Author Archive

  • Dina Butcher, Ema DeRosia, Emily Lema, Sophia DeRosia, Olivia Bisset, Natalie Bourn, Nathan Ingram: How the WordPress Community Can Embrace the Next Generation (Talk + Panel)

    WordCamp US 2019Speakers: Dina Butcher, Ema DeRosia, Emily Lema, Sophia DeRosia, Olivia Bisset, Natalie Bourn, Nathan Ingram

    November 14, 2019 — Synopsis (Talk): This talk will explore ways the community can be more inclusive to the incoming generation of content creators and developers. Tips will be presented especially for parents and teachers how to incorporate WordPress into their home lives and educational curriculums. How local meetups, WordCamps, and contributor days can be more accommodating and inviting to young ones will also be covered.

    Synopsis (Panel): This panel will have youth of various ages and backgrounds sharing how they use WordPress and what technologies other people their age are using (including some platforms or technologies that might be considered WordPress competitors).

  • Katherine White: Responsible Tracking: Learning from Your Users Without Being Creepy

    WordCamp US 2019Speaker: Katherine White

    November 14, 2019 — This talk will expose some touch points that you can leverage with WordPress to help you learn about your users and how they interact with your site. We’ll discuss tools that move beyond just your analytics platform to help you gain access to these insights, and we’ll walk through some core features of Google Analytics that you may not be aware of.

    Leaving this session, you’ll have a better understanding of the types of tracking tools, the information you can glean from them, and how to ensure your data tracking is responsible, transparent, and accessible.

  • Jenny Beaumont, Andrew Nacin, Jake Spurlock, Mika Epstein: WordPress Automated Updates: A Panel Discussion

    WordCamp US 2019Speakers: Jenny Beaumont, Andrew Nacin, Jake Spurlock, Mika Epstein

    November 14, 2019 — Join an animated discussion on the hot topic of WordPress security and automated updates among longtime WordPress contributors. The panel will review recent conversations in WordPress Core on this issue, and discuss points for and against!

  • Remkus de Vries, Ptah Dunbar, Milana Cap, Cal Evans: Running a Successful Contributor Day

    WordCamp US 2019Speakers: Remkus de Vries, Ptah Dunbar, Milana Cap, Cal Evans

    November 14, 2019 — Many WordCamps do not have contributor days or hackathons… many organizers hold back thinking they can’t provide a “good enough” experience or maybe their local community isn’t “developer focused.” There are also camps that have done these in the past and want to learn more ways to improve the experience for future events.

    There are also contributor day / hackathons that don’t involve WordCamps (language transition day, WordPress.tv captioning, etc.). Explore the potential for local or online single-day events that cover the space between a regular meetup and an annual WordCamp.

  • K Adam White: How to Disagree on the Internet

    WordCamp US 2019Speaker: K. Adam White

    November 14, 2019 — In distributed companies and global open-source communities alike, diversity makes our teams stronger. But how do we reconcile diverse opinions to move forward productively as a unified team? In this talk I will share prioritization and team management tools I’ve used as a senior engineer and team lead in a distributed agency-tools that help us understand where and why we disagree, then work together as a group to find solutions, focus, and prioritize the right things. We will never all agree, and that’s the idea! We can disagree with intent and empathy, and use our diverse perspectives and opinions to work together on ever more ambitious and exciting projects.

  • Carl Alexander: How to Beat Technical Writer’s Block

    WordCamp US 2019Speaker: Carl Alexander

    November 14, 2019 — This is what we’ll look at in this talk. We’ll go over some of the principles that I use for finding ideas for technical articles.

    These principles aren’t only useful for finding ideas for technical articles. They’re also great for talk submissions. (Such as this one!) And my hope is that they remove some of the frustrations that you might have with writer’s block.

  • Jon Quach: Design Systems: Crafting For Crafters

    WordCamp US 2019Speaker: Jon Quach

    November 14, 2019 — Design systems are so hot right now. And for good reason! They improve collaboration and creation amongst your crafters (designers, developers, product, and marketing alike). Despite popular belief, it’s more than just colors, fonts, buttons, and components – much more. In this session, we’ll learn how to think about design systems to explore how you can empower your teams to do what they do, but better (and faster)!

  • Beka Rice: Unlocking six-figure eCommerce growth with automations

    WordCamp US 2019Speaker: Beka Rice

    November 14, 2019 — To automate or not to automate? Is automation impersonal, ineffective, or overdone? Or is it the key to unlocking retention and efficiency? This discussion digs into how automation applies to online stores, and how it can influence sales, processes, and customer relationships — especially when it comes to retention. We’ll also review how to identify areas for automation as a merchant or developer and where it’s most impactful.

  • Shannon Smith: Just Enough React for WordPress

    WordCamp US 2019Speaker: Shannon Smith

    November 14, 2019 — We’re in the middle of the biggest change to the WordPress user experience in several years. It has modernized, streamlined, and simplified content creation. PHP theme and plugin developers are finding themselves needing to transition quickly. Come learn just enough React to take advantage of new features like colour palettes, meta boxes, and reusable blocks.

  • Olesya Boreyko: ROI of UX, How to Assign Money Value to Your Designs

    WordCamp US 2019Speaker: Olesya Boreyko

    November 14, 2019 — Design has been synonymous with “making things pretty”, more artificial than functional, but the popularity of UX and design thinking has done a lot to break that stereotype in the last few years. One of the ways to evangelize a better user experience to your product owners and managers is to assign money value to your design improvements.

    In this talk I’ll show you a few easy examples of how to do that.