole Kohler

    December 23, 2016 — For many years, the dual diagnosis of anxiety and depression kept me from sharing my knowledge, experience, and voice with others. Despite this, I started speaking publicly (at WordCamps and WooConf) at the beginning of 2016. I want to share a few tips and things I learned with others who feel like they have something important to share, but are scared or might be held back by similar conditions/illnesses.

  • Mel Choyce: Lessons in New User Experience

    WordCamp US 2016Speaker: Mel Choyce

    December 23, 2016 — WordPress’s famous 5 minute install doesn’t mean 5 minutes until site launch. Setting up a new site can be time-consuming, tedious, and downright confusing that’s why new user experience (NUX) has been a recent focus at WordPress.com. Through A/B testing, usability testing, and constant iteration, we’ve made gradual improvements to WordPress.com’s NUX. Come learn some of the key insights discovered over the past year and how we can use those them to improve WordPress NUX for everyone.

  • Stuart Livesey: Basic Security for Your WordPress Website

    WordCamp Sunshine Coast 2016Speaker: Stuart Livesey

    December 22, 2016 — Why the Panama Papers leak should never have happened.

    Who wants to get into your website? It’s not about what you have, it’s about what they can leave behind. Security is about making life hard for hackers. The biggest lie in WordPress security – automating your security will not keep you safe. Security is a mindset – it’s all about doing simple things, over and over again.

    Presentation Slides »

  • Sarah Moore: Social Media Marketing with Video in 2016

    WordCamp Sunshine Coast 2016Speaker: Sarah Moore

    December 22, 2016 — The presentation looks at the current social media marketing trend (which is here to stay) – video marketing (included throughout the presentation are statistics and case studies). I look at how video marketing can help you achieve your bigger business goals. I look at current and projected statistics of video marketing and what every business can do now to get ahead. I look at how search (Google) will be affected by video and why we MUST have video content on our website. I look at how social is being affected by video and ways to maximise efforts in this area (including how to amplify the content, how to repurpose video to reduce content creation time and how to leverage video within different social media networks to increase brand presence). I also have a list of tools and plugins for WordPress users to make the process simple.

    Presentation Slides »