Language: English

  • Bridget Willard, Francesca Marano, Miriam Goldman, Rachel Cherry, Tessa Kriesel: Women In WordPress Panel

    WordCamp Seattle 2017Speakers: Bridget Willard, Francesca Marano, Miriam Goldman, Rachel Cherry, Tessa Kriesel

    February 25, 2018 — A frank and honest discussion with women who have been involved for different amounts of time in WordPress – ranging from development to designer to marketer.

  • Adam W. Warner: You Created a Plugin. Now What?

    WordCamp Seattle 2017Speaker: Adam W Warner

    February 25, 2018 — In this session, Adam details his story of creating a sustainable plugin business. He shares actionable advice that audience members can put into practice immediately to grow not only a user-base, but also a customer-base. Adam also explains the techniques he uses to guide free-users to premium product.

    Attendees will learn everything they need to know to market a plugin that people will love, and recommend to others.

  • WordCamp Albuquerque 2018 Keynote

    WordCamp Albuquerque 2018Speaker: John Maeda

    February 22, 2018 — He is the past President of Rhode Island School of Design and formerly eBay‘s Chair of their Design Advisory Board. He is also the recipient of many awards, including the Smithsonian Institution National Design Award.

  • Jason Coleman: Transitioning From Consulting to Products

    WordCamp Cape Town 2017Speaker: Jason Coleman

    February 22, 2018 — This talk will be helpful for any WordPress developers or consultants who are thinking of building products of their own. I’ll use our own story as one example of how to do this, with advice that should helpful for businesses and freelancers looking to increase the value of their consulting services, add revenue streams from products, or transition 100% into products like we did.”

    Presentation Slides »

  • Empowering Speakers: A Journey to Encourage Women and Diverse Groups at WordCamps

    WordCamp Seattle 2017Speaker: Jill Binder

    February 22, 2018 — When more people from underrepresented groups start speaking at WordPress events, everybody benefits. At WordCamp Vancouver, we started by focusing on women. In 2013, not many had applied. The following year, three times as many women applied and fully half of selected speakers were women. This dramatic shift was no accident. My talk will share how we accomplished it, some of the lessons we learned along the way, and the positive changes that resulted in our community.

  • Jeff Running, Rachel Cherry, Scott Berkun, Steven Speicher: Managing Big WordPress Sites

    WordCamp Seattle 2017Speakers: Jeff Running, Rachel Cherry, Scott Berkun, Steven Speicher

    February 22, 2018 — An extremely engaging moderated discussion of the challenges that face large WordPress sites with 100s or 1000s of users.

    Come learn lessons and hear advice on managing user needs and providing tools that make site management easier for everyone.

  • Amy Fawcett and Julie Pham: Practical WordPress Marketing for Nonprofits

    WordCamp Seattle 2017Speakers: Amy Fawcett, Julie Pham

    February 22, 2018 — Are you a small, ambitious nonprofit with lots of programs but a little marketing budget? Is it hard to show what you do on your WordPress website because your org just does so many different things? Do you need help maximizing your WordPress site’s potential to market your mission? In this session, we’ll share 3 cost-effective ways of promoting your nonprofit’s work:

    1. Build an online annual report
    This is a highly effective and super shareable way of showing your nonprofit’s impact. And you won’t have to print and mail those reports again.
    2. Build microsites for your special programs/events
    Highlight your special fundraising events or conferences with a microsite, which has its own mini navigation bar.
    3. Create an issue specific resource
    You can create a crowd-sourced Google sheet that will drive new traffic to your site. It’s an easy to maintain document too. (Ex: Women in Tech).

  • Gian Wild: Mobile Accessibility

    WordCamp Seattle 2017Speaker: Gian Wild

    February 21, 2018 — Unfortunately, when developing WCAG2, the Working Group did not envision the current world where mobile is almost ubiquitous. For example, on a mobile device there is no continual access to a keyboard (unless someone is using it as an add-on to the device – or using a Blackberry Classic). WCAG2 requires that all content be accessible to the keyboard interface, but it does not require that all content be accessible to a mouse or to a touchscreen user – which is essential on a mobile device. Gian Wild talks about the unique accessibility issues on a mobile site and mobile app, including hover traps, VoiceOver swipe traps and zoom traps.

    Accessibility is important to all – not everyone using your mobile app, device or wearable will be fully functioning: either because they have a disability or they are simply engaged elsewhere. Gian Wild talks about the things that are essential to avoid when designing mobile apps, devices and wearables to ensure that everyone can use them.

    This is a fun talk, with lots of gasps and laughter. It is example after example of mobile accessibility fails – but they just look like mobile fails! In this way I try and stress that a usability issue is really an accessibility issue, and making a mobile site accessible actually makes it usable too.

    I talk about specific mobile accessibility features: pinch zoom, native screen readers, haptic keyboard etc, and system accessibility settings: font size, screen rotation, high contrast etc
    I outline the major things that need to be considered when dealing with a mobile site or mobile app:

    PDFs
    Mobile-specific
    Autoplay and movement
    On-screen keyboard traps, hover traps, VoiceOver swipe traps, Touch traps
    Alternatives
    Text size
    Inherited system settings
    In-app settings
    Color contrast
    Missing functionality
    Pixellation on zoom
    Touch target size
    Spacing between touch targets

  • Ben Byrne: Accelerating Custom Development With Dynamic Scaffolding and WP-CLI

    WordCamp Seattle 2017Speaker: Ben Byrne

    February 21, 2018 — In trying to figure out how to build better WordPress sites faster, we at Cornershop have developed an approach that leverages WP-CLI to dynamically inject configurable, pre-written code (HTML, PHP, JS and SASS) into our in-house starter theme. This novel approach speeds up our custom development work by letting us quickly assemble oft-used functionality without littering our theme with superfluous code.

    Come learn about the decision-making that led us to go down this road, and see exactly how we’ve gone about building our extensible framework as a plugin that extends WP-CLI. Whether you’re an agency or a solo freelancer, hopefully seeing our approach can lead to fruitful thinking on how you can deliver the most value to your clients.

  • Dwain Maralack: How WordPress taught me to be an Engineer

    WordCamp Cape Town 2017Speaker: Dwain Maralack

    February 21, 2018 — “Going from hacking all the things to engineering solutions because I have open access to the WP Community and the WordPress source code.

    I’ll touch on my journey, Software Engineering within the WP context and how one can become better by being part of the WordPress community.”