July 25, 2025 — This is a two-day WordCamp Bhopal recap video which includes highlights of openverse walk, contributor day, and WordCamp.
July 25, 2025 — In this insightful session recorded during a local WordPress Meetup, Krupa Nanda walks attendees through the process of contributing to the WordPress Testing Team. Whether you’re a developer, tester, or someone new to contributing, this session offers a clear, hands-on guide to getting started with testing WordPress releases, reporting issues, and improving the software’s overall quality.
Krupa Nanda covers:
1. The role of the WordPress Testing Team
2. How to set up a testing environment
3. Participating in release testing and test scrub sessions
4. Submitting feedback and bug reports effectively
Tips for new contributors
This session is a valuable resource for anyone looking to contribute to the WordPress project in a meaningful way, even without writing code.
July 14, 2025 — Panel discussion: Page Builders
July 14, 2025 — Attribution remains one of the most persistent challenges for WordPress plugin developers — how do you know which channels actually drive installs, activations, and real usage? In this talk, we’ll go beyond theory and unpack the real-world attribution playbook that Usercentrics used to untangle this exact problem. Join us for a tep-by-step breakdown of how Usercentrics approached attribution for their own WordPress plugin. From identifying critical blind spots to stitching together data across platforms, you’ll learn how the team established privacy-led framework to track meaningful conversion paths. We’ll cover tools used, integration tactics, team alignment, and lessons learned the hard way — all aimed at helping you do the same. Whether you’re a product manager, marketer, or plugin developer, this session will give you a proven roadmap to decode attribution in a fragmented plugin ecosystem — and finally answer the question: what’s really working?
July 13, 2025 — Most agencies waste time and money during client onboarding—not because of tools or processes, but because they’re speaking a completely different language than their clients. When a technical person talks to a non-technical client without empathy, things fall apart fast: unclear expectations, messy communication, scope creep, and frustration on both sides. It doesn’t just hurt the relationship—it hits your margins too. This talk is about: Understanding where the disconnect really happens Using empathy (not jargon) to build trust from day one Fixing your onboarding process so it’s smooth, profitable, and repeatable If you’ve ever felt misunderstood by a client (or vice versa), this one’s for you.
July 13, 2025 — Being active in the WordPress community can help you grow as a person and teach you skills that help your business. Robert will show you shortcuts and some people you should reach out to speak to to boost your WordPress business. There is a term in WordPress: come for the software, stay for the people.
July 10, 2025 — Have you ever been faced with a list of complex pricing requirements for an e-commerce store? A multi-step process that has many different pathways? Some interactive elements requiring JavaScript? A template or block that should look or work slightly differently depending on the combination of options or data it receives? Has the solution to any of these ever felt inherently fragile, required extensive manual re-testing every time you make a change, or resulted in a panicked phone call or email from a client because your change impacted some other part of the site that you didn’t even think of?
Sounds like you could do with a way to reduce the risk of human error by having something to automatically check all those pesky edge cases, combinations of options, types and amounts of data, etc., for you! Whether it’s during initial development as you build up layers of complexity and want to make sure you haven’t broken the earlier layers, or when you come back to the project in a year’s time praying this change to the layout doesn’t inadvertently break some usage buried deep in the blog archives – writing and using automated tests can reduce the risks and increase your confidence when writing or modifying complex code.
In this talk, you’ll hear about some of the principles, methodologies, and types of automated testing relevant to developing WordPress themes and plugins, some of the tools available, and see some real-world examples of how they can be used.
July 10, 2025 — Fed up with endless revisions, vague client feedback, and feeling more like an order-taker than an expert designer? You’re not alone. The way you present your work can make or break client relationships—and your sanity.
In this session, I’ll show you exactly how I’ve built a rock-solid presentation process that makes clients see me as the expert I am, eliminates those dreaded “make it pop” requests, and massively reduces feedback rounds. You’ll learn to frame your designs clearly, confidently, and strategically—so clients see solutions, not opinions.
July 10, 2025 — The WordPress Plugin Repository provides a platform for developers to showcase their work to a broad audience. However, it enforces specific guidelines that can influence monetisation strategies. This session will delve into the premium monetisation options permitted within the repository, highlight those that aren’t, and examine how your premium implementation can impact your product’s discoverability.