Language: English

  • Shayda Torabi: Let’s Take This Offline – Making Friends, and Growing Professional Relationships IRL

    WordCamp US 2016Speaker: Shayda Torabi

    December 19, 2016 — Thanks to the internet you can start relationships, learn new skills, and discover new identities, but how does that translate offline? For some of us, it’s easier said than done but is indisputably key to growing our network. This talk highlights some of the best practices for building relationships, making the most out of networking mixers, and building your personal brand.

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  • Tessa Needham Synnott: How To Embrace Your WordPress Mediocrity

    WordCamp US 2016Speaker: Tessa Needham Synnott

    December 19, 2016 — You’ll never know everything about WordPress. But you probably know something that other people don’t, and you know it in your own unique way.

    So get over your impostor syndrome, and create something with WordPress by being yourself, giving back, and embracing your mediocrity!

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  • Sal Ferrarello: Blogging – The Best Thing I’ve Done as a Developer

    WordCamp US 2016Speaker: Sal Ferrarello

    December 19, 2016 — As a developer, there are many experiences which have helped me grow and improve. None of them have been as valuable as blogging. We’ll look at how blogging has helped me as a developer and why I think you should be blogging, too.

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  • Jamie Schmid: Content Doesn’t Grow on Trees – An Introduction to Content Strategy

    WordCamp Montreal 2016Speaker: Jamie Schmid

    December 19, 2016 — Content is EVERYBODY’s problem: it’s a problem for the content creator, and a problem for the developer. Without content, there is no website. Without the website there is no client. Yet… how is it always left for last? In this talk I will teach you the core practices of the field known as Content Strategy: planning, development, and management of content. Learn how to integrate Content Strategy into your web process will transform your workflow to give everyone a grasp on creating, managing and structuring content– organized and delivered on-time.

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  • Kate Newbill: Disaster-Proofing – Protect Your Site Before Something Goes Wrong

    WordCamp Montreal 2016Speaker: Kate Newbill

    December 19, 2016 — How much money and credibility would you lose if your website went down for a week? A day? An hour? Let’s take a look at some of the most common things that can go wrong with a WordPress site. This short talk will outline easy plans and steps you can take to prevent website disaster. Kate will share a downloadable action plan to help you get started.

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  • Dee Teal: Changing Tack – Adjusting Your Sails for the Winds of Change.

    WordCamp Sunshine Coast 2016Speaker: Dee Teal

    December 19, 2016 — It was the Greek Philosopher Heraclitus who said “There is nothing permanent except change” and another, perhaps more well known American philosopher, Billy Crystal who, said “Change is such hard work.” Both of them though millennia apart recognise two existential certainties, change happens and navigating change can be difficult.

    We as WordPress users and developers are navigating an ecosystem that’s rife with change, Matt Mullenweg counselled us in the last State of the Word to Learn Javascript deeply, the REST API is changing the game in terms of what’s possible with WordPress… Furthermore, it’s almost as if every day there’s some new framework, toolkit or productivity hack that could ‘totally change your workflow’. Quite frankly, it’s overwhelming.

    Such looming changes may fill you with either excitement, or dread, so in this talk Dee will be discussing the kinds of ways you can adjust your trajectory, and your mindset to confidently navigate large scale change as it approaches.

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  • Jesper van Engelen: Customising the WordPress Admin Panel for Your Clients’ Needs

    WordCamp Geneva 2016Speaker: Jesper van Engelen

    December 18, 2016 — In an ever-growing WordPress ecosystem, both the number and scale of companies using WordPress for their online operations are expanding rapidly. Providing your client’s visitors with a usable, accessible and good-looking frontend to their website is usually concern number 1. But should it be? Often, the usability of the WordPress backend is overlooked by developers, and choices pondered on by core developers for months are negated by developers overloading the admin panel with useless menu items, options and data — resulting in a complete lack of insight.

    In this talk, I will discuss with you the need of building WordPress websites and web applications that are not only usable to its visitors, but also to its users — be it administrators, content editors or developers. I will walk you through the why and how of improving your WordPress backend experience using plugins and custom code (specifically, the menu API and the columns API), lead by my experience as a developer for clients and as a former co-author of the Admin Columns plugin.

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  • Alison Knott: Engage Your Audience Now – Purposeful Content Design For Beginners

    WordCamp Montreal 2016Speaker: Alison Knott

    December 16, 2016 — Let’s talk about design in a different way: is the purpose of your site clear to those who visit it? How does their experience differ when they visit on a small phone versus a laptop? Is it clear how you want people to engage with your content, or do you assume they know what to do? In this presentation, designer Alison Knott will help you evaluate your site’s purpose from a design and usability perspective. If you have trouble getting readers to engage with your content, or want to be more objective with the look of your site, this talk is for you!

  • Meagan Hanes: Giving Back to WordPress – No Code Needed!

    WordCamp Montreal 2016Speaker: Meagan Hanes

    December 16, 2016 — It’s known that WordPress is open-source and community-built, but how exactly one can get started contributing can be a bit of a mystery. In fact, many people aren’t aware that one can contribute to WordPress without being a master of code! Documentation, translation, teaching, infrastructure, design, and yes, Core – there are many different ways to contribute to the WordPress.org Project. My presentation will enlighten audience members to the world of open-source contributing and make it easier for them to connect with the Make.WordPress.org community.

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  • Tippi Thole: How to Brand Your WordPress Site

    WordCamp Montreal 2016Speaker: Tippi Thole

    December 16, 2016 — Learn how to customize the look of your website with nothing more than your brand identity. I’ll show you how to integrate all the elements of your branding (logo, favicon, colors, fonts, typography, design elements, etc.) in WordPress to create a custom-looking site without having to know a lot of code. Using a child theme, some custom CSS and a few tried-and-true plugins, you’ll have a custom-looking website in no time!

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