EDITS.WS

Tag: Community

  • What Sets a Good Freelance Developer Apart From the Others

    Freelancing is not for the weak-hearted. It takes a lot of grit, empathy and courage. Some who choose that path wouldn’t have it any other way. There are opportunities they are given that would not have been the same if they were working for a company or an agency. And although you might be thinking that the freedom alone is one of the strong points, when it comes to what really sets apart a good freelancer if beyond that creative drive.

    The Super Power of Building Relationships

    A lot of developers start their career opening an agency. You spend your time trying to gain clients, trying to provide solutions, running after different projects. But for some freelancing is the best route. Whether it’s yourself, or you work for a company like Codeable, it provides the best way to get the kind of clients you want. Ideally, those who are respectful, and they appreciate your work, and they return to you and you build a relationship with them.

    What many developers have admired the most about the freelancing is the relationship that you can build with clients.

    Freelancing Gives You the Ability to Communication with Clients

    With the ability to communicate with clients, to express yourself, to even talk about technical stuff and not only the technical stuff. All of that together makes it much more sense to as a human being and as a system solver or provider, to work with clients than any other way.

    What sets a good freelancer apart is the ability to build relationships. It’s never about what that customer needs now or what that customer might need now, it’s about supplying them with what they need now in such a manner that they are always going to come back to you for it. You are their trusted partner in this journey that they are making with their website, and they will always come back to you. It’s about establishing those relationships in very solid manner. And it’s about the small things. It’s about saying, please, thank you, or remembering them on a holiday and saying, “Hey, happy holiday.” It’s the little things that make it.

    The Hardest Part is the Soft Stuff, Not the Technical Stuff.

    As a result, what sets a really amazing freelancer apart from ones that tackle the hardest part, the soft skills. That’s the most difficult part to really tone down.

    The technical stuff you can learn in a book. Saying it’s not hard I suppose is reductive. But you’re capable of learning it with ease, there’s a structure to it. The soft stuff is the harder piece of it.

    This post was inspired by the conversation with Christopher and Marcel on the podcast.

    The post What Sets a Good Freelance Developer Apart From the Others appeared first on BobWP.

  • Press This: You Should be Using Newsletters with Lesley Sim

    Welcome to Press This, the WordPress community podcast from WMR. Each episode features guests from around the community and discussions of the largest issues facing WordPress developers. The following is a transcription of the original recording.

    Powered by RedCircle

    Doc Pop: You’re listening to Press This, a WordPress Community Podcast on WMR. Each week we spotlight members of the WordPress community. I’m your host, Doc Pop. I support the WordPress community through my role at WP Engine, and my contributions over on TorqueMag.Io where I get to do podcasts and draw cartoons and tutorial videos. Check that out.

    You can subscribe to Press This on Red Circle, iTunes, Spotify, your favorite podcasting app or you can download episodes directly at wmr.fm. 

    I’m going to tell you a quick secret. I love signing up for newsletters. I think I’m a bit of an anomaly here, but if we aren’t close personal friends, I’m probably not going to follow you on Mastodon or Instagram or Facebook, but I won’t think twice before I sign up for your newsletter.

    If you have a restaurant, here’s my email. You got advice for game design? Sign me up. Weekly WordPress news roundups in my inbox? Don’t mind if I do. So I’m already sold on the advantages of communicating to your customers directly through email. But I thought some of you listeners might need some encouragement to explore the newsletter space.

    So I’m happy to say that today’s guest is Lesley Sim. The co-founder of Newsletter Glue, a plugin that turns your WordPress site into a powerful newsletter CMS. And we’re going to talk about why you should be getting into newsletters. 

    Lesley, let’s kick things off with just telling us how you got into WordPress.

    Lesley Sim: Hey, Doc. Thanks so much for having me on. I always love coming on these podcasts and live streams. My WordPress origin story, wow. I think my first exposure with WordPress was in 2016. I was trying to build a site for a craft beer business that I had just started and given where I am now, you can tell that that didn’t work out.

    As it turns out, craft beer breweries are hard to run. so we were looking for a cheap way to build our site and that’s kind of the first time I stumbled upon WordPress. And craft beer didn’t work out and I ended up going deeper down the WordPress hole, starting a digital agency where I did marketing and build sites for clients.

    And then just before the pandemic hit, I kind of got sick of that. I’d been doing it for a few years at that point and dealing with clients. Sometimes it’s really fun and fulfilling and sometimes it can be really frustrating. And I was like, Okay, I’ve given this services thing a good go, maybe it’s time to try my hand at products.

    And since I’ve been working in WordPress for a while now, I was like, okay, maybe I’ll try building a WordPress plugin. And that’s very, very briefly kind of how I got started and how Newsletter Glue came to be because the WordPress plugin that after some trial and error, I decided to build was Newsletter Glue.

    Doc Pop: I don’t know if I knew that you were a craft brewery business owner before this. That’s really cool. I always love hearing these extra little stories at the beginning of the show. So, is the craft brewery, how you got into, I need to make a newsletter plugin, or was that, after you already kind of dived into WordPress, you saw this need for that?

    Lesley Sim: After I’d already kind of dived into WordPress, so I’ve been doing WordPress for a while and newsletters started getting more and more popular. I think as RSS kind of faded into the background a little bit, which I’m personally really sad about because I always loved RSS, I think people needed a way to stay updated and newsletters were it.

    So I think around 2019, 2020 was when Substack started becoming really popular. And yeah, so I kind of wanted to do my own newsletter and then that’s kind of how I got the idea for Newsletter Glue.

    Doc Pop: Yeah, definitely pouring out some craft beer for RSS and I was a heavy RSS user, so that might explain why switching to newsletters where it was basically my email now is the RSS aggregator. Right. That’s kind of how it probably works. It’s like something like that.

    I mean, I’m sharing my personal information where with RSS I didn’t have to do that, but that’s maybe what you and I have in common with why we got into newsletters. Can you tell us about what is Newsletter Glue and what gap does it fill in the market?

    Lesley Sim: Newsletter Glue works with publishers, media companies, and newsrooms, and we help them connect their email service provider, like MailChimp, Campaign Monitor, ActiveCampaign to WordPress. That lets them build their newsletters inside of WordPress, the way they’re already writing their articles. So the way I think about it is, if you have a team of editors and writers who are already spending all their time in WordPress writing their articles it’s kind of a pain for them to then switch brains.

    To log into MailChimp, for example, and fiddle around with that editor and write their emails in there, and historically that’s always taken a long time and it’s less intuitive because you have to write in a separate pane than what you’re seeing. So we do a bit of all of that. Writers can instead just log into WordPress or they’re probably already logged into WordPress and just spin up a new post or a new newsletter inside of WordPress and start writing. And that experience is a lot faster. There’s no onboarding needed if you have new writers, because everybody, most professional writers, freelance writers already know how to use WordPress.

    And the other side benefit of that is that now all of your newsletters are really deeply integrated into your WordPress site, so that means if you want to do paywall stuff or SEO stuff with your newsletters, you now can. Whereas previously, all of your newsletter archives were inside of MailChimp and it’s a different URL and you don’t really have much control over that.

    You’re not able to have subscription forms on your newsletter archives because they’re sitting in MailChimp and on and on and on. So just having that deep integration is really huge for growth and branding and all of that stuff.

    Doc Pop: Yeah, I think there’s a lot to be said about the integration in your site. You’re talking about using the SEO from the newsletters as a benefit to your site, and that’s interesting. But you briefly touched on one thing I just kind of want to address here is MailChimp and Substack. If they go away, which we’ve seen very similar services go away recently, if they go away, then you’re maybe at a difficult position, right?

    Because Substack hosts your newsletter and MailChimp has hosted versions and then the version in the email box, but there’s not going to be that archived version where if you’re using something like Newsletter Glue, you can, depending, I guess, on the privacy settings, the public settings that you’ve allotted to each post, you can kind of keep those hosted and people can still find them later, right?

    Lesley Sim: Yeah, that’s exactly it. And if you wanna migrate email service providers, then again, same thing, right? You don’t have to manually migrate ’cause everything’s already on your WordPress site.

    Doc Pop: You’re talking about email service providers. I feel like we’re near the end of the first section here, but let’s try to get into that. If I’m using Newsletter Glue and I’m going to have to have a host for my site, which I would have to have anyway, am I also going to have to pay big money for an email server of some sort?

    I don’t know how that works.

    Lesley Sim: Yeah. So, all of the customers that we work with already have MailChimp accounts or ActiveCampaign accounts, and at the size that they’re at, it’s typically really, really hard for them to move off it. They might have a whole bunch of segments, tags, automation set up in there already.

    But at the same time, they don’t like the day to day work, doing the day to day work inside of those platforms because they’re not really built for easy writing. And so that’s kind where we come in and help with that day to day newsletter operations.

    Doc Pop: So, if I have a site, a WordPress site, again, you don’t have to pay hosting for that, but I would also have something like a MailChimp just to handle the newsletter serving. And what’s the integration like for that?

    Lesley Sim: On our end, it’s super easy. So they just need an API key and key that in, and then we connect everything for them behind the scenes.

    Doc Pop: Okay. And you probably do that like in the dashboard, in the WordPress dashboard, right?

    Lesley Sim: Yes.

    Doc Pop: Yeah, I love it. Okay, that totally makes sense. I haven’t used Newsletter Glue yet, but I can totally kind of imagine what it’s like there, because I’ve used several other WordPress plugins. When we come back, we’re gonna take a quick break, but when we come back, I’m gonna continue talking to Lesley Sim, the co-founder of Newsletter Glue.

    We’re gonna talk about why you need a newsletter in the age of social media. And we’re going to talk also a little more deeply about how this is going to integrate with your WordPress site and kind of questions about new features that are coming to Newsletter Glue. So stay tuned for more after the short break.

    Doc Pop: Welcome back to Press This, a WordPress Community Podcast. I’m your host, Doc Pop. Today, I’m talking to Lesley Sim, the co-founder of Newsletter Glue, a wonderful newsletter plugin that turns your WordPress website into basically, I don’t know, Lesley, what do you call it? A newsletter CMS?

    Lesley Sim: Yeah, I would say it’s a newsletter builder, but newsletter CMS sounds good too.

    Doc Pop: We talked about my love for newsletters, and I definitely think there’s a place for newsletters. I’m hoping maybe, Lesley, you could try to tell some of our listeners who might be putting a lot of energy into Instagram posts or TikTok videos, and they’re putting all their energy into there.

    And maybe they think newsletters and email are kind of dead. What would you tell them? What statistics do you have saying, saying, actually, these are still really common? Or, you know, what would you try to tell someone to kind of convince them that they need to be in the newsletter business?

    Lesley Sim: Wow, that’s hard. they’re just slightly different marketing channels. With social media platforms, that tends to be kind of where you go if you don’t have your own audience. So you’re going on a different platform to try to get found in the first place, but once you’ve grown an audience for yourself, you really want to bring them into your world, your universe, your Marvel cinematic universe. And that’s kind of where newsletter come in. 

    Because again, when you’re on a social media platform and you’re trying to get discovered, you’re at the mercy of the algorithms. Once your subscribers or your loyal customers or loyal followers know about you, they do want to know about if you’re a donut shop your Friday, you know, donut special. Or if you’re a hairdresser, there are monthly discounts. If you come in every month, you get a 20 percent discount or something like that. 

    They don’t want to have missed it because the algorithm didn’t show it to them. And so that’s where newsletters come in really handy. So you bring in, let’s say, something like 10 percent of your social media following into your newsletters and they’re your most avid fans. You can ensure that whenever you have a promotion or a discount or even just a story or an update to share, those people are going to get it. And that’s kind of the best way to build rapport with them, build a deeper relationship in a way that you just can’t on social media. 

    And you own those relationships, right? Because people have opted in, they’ve actively given you your email address. They want to hear from you, which is a very different vibe from social media where they kind of are scrolling randomly happen upon you and follow you and then forget about you five minutes later. 

    So I would say that’s not an either or kind of thing. It’s not like you either do Instagram or you do newsletters. It’s more like a funnel where, Instagram and TikTok and social media in general is kind of at the top of the funnel where you are going out of your universe into someone else’s universe to find subscribers and followers and then you’re drawing them in deeper into your funnel via the newsletters and then you know at the end of the day to your shop whether that’s online or in person.

    Doc Pop: I like that. It’s not either or I think that’s good. I have been stating things as if they’re binary, but like, yeah, Instagram is great for giving flavor to your business and communicating with your customers, maybe having a back and forth and giving them behind the scenes. But if I’m following an artist, I don’t want to find out about their Monday night art show on Tuesday morning. Because the algorithm messed things up. 

    And similarly, if I’m following an artist and they have a new album coming out, I can’t click on a link from Instagram, not super easy, but in an email, totally could. So I like that idea that maybe do both. It’s not one or the other, but it sounds like newsletters have a little bit more of an actionable kind of like, here’s a time dependent thing, or here’s a link we want you to click.

    And that maybe is their benefit. Does that sound good?

    Lesley Sim: Yeah and I think as your marketing operations grow then obviously you can do more. We’ve got lots of publications using us that publish multiple daily newsletters. And so that’s something that you can aspire to. So it’s not just last minute discounts and stuff like that.

    Doc Pop: This is another thing too, I’m thinking very specifically about newsletters as a way to communicate to your customers, but there’s a whole generation of newsletters, post Substack, as you mentioned, there’s a whole generation of newsletter writers that are turning that maybe into income, like writing the newsletters isn’t a way to drive business, it is the business, and does Newsletter Glue support features like that?

    Lesley Sim: Not directly, we do work well with a whole bunch of different paywall plugins and software. LeakyPaywall is one of them that we work really closely with, Memberful is another one that lots of our customers use, and so on.

    Doc Pop: What about Patreon integration? Is there any kind of integration there?

    Lesley Sim: Not right now, but that’s really interesting and I’ll have to look at it.

    Doc Pop: Yeah, I’m a Patreon user so I’d love to talk to you about that afterwards. 

    So let’s talk about some of the features that somebody can get from Newsletter Glue that might be missing from other things. Like I’m assuming you have Gutenberg integration in Newsletter Glue?

    Lesley Sim: Yep. So that’s actually one of the big things about us. We use the block editor. So if you’re still using the classic editor, you’ll find that when you use us, you are faced with something a little bit new, which is the block editor. And one of our core features is that we have a whole bunch of different blocks that really dramatically speed up your workflow.

    So customers, on average, say that they save one to two hours per newsletter using us, or you could also say that we cut your publishing time in half. And that’s just because a lot of them, when they’re building email digests, for example, they’re sharing links to their website or to other websites. If they had to do that in an email service provider, they would have had to manually upload the image, type out the heading, type out the excerpt, turn it into a link, and do that five times or ten times, depending on how many links they’re sharing in their newsletter.

    With us, you just need to paste in the URL or you can set a bunch of features and filters and it automatically pulls out the articles from your site. And so that takes seconds instead of 20 minutes or half an hour, depending on what you’re trying to achieve. Yeah, so that’s kind of one of our main features.

    And then also, once you’ve got your newsletter all set up, it’s really easy to hit publish and send the newsletter out from WordPress instead of having to go into Mailchimp to do it.

    Doc Pop: Is that how you also manage your subscribers and things too, is through the WordPress dashboard? Or is that something you’d be using the MailChimp side of things to do?

    Lesley Sim: That would be on the Mailchimp side of things. So we focus really heavily on the building part, like that kind of the daily work that you have to do to send out the newsletter. So we’ve also got really powerful automation features, so it’s kind of like RSS emails, which if people aren’t familiar with, basically you can set an RSS feed to send out as email notifications every time a new article is published.

    While that feature has existed for a long time, it’s kind of always given me anxiety because you don’t have any control over what that final newsletter looks like. And so we built an email automation feature where, while you can also send it out automatically based on a certain time that you’ve set, you can also set it to just save as a draft.

    And so this lets you automate 90 percent of the work or 99 percent of the work, and then go in that 1 percent, check that draft, send yourself a test email, update the subject line, and if you’re happy with it, then send it out. It saves a lot of time, but also prevents you from being scared that you’ve accidentally sent out something that you didn’t want to send out.

    Doc Pop: I guess just one more question on that when you’re filling out this post or this newsletter form, is there also kind of like Yoast SEO integration if you have Yoast SEO so that it works later on down the line or is that kind of a separate thing?

    Lesley Sim: Yeah, so because it’s just in the block editor, you can also use Yoast and do all of the keyword stuff and make it search engine optimized.

    Doc Pop: Well, that’s a good spot for us to take a quick break. And when we come back, we’re going to wrap up our conversation with Leslie Sim about Newsletter Glue, and I guess we’ll just talk about the state of the industry, so stay tuned for more after this short break.

    Doc Pop: Welcome back to Press This, a WordPress community podcast. I’m your host and Email Newsletter Addict, Doc Pop, I am talking to Lesley Sim, the co-founder of Newsletter Glue. And I think one of the things I want to talk about, kind of like changing gears a little bit, we talked about social media and websites, SEO, email newsletters.

    We haven’t talked about podcasting, which is a thing that Lesley, I don’t know if you know I’m into, and you had just started a new podcast called Sticky. Can you tell us a little bit about that?

    Lesley Sim: Yeah, we recently moved to focus on media companies and newsrooms, like I mentioned earlier. Before that, we were kind of targeting anyone with a newsletter, which is kind of a classic business mistake. And so once we moved to focus on media companies and newsrooms, I quickly realized, oh, we need a new way of marketing to them.

    And I wanted to provide really high quality content that would help people who are already professionals in the business and not just kind of, me for example, in my room studying my own newsletter for the first time. If I was like an amateur newsletter writer, I would need very different content from someone who has been writing a newsletter for 10 years for a large publication, for example.

    And so, I quickly realized, okay, I can’t interview myself or we can’t rely on really basic experience when we write newsletter type articles anymore. And that was when the idea for the podcast came about because I realized that the best people to interview to get really high quality expert level content were expert industry operators.

    And so, I’ve been lucky enough to have a whole bunch of customers and friends who have been in the industry for a while, and I got in touch with them and set up a whole bunch of different interviews. The podcast launched this week, the first episode drops next week, and I’m really excited.

    The quality is really high, and I feel like even if you’ve been in the newsletter publishing business for the past 10 to 15 years, you’re still going to learn valuable insight and advice from the episodes, so I’m really excited about it.

    Doc Pop: Who’s your first guest?

    Lesley Sim: My first guest is Alyssa Doin. She used to be head of deliverability at ConvertKit. I think now she’s head of audience growth, still at ConvertKit. She’s been working in deliverability for many years now and has dug into some narrowly deliverability issues. And so we kind of covered that in the podcast. 

    And I tried to keep it really, really actionable. So you really hear what you should do in this case? What should you do in that case? And I think I’ve already shared it with some people who are in the news industry and they’ve already found it really helpful.

    Doc Pop: And speaking of actionable, if you are a marketer looking to get advanced advice on your email newsletter needs, you can go to sticky.fm to find out more or just look for Sticky on your podcasting app. Did I nail that?

    Lesley Sim: Yes, that’s perfect.

    Doc Pop: nailed it, And also, while we’re talking about call outs, you can follow Lesley on Twitter @lesley_pizza, or you can follow Newsletter Glue on Twitter as well. And I think on that, Lesley, I’m going to thank you so much for joining us today. It’s been great having you on. Is there anywhere else that you want to tell people to visit before we wrap up here?

    Lesley Sim: Nope, that’s about it. NewsletterGlue.com is where you can find more about us.

    Doc Pop: Right on. Well, thank you so much for joining us today, Lesley. It’s been really great chatting with you. This is Press This, a WordPress Community Podcast. Each week we have conversations with different folks in WordPress. Next week we’re going to be talking to Jeff Paul from 10Up about a new open source detector that he’s built so you can scan WordPress plugins and make sure they’re compliant for your needs. I’ll let him tell you more about it next week, but it’s gonna be a fun episode just about open source and business, and maybe what 10 Up is up to these days.

    I’m also gonna be at WordCamp US, which will be already finished by the time you hear this podcast, but hopefully, if you were there, I got a chance to say hi to you.

    Doc Pop: Thanks for listening to Press This, a WordPress community podcast on WMR. Once again, my name’s Doc and you can follow my adventures with Torque magazine over on Twitter @thetorquemag or you can go to torquemag.io where we contribute tutorials and videos and interviews like this every day. So check out torquemag.io or follow us on Twitter. You can subscribe to Press This on Red Circle, iTunes, Spotify, or you can download it directly at wmr.fm each week. I’m your host Doctor Popular I support the WordPress community through my role at WP Engine. And I love to spotlight members of the community each and every week on Press This.

    The post Press This: You Should be Using Newsletters with Lesley Sim appeared first on Torque.

  • Nathan’s Head Meanders Around WordCamp US 2023

    As the Nathan head made its way around WordCamp US, mixed reactions of shock, love, ignorance, confusion, anxiety, fear and words that defy us, were had by all.

    The post Nathan’s Head Meanders Around WordCamp US 2023 appeared first on BobWP.

  • Press This: How Faust.js Listens to the Community

    Welcome to Press This, the WordPress community podcast from WMR. Each episode features guests from around the community and discussions of the largest issues facing WordPress developers. The following is a transcription of the original recording.

    Powered by RedCircle

    Doc Pop: You’re listening to Press This, a WordPress Community Podcast on WMR. Each week we spotlight members of the WordPress community. I’m your host, Doc Pop. I support the WordPress community through my role at WP Engine, and my contributions over on TorqueMag.Io where I get to do podcasts and draw cartoons and tutorial videos. Check that out.

    You can subscribe to Press This on Red Circle, iTunes, Spotify, your favorite podcasting app or you can download episodes directly at wmr.fm. 

    Faust.js is a JavaScript framework made to unleash the power of WordPress for headless websites. Faust is one of the only, if not the only, JavaScript frameworks specifically built around headless WordPress, and Faust.js officially came out of beta on June 12th, 2023. And may even have some features coming up soon just in time for WordCamp US, which is happening next week. So my guest today is Joe Fusco, a Senior Software Engineer at WP Engine who’s working on Faust. And we are going to talk about some of these new features and what’s changed since Faust has come out of beta.

    Joe, how are you doing today?

    Joe Fusco: Good, Doc, thanks for having me.

    Doc Pop: Yeah, thanks so much for joining us. Let’s kick this off with just letting us know, how did you get into WordPress? 

    Joe Fusco: Yeah, of course. So my WordPress origin story, I started using WordPress in 2013 around version 3.5. At the time, I was just working on an idea that I had, just building out some minor sort of sites and tinkering around and actually got my foot in the door with a local agency in Rochester, New York, building some custom themes.

    And from there, I got my first remote job working for Inksub, which is the company behind WPMU Dev, EduBlogs, and Campus Press. So I got a little time with each of those parts. So I worked for those companies and then from there, I actually moved down to Tampa, Florida, where I had an opportunity to work for a manufacturing company that was using WordPress not only for their marketing site, but kind of internally as well for a bunch of different tools. So I got my feet wet with Headless WordPress then.

    I did a lot of custom development there. That was during the pandemic, so everything was switching to remote. I actually had an opportunity to come back to Rochester and that’s when I started working for WP Engine. So yeah, it’s been great ever since.

    Doc Pop: You mentioned something there, I hadn’t thought about, but you were doing WordPress, working with some great themes and products. And then when you moved to Florida, you were still doing WordPress, but you were doing headless WordPress for a factory. Like that sounds really interesting to me and I feel like you gotta dive into that tidbit just a little more.

    Joe Fusco: Absolutely. Yeah. So this opportunity, I just got an email one day saying, “Hey, we like your stuff on GitHub. Can we have you come down?” 

    And I thought it was fake at first, it just seemed really spammy. And so I was like, yeah, sure, I’ll come down.

    And they offered me a job. It’s with one of the world’s largest door manufacturers. They have a few buildings out in Tampa. And it was really surreal, moved the whole family down there, we were there for three years. And it was a lot of headless sort of components that we started to build out.

    So the actual org, the marketing side was very familiar with WordPress. They were very much invested in WordPress. So using WordPress headless kind of made sense just given that we already had those systems set up at the time. So yeah, there was some pretty cool things that were created out of that, like some door configurators.

    Doc Pop: I love this, thank you so much for diving into that. 

    Joe Fusco: Oh yeah.

    Doc Pop: I love that the story took this turn into the world’s largest door manufacturer and headless WordPress technology and it’s all tied together. Let’s get back into talking about Faust. I believe that Faust.js first, WP Engine first launched a version in late 2021.

    Like September 2021. And just recently, a couple months ago, they have come out of beta with the official release of the product. Can you just tell our listeners what is Faust.js and what has happened in those few years between the start of the project and it coming out of beta?

    Joe Fusco: Yeah, so certainly, Faust.js originally started as a, I believe, a sort of a hackathon project and then evolved from there. Went through a few different sort of phases. One was with GQty, which is a GraphQL Client. From there, it just wasn’t the best tool for that time as we were scaling.

    So we decided to switch to Apollo. And from there, we’ve been building out a lot of new features. Most recently coming out of beta, we just wanted to kind of indicate to the community that this is a production ready sort of framework, so while nothing specifically was tied to that 1.0 release, there have been some huge sort of ideas that have come out that we currently have RFCs for on the GitHub. 

    Doc Pop: So let’s talk about these RFC’s. First off, I don’t see many requests for comments on plugins in the WordPress community. Oftentimes, it seems like maybe developers are listening, checking on Twitter or things like that. But, the actual kind of opening it up and getting feedback. That’s pretty interesting. Maybe that’s because this is such a big project that that’s why y’all are doing that.

    But I was wondering before we get into the specific RFCs, maybe you could just tell us why did y’all go to GitHub and reach out for comments from users?

    Joe Fusco: Yeah, so Faust has been an open source project. However, it’s been sort of corporately sponsored by a WP Engine. So with that comes its own challenges. We have our own process internally, but we’re on GitHub open source, and there’s the whole open source culture.

    Around that with other engineers contributing back. So there was really just a little bit of a gap that we were noticing with feedback and not everything being out in the open, or I guess you could say building in public with these decisions.

    So wanted incorporate RFCs into our workflow. Get some feedback from the community directly and iterate just in public on these thoughts. So it’s been great so far. We’ve loved the feedback that has been provided and look forward to doing this more.

    Doc Pop: One of the first tickets that I saw was a request for comments on React components to Gutenberg blocks. This document provides a detailed proposal for converting existing React components into Gutenberg blocks. People listening should know what Gutenberg blocks are, but these are the block-based editing that WordPress has pivoted to. Can you tell us about what the proposal here is for?

    Joe Fusco: The React components to Gutenberg blocks. This is sort of the next evolution of the React Gutenberg bridge, if you will, and essentially what we want to do is take existing React components that are in a Next application and just have those kind of automatically sync over to WordPress. So, if you have a Gutenberg block created in one spot. You don’t have to go and duplicate that and install a plugin and have it on both sides with duplicate code. So we really want Faust to be able to handle that and facilitate that sort of connection between the two ecosystems, if you will.

    Doc Pop: And what are the challenges with doing something like that?

    Joe Fusco: Yeah, so challenges so far, I mean, we’re definitely still sort of discovering different things with this, but we’ve built some POCs so far and getting us like 90 percent of the way there. So some of the challenges right now, one of the big ones is naming. I know that that’s kind of like not a technical thing, but just, what do we call this thing?

    Naming’s always hard. But beyond that, trying to make WordPress think that this block, that WordPress doesn’t normally look for blocks like that are remotely somewhere else, but just getting it to play nicely with WordPress. So as far as WordPress concerns, it would just be a traditional sort of block that you would create maybe with the WordPress helper. I think it’s like NPX create block. 

    Doc Pop: In the request for comments, have you all gotten any feedback on this specific issue that has helped your team or has shown that there’s a priority that you didn’t expect to hear about?

    Joe Fusco: Not at the moment or not yet. I think a lot of the conversation so far has just been sort of conceptualizing what this idea is, because we’re in this space now where like, no one’s really done anything like this, from what I could see. So a lot of innovation here. And with that comes sort of building those mental models for the community to understand.

    Doc Pop: Yeah, I think that’s a good way to put it. This is definitely uncharted territory, as you’re talking about, even with naming. Naming parts of it is difficult, and there’s a lot of working parts, but also I feel like Gutenberg and the Block Editor is still maybe a moving target. Has that been kind of an issue when you’re developing something around Gutenberg that there’s a change from core that was unexpected, or is Gutenberg pretty stable these days?

    Joe Fusco: Yeah, great question. So in the beginning, when I joined the team, yes, there was absolutely some changes that were happening that were kind of setting us back a little bit, just different sort of schemas and whatnot. I would say this year, it’s been pretty stable, at least with the parts that we’re utilizing of WordPress.

    So it’s been a lot better. We’re really only focusing on those production ready things, but still keeping our ear close to the bleeding edge features of Gutenberg.

    Doc Pop: And that’s a good spot for us to take a quick break. When we come back, we’re going to continue our conversation with Joe Fusco about Faust.js and Headless WordPress, so stay tuned for more after this short break.

    Doc Pop: Welcome back to Press This, a WordPress community podcast. I’m your host, Doc Pop. Today, we’re talking to Joe Fusco from WP Engine about Faust.js and what’s happening with the request for comments for some proposed changes. And we were talking earlier in the show about how not many of the plugins that I follow put out requests for comments that I see, but maybe they do, and I’m not that tuned into it, but we’re talking about the ones that are being put out by the Faust.js crew now, and we talked about one RFC for React components to Gutenberg blocks, another one that I think is worth bringing up is Next.js, AppRouterSupport, and Faust. Joe, can you tell us what is the proposal here?

    Joe Fusco: The Next. js App Router support and Faust proposal. We’ve done a bit of research into just seeing how we can support the new App Router feature in Next.js. So with that, we propose some possible solutions here. 

    But essentially, what we’re trying to do is AppRouter is using React server components. So what that means is we can kind of fetch data from WordPress on the server, rather than making one big sort of GraphQL query to grab everything as you can currently see in our current examples on the Faust repo. So yeah, we’re all really excited about this.

    It kind of opens Faust up to be more framework agnostic as well. Just being able to support React server components in general. So, you can imagine maybe you have some custom fields on a post and maybe some custom fields somewhere else or like a menu. Ideally, we want files to be able to handle fetching those or at least be able to provide utilities to help developers sort of lower that friction to getting started with WordPress and headless.

    Doc Pop: And I see as part of the proposal, it’s saying that with the introduction of AppRouter, there is a new file called head.Js that has custom support for fetching metadata, which should help users with SEO. Can you talk a little bit about the benefits there?

    Joe Fusco: We’ve been working on or just kind of brainstorming how we want to handle this. So SEO is a huge part of WordPress, lots of SEO plugins, and really on the headless side SEO is not, it’s not really prioritized, at least with headless WordPress. It’s kind of like roll your own sort of solution.

    So we want Faust to be able to fill that gap and we think that this metadata API could definitely help us get there.

    Doc Pop: And also as part of this change, you mentioned it would help keep Faust agnostic. And I’m seeing here that that’s going to help plugin developers and people who use plugins. Can you talk about what this change means? Why AppRouter support could help plugins work better with Faust?

    Joe Fusco: Yeah, yeah, certainly. With this proposal, it’s somewhat of a paradigm shift. We don’t think so much like replacing how Faust is currently set up, but more so like just offering more utilities and a helper. So you can imagine a WordPress plugin has some custom settings. Faust provides a tool to just quickly grab those on the front end in your Next app. Yeah, just kind of help facilitate that connection between those two ecosystems of WordPress and Next.

    Doc Pop: The WordPress Rest API was released in 4.7. I can’t remember if it was maybe 2016. And I’m just kind of curious about what GraphQL, ’cause we’re talking about that a lot with Faust.js. What does GraphQL offer that maybe people couldn’t get from the REST API that’s in WordPress core?

    Joe Fusco: Yeah, yeah, great question. GraphQL allows, I would say the biggest thing, without getting too much into what GraphQL is, but I just shaping your data like how you want it. So I can decide like, hey, I only want X, Y, and Z to be returned from WordPress. I can send a request that just has those things in the order I want them.

    And GraphQL through WP GraphQL plugin will provide that in the exact sort of shape that I want. So I’m not having to filter through a bunch of fluff in a response. That might be like REST. There’s a lot of extra stuff there.

    Doc Pop: WordCamp US, I mentioned at the top of the show, WordCamp US is coming up, as far as when we’re recording, it’s next week. I’m just kind of curious if, first off, if you’re planning on going to WordCamp US and if people can reach you there. And secondly, if there’s going to be maybe any Faust or GraphQL representation there, like at the WP Engine booth, or any maybe new announcements coming out about that.

    Joe Fusco: Yeah, yeah, certainly. So I will definitely be heading to WordCamp US. Pretty excited about that. This will be my second one. I think my other one was in Philadelphia in 2015. But yeah, I will be there, happy to answer any questions, I’ll be hanging around the WP Engine booth. There will be some other folks with me, I believe it’s Jeff Everhart and Jordan Maslin, so definitely come and say hi and pick our brains.

    Doc Pop: WP Engine often has great swag. I haven’t seen any, but are there gonna be any stickers or anything for Faust? I don’t know if that community kind of has its own branding yet.

    Joe Fusco: So, I don’t believe that we’ll have right now any Faust specific stickers. I do know that there will be other swag there, but yeah, we’re kind of at the beginning of just starting to somewhat brand Faust a little bit as it matures.

    Doc Pop: On that topic, if people are interested, if they’re listening to this and they’re interested in Faust, what is maybe a good thing for them to do to learn about it and kind of dive in a little bit to try it out?

    Joe Fusco: We would love to have y’all, anyone interested in trying it out. I would say the best way is to just visit our site, faustjs.org. You can head over there to the Getting Started section, and it’ll walk you through one of our example projects, where you can just set it up with a single command and get it running and see how the data flows and works there.

    Doc Pop: For that sample project, it’s web based. Do you know if that’s the same as the WordPress, I think it’s called, I don’t know if it’s the WordPress sandbox, but like the kind of online web version of WordPress where you can kind of try it out without actually hosting it. Are y’all using the same thing there?

    Joe Fusco: So we don’t have any of the WordPress Playgrounds set up on our current site, but that is something that I’m personally looking at and I’ve been geeking out about too. So I have a Code Pen I could share after this, with a link that has the Faust WordPress plugin set up with GraphQL in the WordPress Playground.

    So that’s definitely a quick way to check out the WordPress side of things.

    Doc Pop: On the website that you were just mentioning, can people also find a link to the GitHub? Or should we give them a quick link for that as well?

    Joe Fusco: Yeah, I can add a link to that, but yeah, GitHub is WPEngine.Faustjs, and that houses our NPM packages and the WordPress plugin, so come and check it out,

    Doc Pop: We’re going to take one more quick break, and when we come back, we’re going to wrap up our conversation with Joe Fusco about Faust.Js, GraphQL, and Headless WordPress, so stay tuned right after this short break. 

    Doc Pop: Welcome back to Press This, a WordPress Community Podcast. I’m your host, Doc Pop. Today, we’re talking to Joe Fusco about Faust.js and some of the things that are coming. We’ve talked about the request for comments. We’ve talked about officially coming out of beta. We’ve talked about WordCamp US. And I guess the last thing I wanna ask Joe is I’m always curious when there’s new technology like this, if there’s ways for me to kind of see it in the wild.

    Are there any good examples you can think of Faust.js being used in the wild for people to kind of play around with, or at least just hear about the story of how it’s being used.

    Joe Fusco: Yeah, absolutely. So we’re really happy with the amount of adoption that Faust is getting so far. So much so that even WP Engine right now is utilizing Faust and hosted on our Atlas platform. So definitely check that out, see how blistering fast it is and yeah, it’s really cool. 

    On faustjs.org, we are planning to add a little showcase section that highlights some of those awesome sites that are currently using Faust. And yeah, one of those being our main site, WPEngine.com, on the Atlas platform as well. 

    You don’t need to be on WP Engine to use Faust. Just want to clarify that. It can be used with any sort of platform. But we do feel that Atlas is the best environment for Faust to kind of be hosted on.

    Doc Pop: And we didn’t talk about Atlas in particular. Do you want to quickly tie in the difference between like Atlas and Faust? 

    Joe Fusco: Yeah, so Atlas is WP Engine’s headless framework. So that’s like, if you want to host a WordPress site, and the Node side, the next step, Atlas is where you want to go. There’s also a bunch of other tools that are offered with that, such as Atlas Search. It’s pretty powerful, a lot of awesome features going into that and actively being developed.

    Doc Pop: Well, that’s a great spot for us to wrap up this conversation with Joe Fusco. If you’d like to learn more about Faust.js, you can go to faustjs.org. You can also find them on GitHub. And I’m sure if you look around on Twitter and other places, you’ll be able to find people talking about it as well.

    Doc Pop: Thanks for listening to Press This, a WordPress community podcast on WMR. Once again, my name’s Doc and you can follow my adventures with Torque magazine over on Twitter @thetorquemag or you can go to torquemag.io where we contribute tutorials and videos and interviews like this every day. So check out torquemag.io or follow us on Twitter. You can subscribe to Press This on Red Circle, iTunes, Spotify, or you can download it directly at wmr.fm each week. I’m your host Doctor Popular I support the WordPress community through my role at WP Engine. And I love to spotlight members of the community each and every week on Press This.

    The post Press This: How Faust.js Listens to the Community appeared first on Torque.

  • WordCamp US 2023, Another Fantastic WP Memory

    Well, it was inevitable that I should post a recap of WordPress US. I am writing this after returning to my home and office in Porto on Monday morning, this being Thursday of the same week. And I’ll tell you, I am just starting to get over my exhaustion.

    The Trip to WCUS

    Flying back to the states, I loved the way over. No overnight experiences for me, and leaving at 7:30 am Porto time, arriving in National Harbor 7:30 pm EDT. Of course, during the flight I started with breakfast, then a drink and lunch and segued into dinner at some point which ended with a snack. Lot’s of food and can’t honestly remember when I ate what.

    I did meet a few friends when I landed, but by then I was pretty much half asleep. It was nice seeing my good friend Mark Westguard right off the bat.

    The first day in National Harbor

    Unlike my other WordPressers who were already there, the next day I was not part of the Community Summit nor did I have the desire to be a tourist in Washington DC. The latter did not tempt me with the heat or the sights.

    So I spent the day hanging around the hotel/convention center to make life easy. Now the Gaylord National Resort and Convention Center is enormous. And I mean freakin’ huge. It kind of reminded me of those large cruise ships, although I have never been on one. It’s set up quite well. You never really need to leave and everything is overpriced. But hey, that’s America, right?

    The morning I spent wandering around the grounds, inside and out.

    The other part of the day Mark and myself just did this and that. Lunchtime we went and had some drinks and nachos. After that we just roamed around the hotel and Mark was obviously delighted to find his logo with all the sponsors on the entryway to the conference center.

    Then we had Casey join us, Mark’s better half, and dinner time where at even more food.

    So after a day of local exploring, drinks and food, we did what any normal WordCamper would do. We went to a party, WP-Includes Summer Fest.

    Contributor Day

    The next day was Contributor Day. And guess what? It was amazing. So much so that I didn’t take one photo as I was busy listening and interjecting every once in awhile. But I did snag the group photo from that day just to share the all the groovy WordPressers who were part of that day. By the way, photo credit goes to Shusei Toda.

    WordCamp US, the Event

    As with most WordCamps, I find myself so busy connecting with old and new friends, and just being a happy WordCamper that I never take as many photos as planned. But, I do the best I can do.

    Of course, I cannot go without thanking my sponsors, A2 Hosting, Avalara, Hostinger, GoDaddy, Jetpack and Weglot. Oh, and yes, WooCommerce!

    Do the Woo, a Pseudo Sponsor

    And then this happened. My friends over at Multicolab were not able to use their sponsor booth. Anil Gupta was able to attend, but he had problems with getting his team over to the US. So his table sat unattended and barren.

    I had a chat with Anil as he is a good friend of mine, and also a past sponsor of Do the Woo. Long story short, I took over the booth and used it for the DTW hq at WordCamp US. So I had the opportunity to be able to do some podcasting as well as meet many of our listeners.

    Here is Anil sharing some thoughts on WordCamp.

    Here is my makeshift booth.

    And some of our podcast guests.

    And a very special podcast. Three WordPressers from the Spain WordPress community did a show, and they did it all in Spanish. What fun!

    As it so happened during contributor day, also at the event I didn’t get as many photos as I would have wanted. Was just too busy enjoying IRL conversations. But here are just a few more friends that I caught.

    What’s a Flagship WordCamp without Nathan’s head

    Now for those of you who know Nathan, you get it. For those that don’t, well I will add a mysterious moment to your life. A good friend and fellow podcaster of mine, Nathan’s head often shows up in the weirdest spots, or simply frightening people here and there. And the second day started out with just that.

    The After Social

    As with tradition of WordCamp US, the social at the end of the second day was at the Smithsonian Museum of Natural History. Quite the impressive museum. Now I am not a huge fan of museums. I could also say that it was mostly bones, stuffed or recreated animals, rocks and overpriced jewelry, but nonetheless it was quite breathtaking.

    A lot of people had a great time and it was also filled with conversation, laughter and yummy desserts with old and new friends.

    And what is a museum visit without posing as a museum exhibit.

    Of course my friend Miriam had to catch as I ventured into the fossil display where I discovered an old acquaintance, Joe the Tyrannosaurus. As I gently touch the bones of his neck on display, I pondered our prehistoric life together.

    It’s Why I Do What I Do

    In a nutshell, I do WordPress because of the community. And events like WordCampUS is like a moment of pure oxygen. So much laughter, conversation, hugs, food and drinks with old and new friends. I wouldn’t have it any other way.

    And I leave you with one last photo. As I was flying home, something outside my window reminded me of that museum. Can you guess what that is?

    Hope to see you at WordCamp Asia in 2024.

    The post WordCamp US 2023, Another Fantastic WP Memory appeared first on BobWP.

  • WordCamp US 2023 Looked to the Future and Beyond

    Landing in Washington DC you immediately feel the history. You feel the weight of the decisions being made in the city and it gives you a sense of pride for belonging to something bigger than yourself. That’s why it was such an apt setting for WordCamp US 2023, on the heels of the 20th anniversary of the CMS. Being around community members and seeing the work they’re doing shows how far we’ve come in 20 years and where the CMS can go in the future. 

    The Gaylord National Resort was buzzing with the excitement of WordPressers eager to discuss the thing they love. People from all over the world gathered to learn, network, and celebrate the thing they love. 

    The talks were informative, the hallway track was active, and the sightseeing was unmatched. If you missed any of the sessions, they will be up on WordPress.TV. 

    Let’s get into big takeaways from WCUS 2023.

    Looking to the Future

    2023 marked WordPress’s 20th anniversary. An impressive milestone for anything but especially for a CMS. Talks ranged from accessibility to Core Web Vitals, but all looked at the power of WordPress and where we can go in the next 20 years. 

    WordPress in Space

    The first talk of the conference was presented by JJ Toothman and Abby Bowman from the Web Modernization Team at NASA. They were tasked with the mission to bring NASA.gov into the future using WordPress. 

    The original site was launched in 1994, and has seen updates through the years, but really needed a big overhaul. The challenge wasn’t the design, or even convincing NASA to use WordPress. It was condensing all of NASA’s sites and content into one place so users don’t have to go searching for information. 

    “Our goal was to basically build a WordPress Mission Control,” Bowman said. “No one should have to have a PHD in astrophysics or memorize the org chart to get information on a certain mission.”

    This process took over a year because there was just so much content. To date the team has 440 users onboarded to the new CMS, they’ve created 3,023 new landing pages, and migrated 68,006 pages.

    WordCamp US 2023

    Because the Web Modernization Team made the site so intuitive, people started picking it up in no time and even suggesting new ways to use existing blocks. 

    “One of the things we learned early on was to curate the editing experience to get them comfortable with the new editing tools at their disposal. One thing was to create way more block patterns,” Toothman said. “We even pre-filled out some example content that they could play with and understand right away.”

    Another roadblock was teaching the content creators how to use Gutenberg and WordPress. Because there are so many writers from so many different organizations within NASA, reaching each one was a challenge. They ended up looking to the WordPress community as an example of how to do this. 

    Instead of trying to touch each group, Toothman and Bowman taught a group of super users from each space who could bring their WordPress knowledge to the team. 

    “The technology part was really easy and the really hard part was the people. We couldn’t have done this without the web content team.”

    Abby Bowman

    This was a massive project that should be launching any day now. To check out what the site will look like go to https://beta.science.nasa.gov/. 

    The Future of WordPress

    Executive Director of the WordPress Project, Josepha Haden Chomphosy, took the stage to talk about the future of WordPress. After 20 years, WordPress is rewriting itself and now it’s time to ask some big questions about how to maintain the CMS for the next 20 and beyond. 

    According to Haden Chomphosy, there are three main areas we need to foster in order to keep WordPress healthy; the software itself, events, and the community. These are the heart and nervous system of WordPress. If the software is fast and accessible, more people will adopt it. If the events are easy to attend and informational, more people will learn how to code with WordPress. And if the community remains a safe place, more people will stay loyal to the CMS for life. 

    She then went on to say that WordPress can change your life, your community, and the world only if people are able to access it and more importantly learn how to use it. 

    “When you democratize publishing you’re providing easier access to knowledge, opportunity, and connections. You are giving a voice to the voiceless.”

    Josepha Haden Chomphosy

    The future of WordPress comes down to people and education. The thing that sets the CMS apart from others is the community. It’s the most powerful thing about WordPress and if supportive, will propel it into the future and beyond. 

    Haden Chomphosy left the audience with three questions to consider:

    1. What is the story you want to be able to tell about yourself?
    2. What is the story you want to tell about your time in WP?
    3. What is the story you want WordPress to tell?

    What’s Next for Gutenberg

    WordPress Co-Founder, Matt Mullenweg, closed out the weekend with a look at what to expect from Gutenberg in the coming years. He began by celebrating the 6.3 release, which was created by 640 contributors to that release. 207 of whom were first-timers. A very impressive showing.

    Looking ahead to WordPress 6.4, which will be released in November. This is going to be another underrepresented gender release squad. With that comes the Twenty Twenty-Four default theme. Mullenweg announced that this theme will have a focus on bloggers and content creators. 

    Font management will be added in 6.4, which allows you to download font files directly from Google and onto your site locally. This will make fonts so much more agile. 

    A new feature Image Lightbox enables a user to click on an image on the front end and zoom in on it. This was only possible with plugins before. 

    But possibly the most exciting thing about 6.4 for editors and writers everywhere, me very much included, is Collaboration. Phase 3 of Gutenberg will begin the work on bringing collaborative editing to WordPress. Imagine being able to write and design at the same time as someone else. This will greatly shorten the approval process and make it easier to get content spun up quickly. 

    WordCamp US 2023

    One of the biggest announcements of the evening was what Mullenweg is calling WordPress LMS. This is bringing four different LMS or Learning Management System plugins together to create a standard for how LMS plugins are built. TutorLMS, Sensei, LearnDash and LifterLMS met this week to look at questions like, can we use some of the same SQL formats? In order to create rules for what an LMS plugin should have. Mullenweg is hoping to do this with other plugins such as SEO or forms plugins. If you are interested in getting involved there is a new LMS channel in the WordPress Slack. 

    Mullenweg echoed Haden Chomophsy saying, “We are 20 years into WordPress and we are thinking about the next 20 and beyond and creating and thriving.” 

    He urged the audience to think in the long term. We don’t just want WordPress around for another 20 years, we want it around for the next 100. We want it to thrive for the next generation and beyond.

    A Sense of History, And Long-Term Thinking 

    WordCamp US 2023 was an exhilarating experience. Thank you as always to the incredible volunteer organizers and speakers who made it all possible. WordPress has experienced a lot in the last 20 years. The community has overcome a global pandemic, and was able to come together and create beautiful website experiences. 

    Whether we are going to space or supporting the local bakery, WordPress can take you where you need to go. Here’s to the next 20 years of WordPress and the community, there isn’t a group of more passionate people out there. 

    See you next year, WCUS!

    The post WordCamp US 2023 Looked to the Future and Beyond appeared first on Torque.

  • Press This: How WordPress Can Keep the Web Independent with David Wolfpaw

    Welcome to Press This, the WordPress community podcast from WMR. Each episode features guests from around the community and discussions of the largest issues facing WordPress developers. The following is a transcription of the original recording.

    Powered by RedCircle

    Doc Pop: You’re listening to Press This, a WordPress Community Podcast on WMR. Each week we spotlight members of the WordPress community. I’m your host, Doc Pop. I support the WordPress community through my role at WP Engine, and my contributions over on TorqueMag.Io where I get to do podcasts and draw cartoons and tutorial videos. Check that out.

    You can subscribe to Press This on Red Circle, iTunes, Spotify, your favorite podcasting app or you can download episodes directly at wmr.fm. 

    Wherever you look online these days, it seems like the web is consolidating into fewer and fewer pillars. Now, on this podcast, we often focus on ways to optimize your WordPress website or improve your SEO ranking for Google. But on this episode, we’re going to just talk about a philosophy that celebrates individuality, a realm of freedom and expression that might challenge our perceptions of the WordPress user experience.

    Today, we are going to be talking about the IndieWeb, which is a group of web designers and users who are creating the type of web that they’d like to see, a non corporate web. The existence of an IndieWeb, implies the existence of a dependent web. And so these are the folks that are trying to fix that.

    So today, we are going to be talking to David Wolfpaw, a website mechanic for FixUpFox, as well as a theme and plugin developer and a contributor for the WordPress Community Team. David, how are you doing today?

    David Wolfpaw: I’m doing very well, yourself?

    Doc Pop: I’m doing great. I’d love to kick this off by just hearing about how you got into WordPress.

    David Wolfpaw: Absolutely. I’ve been doing web development for over 20 years now, looking back before WordPress was around. But I didn’t actually get into WordPress until 2008. So I’d been around for about five years at that point. I’d been using other CMSs. I’d been doing a lot of PHP coding, you know, separate of using any CMS.

    And quite honestly, I just wanted to try out a few different tools for managing my own personal website at the time. I was already blogging prior to that, but I was doing blogging in the manner of just writing new pieces of content at the start of an HTML page and uploading it to a server. So finding that there was a tool specifically built for that, it was pretty easy to get on. But I also found that when I started using WordPress, I brought a lot of my own existing habits to the WordPress space. 

    So for example, when I built my first WordPress website, I had no idea that there was a navigation system built into the dashboard. So I went in and edited the header.php file every time I wanted to change a link to a page or something. So, you know, not everything is immediately apparent to someone who’s not used the software.

    Doc Pop: And WordPress is still your main CMS, or do you tend to kind of explore Joomla and other CMSs as well?

    David Wolfpaw: No. WordPress is still my main CMS. I have worked on some Drupal sites before along with some other CMSs and other non-blogging non-site builder platforms. But I continue to return to WordPress time and time again.

    Doc Pop: And let’s get into that main topic. What is the IndieWeb in your definition?

    David Wolfpaw: Yeah, so I would first direct anybody to visit IndieWeb.org to find out information about a wide variety of IndieWeb related topics. There’s a whole section specifically devoted to WordPress there. 

    My personal definition of the IndieWeb is any site that the user is building for themselves for their own purposes, that doesn’t just mean like personal use, but it could also mean for business use, that is disconnected from a third party centralized service. What I mean by that is you are building your own website or using your own social media that is hosted elsewhere, then building a Facebook page to promote your business or using Squarespace to build a website for yourself. Those things have their own uses and their own values, but you have a lot less control over them.

    Doc Pop: And what are some of the other CMSs that are part of the IndieWeb? If Squarespace would be a third party that you’re dependent on, what are some of the CMSs out there that are popular in the IndieWeb community?

    David Wolfpaw: One big part of it, I guess one thing that I didn’t bring up is that, usually it’s things that you are self-hosting. But I do wanna make a distinction that you do not need to be self-hosting, to do something that you’d consider part of that or at least I don’t think so.

    But that you have the opportunity to self-host. So you might use the Ghost CMS, for instance, or WordPress.com. And you may have, those companies host it for you, but when it comes to platforms like WordPress or Ghost, two that I would consider very popular in that realm, you have the opportunity to self host them if you want.

    And also you have data portability. So if I start a website on WordPress.com, and I decide later that I want to self host that website, I can do so without losing any of my content, because WordPress has led the way in making data portability very important when it comes to your content online so I can easily take all of my content and move it to my own site.

    Doc Pop: That rings true to me. I feel like I’ve talked to Tontek throughout the years about the IndieWeb and heard that self hosting was kind of a big part of it. I always thought it was like a requirement. But the way you just phrased it kind of makes me think the reason I don’t use Twitter anymore is maybe because I want to be able to own my content and move it around and not be dependent on someone. 

    And even though I’m not hosting my Mastodon instance, I could, and the same reason I have my personal website on WordPress instead of on some other places, I’m not dependent on that other place in terms if they make a policy change or break something, I can always have my website under my control, but beyond that, I also have the option.

    I’m not self hosting. I can’t imagine self hosting my site, but I have that option. So I think the data portability and all that kind of goes together. And just because I’m not hosting my own site doesn’t mean that maybe I’m not still following some of the principles that are building philosophies of the IndieWeb.

    David Wolfpaw: Absolutely, I would agree with that. One example, earlier this year, Automatic hired Matthias, I don’t think I’ve heard his last name out loud, Pfefferle, and if I’m mispronouncing it, Matthias, I’m sorry. Specifically to work on ActivityPub related plugins for WordPress, both for WordPress.org users, but also for people on WordPress.com. 

    And I’m highlighting that as the larger, what I would consider a more centralized company in terms of if you’re hosting on WordPress.com, you are bound to they’re decision making about the hosting platform, but you still have that ability to do some of the more IndieWeb things such as communicate cross platform. 

    The real reason I want to make that distinction that I don’t think hosting is the only thing is it has a lot more in my mind to do with what you can do with the things that you have. A good example is that without using a third party tool that’s just double posting things, and I’m just going to say this is notwithstanding any of the weird confusion going on with centralized social media right now, which, I’m sure all the listeners know, you can’t just make an Instagram post and have that show up as a Twitter post as well.

    You can’t post a story on Snapchat and have that also be available for people on Facebook. But when it comes to the IndieWeb, you can do things like that. I can use my Mastodon account to listen to music from a FunkWale instance, which is a decentralized music platform. There’s things like Peertube, so I can I use my account on my Mastodon instance to comment on people’s YouTube channels, for instance, using Peertube, and I don’t need to maintain a separate account somewhere. 

    Right now, a lot of the different platforms are seen as clones, I would say, like PixelFed is what a lot of people call an Instagram clone, which is a fair assessment, but I think it’s less, we’re just trying to copy what this platform has done, and more of a these are the ways people have decided to share themselves online the tools that we have, photo, video, text, audio, and there just happens to be a centralized company that’s done that first.

    Doc Pop: You mentioned the idea of how we would’ve done that before would’ve been like cross posting or double posting I think is a better way to put it. Where if you want something to go out to all the different places, you literally post it on Twitter and then you copy paste and you post it to Facebook or whatever.

    And I like how you’re talking about this positive feature of the IndieWeb through the ActivityPub is how you don’t have to double posts. You can just choose how you follow things and choose how you share things. You could share on Pixel Fed and somebody following on Mastodon could interact with it.

    And we are going to bring this back into WordPress because ActivityPub has great integrations with WordPress and there’s a lot of crossover and a lot of potential for how we’ll be able to share and comment. And do all sorts of powerful things from WordPress while still having something that feels like the web we know today.

    Just a decentralized version of it, and we’re gonna get back to that after this short break. So stay tuned for more with our conversation with David Wolfpaw, right after this.

    Doc Pop: Welcome back to Press This, a WordPress community podcast. I’m your host, Doc Pop. Today, I’m talking to David Wolfpaw, a website mechanic for FixUpFox, and we are talking about the IndieWeb, and we’re gonna talk about how the IndieWeb can help keep the web weird and how WordPress can be part of that. Right before the break, we talked about plugins that are available and the potential for WordPress to kind of crossover with things outside of WordPress.

    David, let’s get into that. What sort of tools are there to help WordPress users join the IndieWeb?

    David Wolfpaw: The first thing that I would clarify is I think that if you are hosting your own WordPress site, you are already de facto part of the IndieWeb. You are doing all of the things that I would consider core to the IndieWeb ethos. But you probably want to go beyond that. You probably want to discuss ways that you can interact elsewhere or that you can do more with your own site.

    The first plugin that I would suggest is the IndieWeb plugin itself, just because it’s an easy name to remember. And the IndieWeb plugin doesn’t do anything on its own, so much as wrap together a lot of functionality of various other plugins. I would compare it kind of to Jetpack in that way, in that you’re installing one tool that helps you manage a variety of different tools.

    So some of the things that the IndieWeb plugin itself provides is a way to do web mentions. So when you use a Webmention, you are notifying another website that some activity has taken place on your website. So an example of how I use the Webmention plugin on my personal site is that I can write a post on my site and then I can copy the link to that post and I can write my own post on Mastodon, being like, hey, blah blah blah, I wrote this article, take a look. 

    When somebody responds via Mastodon, that will show up on my personal website. So no longer does somebody have to go to your website and go fill out the comment form down there and wait for your approval there. Although I’ll specify, you can still set comments to require approval on your site. So it’s a lot easier way to get engagement and more interaction on your content, which I found that it leads to more engagement because it’s a lot easier for you to see a link and make a comment about it where you’ve seen the link, as opposed to having to follow it elsewhere. 

    Another tool that I want to highlight within that plugin is the syndication links. Think about it kind of like canonical links. Basically, if you are cross posting to other places, you have a way to indicate where it’s been cross posted, where people can get other copies, and vice versa, if those sites support syndication links back, you’ll be able to, again, get more traffic to your own site. So one example that I use here is Medium.

    If anyone regularly uses Medium to blog, you do have the ability to post to your own website, post the same content to Medium, and then use syndication links to ensure that people are going back to your own website.

    Doc Pop: I wanted to just kind of mention, first off, for anyone listening, the IndieWeb plugin that we’re talking about, and probably the others that we’re talking about, these are all available in the WordPress repository, wordpress.org, and the IndieWeb. I love that description of it as sort of like the Jetpack for this, because it is a package of plugins, right?

    It’s like a suite of plugins, or am I wrong on that?

    David Wolfpaw: So basically it lets you use that as a way to install other plugins. And you can also deactivate them from there. So it’s not saying that Post Kinds or IndieAuth or Micropub are built into this plugin so much as it’s a portal for you to get them, more readily. But it does have its own settings and options that allow you to connect to other plugins.

    So what I mean to say is if you, let’s say, have the syndication links active, you can choose which providers you have set up. You can choose how it’s going to look on your website. and you can set up specific API keys to use it for other websites, but you can, you can go in there and say, I specifically want to activate GitHub so that if somebody interacts with something via GitHub, it will come back to my site.

    And for developers that can be very useful depending on what kind of project they’re working on. I mean, there’s a variety of different things. There’s also a tool that’s heavily integrated called Bridgy, which is another way that it’s external of WordPress itself, but it can be integrated with this plugin to allow people to do cross posting between websites that allow it.

    Doc Pop: That’s cool. You mentioned one of my favorite use cases that I’ve experienced. We haven’t talked about the ActivityPub plugin yet, but I’ve got the ActivityPub plugin. And when I post from my personal blog, it goes up to its own feed, sort of independent of my Mastodon feed. It goes up as a different feed.

    And if people leave comments on it if they see it as a post and they’re like, oh, here’s my comment, it shows up on my blog post. And so I go to my blog and there’s this natural feeling. It’s a comment to the post and it’s so cool as a writer to just make that ease where, you know, someone could post on one place and it shows up on another and it just feels seamless and natural.

    It’s super cool.

    David Wolfpaw: Oh, absolutely. If you were tolook at the back end of my site, and look at posts and look at the comments on posts. I could probably identify the day that I activated that plugin because suddenly there’s so much more engagement and to be clear that engagement is always there or presumably it’s there if you are sharing things elsewhere, but the problem is it’s all siloed in other places.

    And I’m not just saying this in terms, like when I’m saying engagement, I don’t just mean like it’s good for the SEO and everything, although I think that it is, I also think that it’s good to be able to as much as we talk about decentralization in the IndieWeb, it’s good to be able to centralize the conversation a bit in a place that you have more control over. 

    So again, you both have that decentralized aspect of people can respond on whatever platform they’re most comfortable on or wherever they see it, but you have that ability to combine everything together in a place that it’s useful to me to be able to see it all there.

    Doc Pop: We’re running low on time, but I do want to talk about two things: rel= me and ActivityPub. First let’s start off with, can you tell us the significance for WordPress users of “REL=me” on Mastodon and sites like that?

    David Wolfpaw: Yes, so rel=me that is an attribute for link elements. Basically, you would post an HTML link element or an anchor element, either or, and you can use that to indicate that you have to verify. So I can go to my Mastodon account. And put in my account, I have DavidWolfPaw.com. And then on my website, on my personal site, I can put a link to my Mastodon account.

    Being able to put those links on both directions using that rel=me attribute. is a good enough indicator that I’m an owner of that. So it’s a way to verify yourself on those platforms. When a lot of people moved over from Twitter, they wanted to know, like, you know, how do you verify? How are people having checkmarks in their bio when they’re not verified?

    The answer is it doesn’t really work the same, but you can verify in a more I’m proving that I am who I say I am kind of way. And you can do the same with other platforms that are built in, such as GitHub has it built in, and I believe Tumblr does as well, there’s a few others.

    Doc Pop: Yeah. Everybody should have it built in. It’s inexcusable that they don’t.

    David Wolfpaw: Well they want to keep their walled gardens, but yes, I agree. Everyone should have it. 

    And then the other thing is the ActivityPub extension. If you look at my Learn WordPress Webinar concerning the IndieWeb. I didn’t really address that plugin quite as much because while it existed at the time, even though that was only a few months ago, it was not nearly as fully fledged as it is now.

    And I think that speaks volumes to, one, how much more work a developer can do when they have the support of a large company like Automattic, and two, how much more focus there is on this. I’ve been on Mastodon for, you know, almost seven years now, but only in the past year or so for various reasons has it really taken off.

    Doc Pop: I think that’s a good spot for us to take another final break. And when we come back, we’ll wrap up our conversation with David Wolfpaw about how we can go back to the web’s weird roots. So stay tuned for more after this short break.

    Doc Pop: Welcome back to Press This, a WordPress community podcast. I’m your host, Doc Pop, and we have talked about the IndieWeb, its philosophy, how you can apply it practically to your WordPress usage, and also how you use other social media sites and integrate it all together. 

    And on this final thing at the beginning of the show, I talked about how it feels like the web is consolidating into fewer and fewer silos. And I kind of hope to see those shaken up, but that may or may not happen. And it seems so different than the early days of the web, which wasn’t just about weird. I mean, it was definitely weird, but it wasn’t just weird. It was experimental. It was fun. It was creative. It was so expressive. 

    And I feel like we’ve certainly lost something there. And so, David, just kind of at the end, I wanted to hear your thoughts about how the IndieWeb can help keep the web weird and why that’s important.

    David Wolfpaw: Yeah. I’ll just say for myself personally, I am a bingo card of intersectional different marginalized groups. I’m a queer person who is Hispanic and I’m neurodivergent and et cetera, et cetera. I can go on and on about all the different things that the centralized web does not treat too kindly, is probably the most polite way I can put it. So there are a lot of places where I have not felt very welcome online, but a lot of the IndieWeb spaces that I’ve found have really been a much better, healthier, stronger community than I ever had on any other platform.

    So I think that’s really important because it allows people who might not otherwise be heard or who might be silenced on a platform because they might make a dangerous suggestion like we shouldn’t be killing trans people, and allow them to say that without being banned. I also think it’s just better when you have a bit more control over the things you’re posting and the things you share online. 

    You don’t know what’s going to happen to these platforms over time. I think even a year ago, August 2022, if you asked people what Twitter would be like today, they probably wouldn’t be picturing the reality of Twitter in August 2023. Because it hasn’t even been a year since that sale was made final.

    But it’s completely different. I’m completely off that platform after over a decade of using it. And I still keep going with the self hosted Mastodon, and since I have, I just find it’s a better community. 

    I’m trying to think of a good way to put this. I think that an important part of keeping the web weird is that it makes it antithetical to advertising. So, while I don’t consider advertising itself a bad thing, obviously we all are doing it for our businesses, for our own sites the people listening to this probably do a lot as well. I think you can understand that the ad industry on the web right now is broken, and it’s been called the original sin of the web.

    I don’t disagree with that, and I think that having more personal control means that you don’t have to rely on that quite as much to share what you want to share. I’m not thinking about the economics of posting tutorials to my website to share with others. I’m not thinking of how many impressions I’m going to get on a photo that I take. Because that’s going to lead to a brand deal or something. 

    It can sound a bit counter to how a lot of people view being online. But also, all of us are just trying to live our own lives online in some way. And it’s just a lot more enjoyable when we have a bit more control and when we don’t feel that we’re beholden to what someone else thinks is brand safe or appropriate.

    Doc Pop: I have to say, I have benefited greatly through the work that people have done to make these IndieWeb tools and to make the web more open, and I just think it’s so much better. Things aren’t necessarily free ’cause they’re not paid for by your attention and advertising and stuff like that.

    There’s a little bit more of a learning curve, usability, sometimes it can feel different than these other things. But these are tools that have been made that I benefit from. I’m so glad for the work that’s been done, and I totally acknowledge that these tools are created by marginalized people who didn’t feel safe on other spaces and they built all of the groundwork that now I just get to come in and, you know, see this beautiful like Pixel Fed and Mastodon and all sorts of things that have been built by people who needed to create a space for their own, but it’s so inclusive and such a great features to them because of whatever reasons that they had in their philosophies.

    That I just think the web is so much better if we can kind of bump off the corporate web. And as WordPress users, we’re already halfway there. So David, I really appreciate your time today. Thank you so much for joining us and for telling us about the IndieWeb and the different tools that are available.

    If people want to follow you online, where do you recommend sending them?

    David Wolfpaw: Yeah. You can find my personal website at davidwolfpaw.com. And then you can also find me on Mastodon. 

    Doc Pop: Awesome. Well, thank you so much for joining us today, and thanks to everyone who’s listened to this episode of Press This, a WordPress Community Podcast on WMR. We have lots of great episodes in the can as well. We’re a weekly podcast. Check out last week’s episode with Rogier Lankhorst from Really Simple Plugins about SSL and Really Simple SSL.

    Doc Pop: Thanks for listening to Press This, a WordPress community podcast on WMR. Once again, my name’s Doc and you can follow my adventures with Torque magazine over on Twitter @thetorquemag or you can go to torquemag.io where we contribute tutorials and videos and interviews like this every day. So check out torquemag.io or follow us on Twitter. You can subscribe to Press This on Red Circle, iTunes, Spotify, or you can download it directly at wmr.fm each week. I’m your host Doctor Popular I support the WordPress community through my role at WP Engine. And I love to spotlight members of the community each and every week on Press This.

    The post Press This: How WordPress Can Keep the Web Independent with David Wolfpaw appeared first on Torque.

  • #88 – Jo Minney on the State of the WordPress Community in Australia

    Transcript

    [00:00:00] Nathan Wrigley: Welcome to the Jukebox podcast from WP Tavern. My name is Nathan Wrigley. Jukebox is a podcast which is dedicated to all things WordPress. The people, the events, the plugins, the blocks, the themes, and in this case, the state of the WordPress community in Australia.

    If you’d like to subscribe to the podcast, you can do that by searching for WP Tavern in your podcast player of choice, or by going to WPTavern.com forward slash feed forward slash podcast. And you can copy that URL into most podcast players.

    If you have a topic that you’d like us to feature on the podcast, I’m keen to hear from you, and hopefully get you all your idea featured on the show. Head to WPTavern.com forward slash contact forward slash jukebox and use the form there.

    So on the podcast today, we have Jo Minney.

    Jo is the founder of a small business that specialises in building websites for organisations, mainly nonprofits and the tech industry. With a background in engineering, Jo decided to shift her focus to website development using WordPress. She was excited about the WordPress community and joined her local meetup, eventually becoming an organizer.

    Jo is keen for the WordPress community in Australia to grow, and has been making significant contributions to that growth.

    In this episode, Jo shares her insights on the challenges of organizing WordCamps and meetups in Australia, where the large size of the country, and small population presents some unique obstacles. If you’re used to a European or north American setting, it’s really interesting how the geography of the country presents challenges not seen elsewhere.

    We discussed the importance of paying speakers and covering their travel expenses to create equal opportunities for freelancers and small businesses, as well as to give the Australian community a stronger voice.

    We talk about her journey with WordPress, starting from her early days as a coder in a different field, and navigating the community online. Jo highlights the need for in-person opportunities to learn and connect with others. Especially in a global community where the time zone differences and online platforms can be limiting.

    We chat about the challenges faced by the Australian WordPress community from limited resources and burnout, to the struggle of attracting new organizers and attendees. Jo share some exciting success stories, such as organizing WordPress events and hosting a successful do_action event.

    We briefly get into the need for more diverse voices and the importance of fostering, a supportive and inclusive environment. If you’re interested in hearing about how the WordPress community is doing in Australia, this episode is for you.

    You can find all of the links in the show notes by heading over to WPTavern.com forward slash podcast. Where you’ll find all the other episodes as well.

    And so without further delay, I bring you Jo Minney.

    I am joined on the podcast today by Jo Minney. Hello Jo.

    [00:03:40] Jo Minney: Nice to be here.

    [00:03:41] Nathan Wrigley: Yeah thank you for joining me. Jo is in Western Australia which means that the collision of the time zones is pretty severe on this one. It’s the middle of the afternoon for me which means it’s very, very late in the evening for Jo. So first up Jo, thank you very much for staying the course and being with us.

    I guess my first question, as always, it’s a pretty banal one but it’s worth asking anyway. Given that we’re on a WordPress podcast, we’re going to be talking about the WordPress community in Australia in particular. Would you mind just spending a moment just telling us who you are? What your relationship is with WordPress? Perhaps a little bit about the kind of job that you have, and the role that you have and all of that good stuff.

    [00:04:22] Jo Minney: Sure I can absolutely do that. So I am a small business founder like a lot of people that work with WordPress. I run I guess what you’d call a micro business. I have a grand total of three people in my team, and we build websites for mainly organizations. We work a lot with nonprofits and also a bit with the tech industry. So my background is actually engineering, and I threw in the towel and decided I didn’t want to do engineering anymore and started building websites instead.

    So in a nutshell what I do now, and how I use WordPress. And when I first started using it I got really excited when I found out about the community that was behind it and things like meetups and WordCamps. And that was yes, this is so exciting and went and joined our local meetup and none had been running for the last year and a half. So that was a bit sad. And then I reached out to the organizer who had previously run them and was like, hey, what’s going on? And she’s like here you go. And so I became lead organizer and the rest, I guess, is as they say history.

    [00:05:27] Nathan Wrigley: Did you find the community more or less as soon as you found WordPress? Did you have a nice bit of serendipity there? Because when I discovered WordPress it was many years before I realized that there was any kind of community. I purely viewed it as a piece of freely available software. And whilst I understood that the freely available nature of it meant that there was community involvement in building the software, I had no conception there was a community of people who would be meeting up in the real world or getting into the kind of discourse that they do, in all sorts of different directions. So yeah, to paraphrase that question, did you find the community right away?

    [00:06:07] Jo Minney: I wouldn’t say right away, but fairly soon after I started using WordPress. So I had done a little bit of coding before I started using WordPress but in a very different environment, working as I said in engineering. I was really lucky that my husband, who’s also my business partner now, also works in development.

    And when I first said I want to learn how to use WordPress and I’m going to use it to create my website for my consulting business, which back then was still in engineering, he was like no you can’t use WordPress. WordPress is the devil. He’s come around since then. He’s actually speaking at WordCamp US. We do a lot of collaboration projects now. So he builds custom web applications and my team do WordPress websites. And we do a lot of merging the two together and integrating them.

    When I first started using it I felt like a lot of the time the people that I was asking were a lot more superior at using it to me, and had a lot more experience. So reaching out online was a little bit intimidating. So I actually started looking quite early on in my journey for something that was in person, because it would enable me to kind of go and learn from other people without having to actively start asking questions on online forums, where often I was the only woman there, or I didn’t know if I was the only woman there, but I kind of had assumed in that space.

    [00:07:30] Nathan Wrigley: Yeah thank you. So in terms of the timeline of all of this, you may have mentioned it but forgive me I didn’t pick up on it. How far back are we going in history? What year? 2015, 2016, or later than that? Did you reach out and find these events?

    [00:07:48] Jo Minney: Yeah, so I think I started using WordPress in 2017, quite recently compared to a lot of people that are in the WordPress community. And I took over the meetup as lead organizer I think in 2019. I could be wrong it could have been 2018, but it was either 2018 or 2019. So it was only a year or so into the first time that I had actually touched the platform.

    [00:08:12] Nathan Wrigley: Okay so pre pandemic you discovered the real world community. So paint a picture of what it’s like in Australia. Now clearly you’re going to be able to paint that picture better describing where you live. But if you’re able to give us more information about Australia more broadly that would be excellent as well. And maybe during the course of the next few minutes we can map out how things may have changed since 2017, 2018, 2019, to where they are now.

    [00:08:42] Jo Minney: Yeah, that’s a great question. So I have a question for you in return, cause I know that you’ve been to Australia before. We talked about that earlier. Australia is pretty big. So do you want to have a stab at how big Australia is?

    [00:08:57] Nathan Wrigley: In terms of square miles, or just multiples of the UK.

    [00:09:01] Jo Minney: Either’s fine.

    [00:09:02] Nathan Wrigley: Okay so I would imagine that you could fit the UK into Australia, I’m going to pluck a number out of thin air, 35 times.

    [00:09:09] Jo Minney: I actually have no idea how many times you can fit the UK into Australia but I do know that it is about the same size as the lower 48 in the US. So it’s like 7. 6 million square kilometers, versus 8 million square kilometers for the US. So they’re pretty comparable size wise.

    Do you want to have a stab at what the population of Australia is compared to the population of the US?

    [00:09:34] Nathan Wrigley: Okay, so I’m going to guess Australia has 22 or 23 million people in it.

    [00:09:40] Jo Minney: It’s a little bit higher than that. It’s 26 and a half, thereabouts, million. Which is less than Texas. So think it’s really important to understand that one of the biggest challenges that we face here, and you would know this from having driven across the Nullarbor, is there’s nothing in the middle of Australia.

    We only live around the outside. So if you imagine the entire US but only having people live around the coastal cities and having the entire population of that whole continent being less than Texas.

    [00:10:13] Nathan Wrigley: Yeah that’s fascinating. So I guess if you’re listening to this and you’re a North American, the distance that you would have to go from east to west is comparable from say going, I don’t know, from Virginia to California. They’re on the same kind of scale but the population is significantly smaller. I guess what you’re trying to say is we’re spread out.

    [00:10:35] Jo Minney: Yeah, we really are. And I think if you’re in Europe, again, to travel the length of Australia or the width of Australia you’re traveling through multiple countries. Each of which probably has a higher population than what we do. So the challenge that we’ve got there is that our communities to start with, and I don’t just mean our WordPress communities, I mean our cities, the people that we have living here, are very small in comparison to a lot of other places in the world. So because our population is so spread out, it makes it really hard for us to hold in person events in the first place.

    So that’s a challenge that we’ve always faced here in Australia in building our community. And it’s something we were slowly starting to overcome. And we did before the pandemic have meetups happening in, I think, five different cities around Australia. And then obviously the pandemic happened and all of that stopped.

    But even before the pandemic started, in the city where I live, I mean it’s only 2 million odd people here, but we had never had a WordCamp in the whole time that WordCamps had started running.

    So if you think about someone who’s just coming into the WordPress community for the first time, and they learn about all of this stuff and then they find out actually we’ve got no meetups running. We’ve got no WordCamps running. We don’t actually have a community here. It can be really sad, and really soul crushing I guess.

    That’s kind of where I was at. So I got it in my head, I was like that’s it, I’m going to be the person that organizes the first WordCamp here in Perth. And to do that I reached out to a lot of the other organizers from around Australia, who are fantastic people. And some of them have been doing that for a really long time.

    And that’s probably the second challenge that we have which is burnout. And I know that this is not something unique to Australia. I know this happens everywhere. When you’ve got meetup organizers that are volunteers it’s not just rocking up for the time of the meetup and ordering some pizza. It’s organising speakers, it’s growing the community and actually making sure that people come along to it. There’s a lot that’s involved with it.

    And often it falls on one, maybe two, people to do that. And we really struggled to get more organizers, to get attendees, to get speakers. And when you look at that compounded with the fact that we have such a small population compared to the space we have, you can see how very quickly it becomes a challenge.

    [00:13:04] Nathan Wrigley: Yeah. I guess in Europe, as an example, the population density is extremely high. I’m guessing per square kilometre it probably is even higher than in the US. I don’t actually know if that’s true or not, but I’m imagining it is.

    The point being there’s lots of people. So the reservoir of people who may stumble into the community within a hundred miles of where I live there are likely to be a dozen, two dozen, a hundred, whatever that number may be. Whereas where you are, that number is going to be significantly lower. And so if somebody steps into the community but then gets that burnt out, or just gets fed up, or moves on, or just doesn’t wish to contribute to those events, there really isn’t that pool of people that you can dip into which would be present in North America or other parts of the world, Europe and so on.

    So if somebody moves on there’s often somebody that will take that role on again. And I know that in the recent past there have been discussions about whether or not, even in Europe and other places, the burnout and the replacement of people is more and more challenging. But I guess where you are it’s really acute.

    [00:14:13] Jo Minney: Yeah absolutely. And I think another thing that became a challenge for us is, you mentioned earlier a mutual acquaintance of ours, Cameron. And he moved to the UK. He wasn’t the only one. We actually had two of our other organising committee who we had spent the last couple of years trying to build up that community, and they also moved either interstate or international.

    So I am back to being the only organizer now for our local meetup. And we’ve now got three meetups around Australia running. So Sydney is definitely the most recovered. And a big part of that is because it’s got Will spearheading it who is phenomenal. Who mentors WordCamps and stuff like that, and has a lot of contacts. And also just because Sydney has the biggest population of any of our cities in Australia.

    Brisbane started up again. For anyone who doesn’t know Australia which is most people in the world, they’re in the the top right. So in the northeast of Australia. And our biggest WordCamp that we’ve ever had before the pandemic so it was November 2019 I think or maybe a bit earlier than that, it was in 2019 anyway. That was our biggest WordCamp we’ve ever had in Australia and that was 450 people.

    [00:15:29] Nathan Wrigley: Yeah that’s really interesting as a contrast, the last WordCamp London that I attended, which I think was in 2019. So that’s a subset of the events which go on in the UK. I think that event was about 600, something like that. WordCamp Europe is usually touching about 3,000. WordCamp US, although the numbers have been much smaller recently due to pandemic restrictions, you know eclipses 2,000 as well. So the magnitude, given everything that you’ve said, I guess we’re expecting the numbers to be lower.

    Were you saying 400 as the big flagship event in Australia, the Sydney one? Were you saying 400 because you thought that was a small number, or were you just saying it because that is the number?

    [00:16:11] Jo Minney: A little of both. 450 was actually in Brisbane. So I think actually a lot of the speakers at that had come from interstate, and that’s something that definitely we’ve noticed. Every WordCamp that we have in Australia people travel to it, because they’re so rare here. Even though it costs us an absolute fortune, we still have people flying to Brisbane, flying to Sydney, flying to Port Macquarie.

    And an interesting thing that I noticed was that a lot of the speakers were the same across multiple WordCamps in Australia because again, it comes down to that not having a huge population and we struggle to find speakers for our meetups. So you can imagine it’s equally hard to find speakers for WordCamps.

    So that’s a challenge there. Since post pandemic it’s become even harder. I know I’ve had the same conversation with the Brisbane organisers and the Sydney organisers. And I don’t know if this is something that other communities have experienced, but all three of us have found that our communities are essentially started from scratch again.

    So the number of people that have come back from pre pandemic communities is basically zero. So we had one person at our first meetup when we restarted that had attended a meetup before, ever. It’s not a bad thing, but it’s still a thing. And it’s something that I think has also become a challenge because it means that there aren’t people who are experienced with running events and that sort of thing. And how to put the word out, and what’s involved in organising them, and speaking with who is around to help out with that load.

    [00:17:43] Nathan Wrigley: Yeah. It’s interesting. In the UK there’s several factors which are making it more difficult to get that community engagement back up to the levels that it was pre pandemic. The first one is obviously just related to people’s desire to go out. They may have dropped out of the community. So there’s the process of, as you’ve just described, starting from scratch. So that’s one thing.

    But also the cost of ever so many aspects of life has gone much, much higher than it was prior to the pandemic. Particularly the cost of venue hire. Venue hire over here has become significantly more expensive, orders of magnitude more expensive. And so something that may have cost X 5 years ago, or 3 years ago is now possibly 3 or 4 or 5 X for the exact same building, for the exact same duration. So there’s all sorts of circumstances contriving to make it as hard as possible I think. And if you’re starting from scratch, that is even more of an obstacle.

    [00:18:48] Jo Minney: Yeah absolutely. And I am sure that London is probably about as expensive, maybe even more expensive, than Australia. So one of the things that I think is very different here, so those WordCamps that I talked about, even our biggest ones have always historically been at educational venues. So we’ve always used universities.

    And the one that we were planning locally here was at a TAFE, which is a technical institute. I don’t know what you would call that in places that are not Australia. That’s sort of always the kind of places that we’re looking at and we’re not talking about flashy hotels and things with 2000 people or conference centers. We’re talking about a university during their down times. So even trying to keep those costs really low, it was actually a real struggle for us to be able to fund. And I say us, I wasn’t actually involved in the organising committee for the last one, because I was still fairly new to the community at the time.

    But speaking to Will and some of the other previous organizers about it, A they have to wait until the end of the year to find out the availability for those venues. So it makes planning kind of a challenge. And B, one of the things that WordCamp limited us to, or really pushed for, was for us to keep the ticket prices down at 50 Australian. Which is like 30 Euro or 30 US. So trying to do that and then cover the rest of it, even using a really comparatively cheap venue like a university, was really a struggle still to meet the budget.

    And on top of that, in 2019 that was the first year that we’d had three WordCamps in Australia in the same year. So before that the most that we’d ever had was two. And I think that had only happened once. And what we found is that the organizers for those WordCamps were actually competing for funding. So the sponsors were like, oh I don’t want to fund WordCamp Sydney because we just funded WordCamp Brisbane, and it’s all the same people that are attending.

    So that’s something that has really been something that we’ve noticed, and it’s something that we’re keeping in mind when we go into the future planning WordCamps. While we know that they are historically encouraged to be very local events, that’s something that we’ve got to keep in mind. We are potentially competing against other cities for that attention where we don’t want to be. We want to be helping each other grow because there’s not enough of us to be in competition. We’ve got to be helping each other out.

    [00:21:15] Nathan Wrigley: Yeah. It speaks to coordinating at a higher level doesn’t it? The idea that, let’s say there’s three or five, that they were A spread out geographically, B spread out over time so that you weren’t trying to compete in the same month for a WordPress event. And that obviously, you’ve got to go a little bit higher up the pecking order to figure out all of that stuff.

    But from everything that you’ve said you sound fairly, I’m going to use an English colloquialism, you sound fairly chipper. Which means you sound fairly upbeat.

    [00:21:47] Jo Minney: Optimistic. Hopeful.

    [00:21:49] Nathan Wrigley: Exactly. But I want to probe into this, if you’re willing. How do you really feel about this? Because I can imagine that with all these setbacks and no shows, people coming in smaller numbers, the feeling that the community is dwindling. Do you get moments where you just think, oh this is really hardly worth my time anymore? Do you ever get those moments where you just want to throw in the towel?

    And if that is the case, I wonder if that is another problem which has to be dealt with, you know, people just getting fed up and moving on.

    [00:22:17] Jo Minney: Yeah. I won’t lie. There’s definitely been times where I’ve been like, is it really worth it? I am the only volunteer contributor that I’m aware of, other than my husband who is fairly new to it, in my entire state.

    We have one other contributor who’s full time at Automattic. So when it comes to the WordPress community everyone that I know is online. And that in itself can be really depressing. But it can also be really challenging for me to have a conversation with someone. And I do think that in person conversations are important, and you don’t communicate the same way online and over text and via Slack and things like that. Commenting on blog posts is what you do when you’re having a face to face conversation.

    And while decisions in the WordPress community aren’t made at WordCamps and meetups and things like that, conversations are started there. And those conversations help to drive future decisions. And that is really important. And it’s sad to me that Australia isn’t part of that conversation, and hasn’t been since definitely since pre Covid, but even before then we were struggling.

    So I think for me that’s one of the most disappointing things. For example, WordCamp Asia was earlier this year which was super exciting for us. There were some Australian people that attended that. There were no Australian speakers as far as I’m aware, which I don’t think is a bad thing because I think it was important for WordCamp Asia to really push for representation from Asian speakers, because that was the purpose of it. And I know if we were to ever have a WordCamp Australia in the future that we would be pushing to try and have as many local speakers as possible as well.

    But then if we look at some of the bigger flagship camps there were two speakers at WordCamp Europe that were from Australia, that I’m aware of. So I did stalk and go through every single speaker to check, because what else am I going to do with my spare time that I don’t have?

    So both of the speakers from Australia that were at WordCamp Europe were executives from companies that are very big. And I’m not going to name names. You can go find them yourself if you’re really interested, but they work for the Googles and the eBays and the News Corps.

    And, my concern is that globally the voices that are coming out of Australia are not the ones that are doing the work of rebuilding the community. They represent big interests, not most interests. And to me that’s the most concerning thing about the lack of community here in Australia.

    [00:24:51] Nathan Wrigley: Yeah. There is this phrase which sometimes gets brought out that the people that can contribute to the project, there’s sometimes a feeling that it’s those that can afford to contribute to the project. So in the scenario that you just described, if your very successful company are willing to send you, then you are now sitting at the table where potentially some of those decisions are being made.

    I realize that it’s far more complicated than that, but you have a voice because you’re able to go and prior success for the company that you work for, you know, it’s no reflection on that company. We want the companies to be successful but that’s just how it works. And it’s difficult for people, well such as yourself, to sort of feel like your voice is rising to the top and being heard, I guess.

    [00:25:34] Jo Minney: A hundred percent. And you look at the cost of flights, for example. So it’s easy enough to say we’ll just go to some of these. Get more people and fund them to go over. But flights are like 65% more expensive now than they were pre pandemic, for international flights from Australia. That’s bonkers.

    I certainly can’t afford to pay out of my own money to go over there. And even getting sponsorship, there’s nothing really in it. There is things in it for people, but it is a challenge to communicate them.

    I like stats, you might’ve noticed that already Nathan. One of my favorite stats about why I think it’s important for people to start paying attention to the WordPress community in Australia? So we have the 14th largest market for eCommerce in the world. Which is cool sure. Do you know how much of the web or how much eCommerce on the web is powered by WooCommerce overall globally?

    [00:26:30] Nathan Wrigley: Oh no. I know it’s a significant amount, but don’t know exact number. Yeah I realize it’s very high.

    [00:26:37] Jo Minney: Yeah like everyone knows the WordPress number, right? But nobody knows the WooCommerce number. I like this because I feel like it’s a better, accurate representation of websites that are being used. Whereas the WordPress number still takes into account a lot of sort of dormant sites and that sort of thing. So with WooCommerce it powers about 24% of eCommerce sites on the web globally.

    In Australia however, it’s less than 15%, and Shopify leads with over 20%. So what that tells me, and this is obviously just my interpretation of that data, but it tells me that in Australia we don’t have the same recognition and understanding of WordPress and WordPress tools as what there is globally.

    And that’s an opportunity for people who are earning lots of money from WordPress. For the Automattic’s and the Yoasts and these other big companies that have combined collectively an economy that’s like bigger than Tesla. It tells me that there is value in them paying more attention to Australia and helping us to rebuild the community because I don’t think that we can continue to do it the way that we’re trying at the moment.

    [00:27:45] Nathan Wrigley: Yeah that’s really interesting. That was a really interestingly presented fact because makes it, well it lays bare the opportunity that is maybe being left. The old adage of money being left on the table it kind of fits under that umbrella, doesn’t it?

    It sounds like you are A, you’re very committed to the community. I guess you wouldn’t be on a podcast like this if you weren’t. But B, you’ve identified that there’s a problem. So C, I guess, is what do we do about the problem? Do you have any endeavors? Do you have any thoughts? Do you have any intuitions as to how these challenges might be overcome? How you might reinvigorate the community?

    [00:28:24] Jo Minney: Yeah look I think a lot of people who are much smarter and more engaged and well versed in the WordPress community than me have already suggested a lot of the things that I look at and go that would really help us. Even though we’re not specifically the target audience for those things that are being championed.

    And one of those big ones is, and I know it’s probably a drum that’s been beaten to death, but paying speakers or at least covering their travel. Because as I said, I think a lot of those conversations happen at WordCamps. And even if you’re not paying people to attend them or that sort of thing, by paying speakers you’re giving the same opportunities to the freelancers and those small businesses as you are to those companies that are working for Google and eBay.

    So I think that’s one thing that would go a long way towards evening the playing field, and allowing the Australian community to have a little bit more of a voice. And I know that there’s a huge amount of work that’s being done to push for that in the WordPress community by loads of different, amazing people.

    And there are sponsorship options and stuff out there for people who are underrepresented in tech. But you know they have their challenges. I think that would go a long way towards helping.

    [00:29:39] Nathan Wrigley: I just want to just interject there again and inject the geographical piece again. Because it’s so easy to forget that for where I live, really I can hop into a car and I can be at a local event within an hour, less. You know and typically more or less everybody in the UK could probably drive in one of the directions of the compass and find an event fairly quickly. May not be all that frequent, but at some point during the calendar year, it really is different isn’t it where you are? You know you may just drive off in the same compass direction as I do but you end up in the middle of the desert.

    [00:30:13] Jo Minney: Or the ocean depending on which way you go.

    [00:30:15] Nathan Wrigley: So there really aren’t those opportunities and the fact that you have to travel further, as you’ve described, the cost of airline transportation has gone through the roof. So it may be that you simply are nowhere near something. And so just having a little bit of an offset for the cost, the remuneration as you’ve said for speaking. Simply that may be enough to propel some people to have a different opinion of it, and to make the effort to go.

    [00:30:40] Jo Minney: And I think the same thing goes, and it’s a similar argument, but for the volunteers who are organising. Maybe not all WordCamps but certainly flagship ones. When I was talking to Will about his experience with organising WordCamp Sydney back in 2019, he actually logged his hours for it and he logged 1,200 hours of volunteer work.

    [00:31:03] Nathan Wrigley: Wow.

    [00:31:03] Jo Minney: And I spoke to one of the organizers, not even the lead organizer, just one of the organizers for WordCamp Europe, on a call for the training team last week. We have like a coffee hour every Friday. Only for me it’s wine hour because I have a 12 hour difference from everyone else. And he was saying that doesn’t surprise him at all. And he definitely feels like he logged at least that much as a volunteer for WordCamp Europe.

    So I think there’s something to be said at least for flagship WordCamps and for that sort of core organising committee who are essentially taking on a second full time job to give them some kind of reason to keep doing that. Otherwise we are just going to keep losing volunteers to people that want to pay them.

    [00:31:47] Nathan Wrigley: It’s interesting as well because, suddenly into my head I’m thinking, I wonder if there just needs to be a different approach based upon different parts of the world. This is probably going to sound controversial. If anybody’s listening to this I’m just throwing it out there. Given what you’ve described in Australia, I do wonder if the Australian WordPress community needs a different set of parameters applied for a period of time.

    Because there are different constraints, there are different problems, than say you might have in Europe. And it might be that one size doesn’t fit all, and those considerations could be different for Australia. They could be different for, well pick any part of the world, any country. They might to be judged differently. I don’t know if that would ever happen, but it’s certainly an interesting idea.

    [00:32:35] Jo Minney: Yeah a hundred percent. And if you’ve got Matt’s ear, when we do manage to have our first WordCamp again after the pandemic, we’d love for him to come visit. Maybe that will help get some more people there. So we do want to make it a primarily Australian event with as many Australian speakers as we can get. But I think having the support and the ear of the global WordPress community would be important.

    [00:32:57] Nathan Wrigley: Okay so you’ve given us one possible way of reinvigorating things. The idea of financial help for, for example, speakers. If there’s any other ideas you want to just float, go for it.

    [00:33:09] Jo Minney: Yeah. So I think something that for me is really hopeful and something that I think is amazing, and I’m really excited about seeing it happen in the near future. And I’m not sure how much of this I am meant to be talking about but I’m going to anyway. And that is the idea that we’re going to have sort of a contributor tab in the latest WordPress release. Sort of about page.

    And a little bit more information about that because something that has really been a challenge is that, because again, as you said, you don’t just bump into other contributors here, you have to actually seek that out. And a lot of people don’t realize that that is something that they can do. That you don’t need to be able to code to be a contributor.

    And I think that the two things go hand in hand. So by contributing to something you’re feeling like you’re part of the community and you feel like you’re not just giving back to it, but also receiving from it, because you get to be a part of that conversation and the direction of where everything is going.

    And if we can broaden the people who know about that and make sure that they’re informed. So your average WordPress user or developer has that information sort of plonked in front of them with, hey, did you know that these are a whole bunch of things that you can do that don’t require you to be an absolute guru at PHP?

    Then I think that that’s something that’s going to be really exciting, and hopefully attract more people who historically haven’t been involved in that community.

    [00:34:36] Nathan Wrigley: Great. Any other suggestions or we can move on?

    [00:34:39] Jo Minney: I think they’re the main ones for me. Just trying to increase the representation in any way that we can. I like the idea of the new WordCamps but I’m not sure that anything has really come up that is the new format for WordCamps. I’m not sure that anything has really come up that has sounded like it’s going to be a super fit for us. So if anyone’s got ideas we’d love to hear them.

    [00:34:59] Nathan Wrigley: Can we just dwell on that for a minute? So I spoke to Angela Jin who is the Automattician who, broadly speaking, she steers in many ways the different bits and pieces. And one of the things that we talked about on a recent podcast episode was about this new idea of WordCamp’s having a different flavor. Perhaps more localized, perhaps localized around a specific theme.

    So it may be that there would be an SEO one. Or there might be something about blocks. The idea being though that rather than having an event in which everything goes, you would lock it down a little bit and encourage people to attend if they are into that particular niche, if you like. So having looked at those proposals, none of that’s jumped out. That’s curious.

    [00:35:46] Jo Minney: I think one of the reasons on that for me is that there still seems like there’s going to be, maybe not 1,200 hours worth of volunteer work, but a significant amount of volunteer work to make it happen. And we’re struggling to get 20 people at a meetup. So I personally don’t have the time to put in even 400 hours of volunteer work, or even 50 hours of volunteer work to have eight people show up to an event, and be the only person who is organising and running it.

    [00:36:17] Nathan Wrigley: Yeah that does make sense. Obviously you are operating in a completely different system. I think the endeavor of these new WordCamps is to try and shake it up, because I think although the Australian example that you’ve just described seems to be more severe, I think the feeling has been that over the whole of the international community the numbers have perhaps dwindled a little bit and there are challenges in getting people to come back.

    And so trying new things out, the hope would be that some of it sticks and some good ideas would rise to the surface. But I do like the fact that you’re open to new ideas. And it may be that somebody in the next year puts on an event which isn’t an absolute runaway success. And it’s just quirky in some way that people like, and you may be able to borrow that example.

    [00:37:06] Jo Minney: Yeah absolutely. I think two things that I would love to see happen more of in the community in general is local contributor days. So that’s something that we’ve tossed around and we’re fortunate we do have one full time Automattician that lives in my state.

    So he works on Gutenberg, and while he doesn’t super love public speaking he does get up and do it anyway because he knows that there’s not really anyone else with the same level of experience and expertise as what he’s got. So super grateful for that. Tell Dan thank you. But I think having a contributor day locally would be a great way of driving more sort of enthusiasm around the community.

    But to do that we need to have enough people that can help run it. And I’ve never even been to a contributor day myself, so that’s not something that I really feel comfortable running. And hopefully that will change after WordCamp US. So I will be going to my first contributor day. I’m super excited about that. So that’s something that we’re hoping to do.

    And another thing that we actually did in 2020 right before the pandemic hit, that I would encourage any other struggling communities to consider as a way to, I guess reinvigorate, but also bring the community closer together. And again, it’s a huge amount of work, but it is so rewarding. And that’s the do_action events. So I’m not sure if you’ve heard of these before Nathan.

    So we ran a do_action event back in January of 2020, and it was so fun. So much chaos. We built eight charities websites, theoretically in a day. I ended up finishing off most of them over the following six months. But just for the rewarding experience of bringing that community together and seeing a hundred volunteers in a room, trying to use WordPress to help these charities was phenomenal. And I think it’s probably, when I look at what’s happening and I’m like, oh, is it really worth it? I think back to that. And that’s the thing that keeps me going.

    [00:39:08] Nathan Wrigley: During the last few years, has the community, I know that the real world events have been on hold, but have you got a thriving online event set up? Are there things that are going on in these cities which are online and regular and what have you? Or is it really just that even the online stuff has gone away as well?

    [00:39:30] Jo Minney: Will did run some online stuff. There’s a two and a half hour difference between Sydney and Perth, so our community didn’t attend a lot of that stuff, but I know that he did have some good attendance for a while. I think post pandemic, a lot of people got burned out with Zoom. They just didn’t want to Zoom all the time. And I get that, a hundred percent get that. I’m on video calls pretty much all day, every day with my clients. And I think it’s great that this technology opens up so many doors, but I can also understand that it can be exhausting.

    In terms of things like Slack, we have really struggled to get our local community to use Slack. We actually have a WP Australia workspace, so that has started to bounce back. But it was essentially dead for a couple of years. And there was basically no conversations happening on there.

    Locally, what I’ve found, we tried a bunch of different platforms. People don’t go to Meetup. We struggle even to get people that come to our meetups to use Meetup. So, the one that we’ve had the most success with, which is, sucks for me because I don’t use it, is Facebook. So we’ve actually got a local community group on Facebook, and I log in like once or twice a week to check for comments on there, and that’s the only time I use Facebook, so if that’s where people are, then that’s where I’ll go to try and get them along. But yeah, online not great either, so.

    [00:40:58] Nathan Wrigley: Well, I think probably we’re just approaching the amount of time that we’ve got. So I will just ask that if anybody is listening to this who feels that they could help, obviously if you’re in Australia, that would be, I guess, an added bonus. But you know, even if not, if there’s some way that you feel that you could help. Jo, where would we contact you? Is there an email address or a social handle that you use?

    [00:41:24] Jo Minney: I’m Jo Minney on most socials. I am recently on Mastodon, because I got mad at it being rebranded on the bird, that’s no longer a bird. And if people want to email me all of my stuff, all of my contact details are on my website. So jominney.com is my personal blog, and always happy to have a chat.

    [00:41:45] Nathan Wrigley: Jo Minney, I really appreciate you chatting to me today about the state of the WordPress community in Australia. Thank you so much.

    [00:41:52] Jo Minney: Thanks Nathan. It’s been very fun.

    On the podcast today we have Jo Minney.

    Jo is the founder of a small business that specialises in building websites for organisations, mainly nonprofits and the tech industry. With a background in engineering, Jo decided to shift her focus to website development using WordPress. She was excited about the WordPress community, and joined her local meetup, eventually becoming an organiser. Jo is keen for the WordPress community in Australia to grow, and has been making significant contributions to that growth.

    In this episode, Jo shares her insights on the challenges of organising WordCamps and meetups in Australia, where the large size of the country and small population present some unique obstacles. If you’re used to a European or North American setting, it’s really interesting how the geography of the country presents challenges not seen elsewhere.

    We discuss the importance of paying speakers and covering their travel expenses to create equal opportunities for freelancers and small businesses, as well as to give the Australian community a stronger voice.

    We talk about her journey with WordPress, starting from her early days as a coder in a different field, and navigating the community online. Jo highlights the need for in-person opportunities to learn and connect with others, especially in a global community where time zone differences and online platforms can be limiting.

    We chat about the challenges faced by the Australian WordPress community, from limited resources and burnout, to the struggle of attracting new organisers and attendees. Jo shares some exciting success stories, such as organising WordPress events and hosting a successful do_action event.

    We briefly get into the need for more diverse voices, and the importance of fostering a supportive and inclusive environment

    If you’re interested in hearing about how the WordPress community is doing in Australia, this episode is for you.

    Useful links.

    WordPress Perth Meetup

    WP Australia website

    WordCamp Brisbane

    WordCamp Asia

    do_action events

    WP Australia Slack

    WP Australia on Facebook

  • Press This: Really Simple SSL with Rogier Lankhorst

    Welcome to Press This, the WordPress community podcast from WMR. Each episode features guests from around the community and discussions of the largest issues facing WordPress developers. The following is a transcription of the original recording.

    Powered by RedCircle

    Doc Pop: You’re listening to Press This, a WordPress Community Podcast on WMR. Each week we spotlight members of the WordPress community. I’m your host, Doc Pop. I support the WordPress community through my role at WP Engine, and my contributions over on TorqueMag.Io where I get to do podcasts and draw cartoons and tutorial videos. Check that out.

    You can subscribe to Press This on Red Circle, iTunes, Spotify, your favorite podcasting app or you can download episodes directly at wmr.fm. 

    Today, we’re diving into the critical world of website security with a spotlight on SSL certificates. SSL cert is like a virtual shield that encrypts data and protects your user’s data. Now, if that’s not enough to keep you listening, imagine pouring your heart and soul into making a beautiful website only to have Google slap a big “Not Secure” label on your site when visitors try accessing it through Chrome, simply because you aren’t using HTTPS or SSL.

    Here to talk to me today is Rogier Lankhorst, the lead developer of Really Simple Plugins, the makers of the extremely popular WordPress plugin, Really Simple SSL, Rogier, thank you so much for joining us today.

    I’d love to hear about your origin story and how you got into WordPress.

    Rogier Lankhorst: Well, thanks for having me in the show. Originally, I think in 2016, a customer asked me to get his website onto SSL as quickly as possible. So I installed a plugin that was popular at that time and the whole site went down. So at that moment, I thought I can do this more lightweight and easier, with just one click install.

    And I published it on WordPress and it really was a rollercoaster coaster after that.

    Doc Pop: Absolutely. And, this was not your first WordPress plugin, right? This was the first one that really took off in such a massive way, but you had some other Really Simple plugins before that.

    Rogier Lankhorst: Some really small experiments, things I thought of at the time and published them and they didn’t really take off, as you said. So Really Simple SSL was the first, big hit you could say.

    Doc Pop: I always like that analogy about buying lots of lottery tickets. Like you put out a lot of experiments and one of them caught on and you’ve been able to build a business from it. And since we’re talking about SSL, can you tell the listeners what an SSL certificate is? And why is it important for a WordPress site to have one?

    Rogier Lankhorst: With SSL certificates, the website encrypts all data before it’s sent to the website visitor and the other way around as well. So it helps secure the web and not only for web shops, but also for any website that otherwise could be impersonated by attackers. And it’s also great for ranking in Google.

    And it just looks a lot better in your browser if there’s a lock on your website. SSL is free, so why not install it?

    Doc Pop: I mentioned at the beginning of this show, how the first time I ever thought about SSL was when I was using Chrome and came across a site that was not secure and that site was mine. So I was scared by my own site. And had to learn about installing SSL certificates in order to hopefully have a better experience when users come to my site and see it. Once you install SSL and you have an HTTPS address, then Google won’t show that warning anymore on Chrome visits, but does it also affect SEO?

    Rogier Lankhorst: Yeah, sure. Google has a lot of powerful tools to get users to do what they want. And the most powerful tool they have is the ranking. So if they want website owners to do something, they just put it in the ranking mechanism and the website will follow.

    Doc Pop: And you mentioned that SSL certificates are free these days. I believe when I first signed up for them, that was just beginning to happen, it seemed like it was a painful process and maybe cost some money and then services like Let’s Encrypt came around and really made it easier. On top of that, a lot of web hosts, mine included, started offering free Let’s Encrypt, they started building it into the process to make it as simple as possible, which is really helpful. 

    So with these alternatives out there now for being able to install, maybe from my host, is there a reason that someone would still be using Really Simple SSL instead of if their host offers it?

    Rogier Lankhorst: Well, Really Simple SSL was not originally built to generate SSL certificates. That’s just something we added two years ago, because I thought, well, if we are Really Simple SSL, we should be able to generate a certificate as well, but it’s not the main reason people install Really Simple SSL.

    When users have SSL, they don’t often they often don’t know what to do with it. And in WordPress, you need to do a few things; add redirects, fix mixed content, stuff like that, add security headers to really get all out of the secure SSL you can get out of it. So I think that’s still the main reason, people install Really Simple SSL for just the quickest method to get SSL configured on your website.

    Doc Pop: Yeah, and there are some added security features that aren’t, I don’t think of them necessarily as SSL related that are part of Really Simple SSL. Can you tell us about some of the other advanced features that a Really Simple SSL includes?

    Rogier Lankhorst: We noticed a lot of people already thought of us as a security plugin. So, that’s when I thought we have to fulfill those expectations. We started with adding some hardening features, like blocking user registration. A lot of website owners are not aware that user registration is opened and things like the debug log location, which can contain important information, like user email addresses or license keys or stuff like that. File editing, feedback on the login screen. 

    If you log in and WordPress says, the username is not correct, the attacker knows, I can try again. So all those things are really the start for us to broaden into a full security plugin eventually. And the last feature we added was the vulnerability detection, which is really a great tool to really secure your website as most issues in WordPress websites with security are caused by plugins with a vulnerability, which are not updated. So if users are more aware of that, I think WordPress will become a lot more secure.

    Doc Pop: Everything you mentioned, I think, are little pet peeves that people have about WordPress security. And it is really interesting that Really Simple SSL has kind of evolved into this easy way to install an SSL certificate, but also like these things should be patched. Here’s a really easy way to fix that.

    I’m kind of curious if bloat is a concern of yours, when you have a plugin called Really Simple SSL. Are you worried sometimes that by adding these extra features, you might be making it a little more difficult. And then I guess on top of that, are you also thinking about changing the name of the plugin as you add more features?

    Rogier Lankhorst: Yeah, well, eventually that is the goal that it will become Really Simple Security. I think that will be the beginning of next year. But while talking about bloat, that’s a difficult thing. You want to keep things as simple as possible. So we have worked hard to make it still possible to just do the SSL activation.

    And all other things are modular and not loaded when you don’t use it, but at the same time, I think we’re really good at making complex stuff really simple. 

    I think that’s where our power is what we can really do for people to make it really simple for non technical users. And for more advanced users, they can dive a bit more into the settings.

    Doc Pop: That’s wonderful. I think that’s a good spot for us to take a short break. And when we come back, we’re going to keep talking to Rogier about Google’s push for SSL. And I guess just, we’re going to talk a little bit more about what it’s like having one of the most popular plugins in the WordPress repository.

    So stay tuned for that.

    Doc Pop: Welcome back to Press This, a WordPress community podcast. I’m your host Doc Pop. Today I’m talking to Rogier Lankhorst, the lead developer at Really Simple Plugins. And we are talking about SSL because Really Simple plugins makes an extremely popular plugin called Really Simple SSL. Rogier before, before this break I mentioned that a large reason that we’re talking about SSL certificates these days is largely because Google made a push on the web for this to happen. 

    I’m also seeing that Google is pushing for maybe shortening the term. So some SSL certificates are for like two years, and Google’s talking about pushing for 90 day SSL certificates. Did you have any thoughts about how Google encouraged people to get SSLs?

    Do you think that worked out great for everyone?

    Rogier Lankhorst: Well, I think it’s a good thing. At the time that Google started with this, a lot of users still thought SSL isn’t important for me because I have just a small blog. I don’t have any user data on my site, but there are a lot of other ways attackers can use that kind of connection between websites and maybe show wrong information to users, pretending to be there with another website.

    So I think it’s very important that all websites will have an SSL connection eventually. So I think although Google always has its own reasons for doing things like this. In this case. It’s a good thing.

    Doc Pop: And the 90 day limits, did you have thoughts on that?

    Rogier Lankhorst: Well, I’m not very familiar with the reasons behind it, I have to admit, but I know a bit about it and that it’s more secure to have shorter lifetimes of certificates. And I think it won’t make that much difference because the most used SSL certificates from Let’s Encrypt are already for 90 days, so it wouldn’t have much impact anyway.

    Doc Pop: So let’s go back to talking about Really Simple SSL. There’s a version on the WordPress repository, the plugin repository, the free version with 5 million. I know I keep saying that, but it’s such a shocking number, 5 million active users or more. 

    What is the difference between the free version of Really Simple SSL and the pro version that I know that y’all offer?

    Rogier Lankhorst: The pro version mainly contains a lot of security headers and I think most users are not really familiar with security headers. But these are some very important headers users can set on their websites, which will also increase security. And not only for their own website, but also for the website visitors, which I think is often forgotten in security.

    We make it really easy to configure security headers and we are currently working on vulnerability detection for example. We have a feature which automatically handles the updates or current time, if a vulnerability is detected. We also have some cool new features coming up, which will prevent creation of admin users by any other methods than the WordPress user profile update or creation.

    So if you look at recent vulnerabilities, you will see a big problem is when admin users are created. So if you lock that, you prevent a lot of vulnerabilities.

    Doc Pop: We had talked about the ranking of this plugin and the WordPress repository. I’m on the popular page on wordpress.org/plugins right now, and I don’t know if these are ranked in terms of order, but these are all plugins with 5 million active installs or higher. I see that just on this list, Really Simple SSL is the ninth down. I think that might actually be meaning that it’s the ninth most popular plugin at the moment in terms of active installs. 

    Rogier Lankhorst: Absolutely. Yeah.

    Doc Pop: Wow. That’s incredible. It’s not a big surprise to see Yoast and WooCommerce and Akismet here. I don’t get to talk to people who created such popular plugins.

    I don’t get a chance to talk to them too often. I’m just kind of curious while you’re here, what is that like? I mean, I guess here’s my first question is when you have such a crazy popular free plugin, I imagine it makes it really difficult to, you probably get a lot of requests, a lot of comments, a lot of questions and help requests.

    How do you handle that for a free plugin?

    Rogier Lankhorst: I think it’s not as many support requests as people often think. During the development of the plugin and the past like seven, eight years, I’ve always tried to either create an article on the website when there was a question or create a solution in the plugin itself, or make it more clear in the plugin.

    So that approach has really kept support down. And we are now with a company of 10 and with just two support reps. We also have two other plugins, with I think in total, over six and a half million installs. So I think the support load is not as big as many people think looking at the numbers of the installs.

    Doc Pop: Can you talk about the business model of a free plugin like this? How does a company like yours enable 5 million active installs on Really Simple SSL and still be a company?

    Rogier Lankhorst: Well, of course, for every 100 free users, there’s someone who buys the premium plugin. That’s where we can build a company from the upgrades. Sometimes free users complain about the upgrades. And we want to tell users what we offer.

    And they always say, well, I think it’s a great deal because the premium plugin allows us to develop for free for 5 million users. 

    Doc Pop: And in terms of balancing what goes in the free and what goes in the pro versions, do you have thoughts on how you sometimes determine how things get charged or how things stay free to help promote the larger product. Is it tough to decide when new features get added if they’re pro only, or if they’re free?

    Rogier Lankhorst: Yeah. That’s always a difficult discussion to think about, what should be in the free and what should be in premium. And we usually give away a lot, I think. Our main approach is like with the vulnerabilities, the detection is free and everybody can see if they have a vulnerable plugin, but the automatic solutions for that are premium.

    So that’s how it’s divided. And with the last of the coming updates, I think we will add more in the premium plugin like login protection, two factor authentication, and limit login attempts, stuff like that. That’s also because we think there’s already so much in the free plugin that we want to keep the balance right. We want to start putting more in a premium right now.

    Doc Pop: And I think that’s a good spot for us to take our free episode of the podcast into commercial break, which helps keep it free. That’s a nice segue. 

    Stay tuned for after this short break, we are going to come back and wrap up our conversation with Rogier from Really Simple Plugins about some of the other plugins that Really Simple are offering right now.

    So stay tuned for more.

    Doc Pop: Welcome back to Press This, a WordPress community podcast. I’m your host Doc Pop. Today, I’m talking to Rogier Lankhorst, the lead developer of Really Simple plugins. We’ve been talking about SSL certificates and Really Simple SSL. We also talked about the fact that Rogier, you have several other plugins out there.

    What are some of the other plugins that you’re currently focusing on at Really Simple plugins?

    Rogier Lankhorst: We have Complianz, which is a privacy solution. And it’s the fastest growing plugin apart from Really Simple SSL. And, it offers a cookie banner, and also blocks services that require consent, according to local privacy laws like the GDPR in Europe. Canada is creating an opt in privacy law as well. So a lot of things are changing in privacy legislation. So the plugin offers a way to handle that automatically. 

    And we also have a statistics plugin, which is pretty new. It recently hit 100,000 installs, and the goal there is to provide a privacy friendly statistics solution, so you don’t have to use Google Analytics, which requires consent in most countries, so you lose data there.

    Doc Pop: It’s really interesting you’re talking about this because I have been thinking a lot lately about Google and the web’s relationship with Google. And I’m thinking, I don’t really need to have Google analytics on my site anymore. I don’t need to have people opting out of the cookies if the only thing really there is Google analytics.

    So I’m like, you’re talking about burst statistics and you’re talking about it being an alternative to that. I’m all ears. I’m definitely interested in that.

    Rogier Lankhorst: Yeah. It’s pretty cool because I think most users only know Google Analytics and they don’t know there are more solutions. And most users are also not aware of the privacy issues that Google Analytics raises, especially in more strict privacy legislations.

    Doc Pop: Well, thank you so much for coming on the show today and talking about the work that y’all are doing and about SSL in general. It’s been very interesting chatting with you. If people want to find out more about what you’re working on, what’s a good way to keep track of Really Simple plugins and maybe what you’re working on.

    Rogier Lankhorst: Follow me on Twitter. Or sign up for our newsletter on ReallySimpleSSL.com we’ll be sending newsletters on our latest news every few weeks.

    Doc Pop: Well, that’s great. I really appreciate having you on the show. Uh, thanks to everyone for listening to Press This, a WordPress community podcast from WMR. We’ve had a lot of great episodes lately, and soon we will be going to WordCamp US, which hopefully we’ll come back from there with a lot more interesting stories and interviews with folks.

    Doc Pop: Thanks for listening to Press This, a WordPress community podcast on WMR. Once again, my name’s Doc and you can follow my adventures with Torque magazine over on Twitter @thetorquemag or you can go to torquemag.io where we contribute tutorials and videos and interviews like this every day. So check out torquemag.io or follow us on Twitter. You can subscribe to Press This on Red Circle, iTunes, Spotify, or you can download it directly at wmr.fm each week. I’m your host Doctor Popular I support the WordPress community through my role at WP Engine. And I love to spotlight members of the community each and every week on Press This.

    The post Press This: Really Simple SSL with Rogier Lankhorst appeared first on Torque.

  • Get Ready for WordCamp US 2023

    The country’s biggest WordCamp is back and bigger than ever! WordPressers from all over the world will descend on National Harbor, Maryland for WordCamp US 2023. You can expect informative talks, interesting networking, and killer after parties. 

    Since 2015, WCUS has been a staple of the WordPress community providing a place to come to together to celebrate WordPress, meet new people, and catch up with old friends. 

    This year’s conference will be held at the Gaylord National Resort and Convention Center. Contributor Day is on August 24 with the conference occurring August 25 and 26. Organizers are expecting over 1,700 attendees over the three days. 

    The Gaylord National Resort and Convention Center where WordCamp US 2023 takes place.

    Can’t make it in person? Live stream WCUS for free here, and catch all of the full sessions after the fact on WordPress.TV.

    Let’s take a look at what you can expect from WordCamp US 2023.

    WordCamp US Basics

    Every WordCamp is different, so even if this is your first or seventh time, these tips and tricks will help  you  focus on learning and growing WordPress skillset. 

    The Venue

    The conference will be held in three rooms in the Gaylord Convention Center. Though it will be clearly marked, see the map below to make sure you don’t get lost. 

    You won’t want to miss the Sponsor Hall where WordPress companies host demos, meet customers, and most importantly, give out SWAG. Make sure you pick up all your stickers, socks, and shirts, and come say hi to the WP Engine team at Booth 301! You’ll score one of WP Engine’s legendary WCUS t-shirts, and you can chat with WordPress experts about the latest in WordPress development, including headless WordPress, Advanced Custom Fields, and WooCommerce.   

    What to Bring

    WordCamps are made up of very rewarding but very long days. You won’t want to miss a minute of programming so it’s important to arrive prepared. 

    Here’s our WordCamp essentials packing list:

    • Comfortable shoes for running between talks easily.
    • A water bottle. It is going to be hot and humid, so make sure you’re staying hydrated.
    • Phone and computer chargers, or external chargers. There will be charging stations throughout the venue, but those can fill up fast. 
    • A bag for SWAG. Trust us, you will walk away with more than you intend to. 
    • Quick and easy snacks. Lunch and light snacks will be provided with your ticket, but you don’t want to have to leave the venue mid-afternoon to grab a bite. 
    • Optionally, business cards. We know it sounds outdated, but business cards are still the easiest way to quickly give someone your information. 

    Don’t Miss These Talks

    Just like previous years, there will be three tracks of talks from experts all over the world. Whether you’re fitting in a lighting talk or setting aside more time for a workshop, there is something for everyone to enjoy. 

    Make sure you go through the schedule and mark off the talks that you want to attend. Here are some we’re excited about seeing. 

    Contributor Day

    Ahead of the talks is Contributor Day, a day where volunteers get together to contribute back to the WordPress project. 

    This is a great place for first time contributors to dip their toes into the process. If you are feeling nervous about contributing or just need the dedicated time to do so, sign up for Contributor Day and work among friends. 

    Day 1- Friday

    Day one is chock-full of content! Let’s dive into some talks you can’t miss. 

    Kicking things off, we’re excited to stop by developer Shambi Broome’s talk, How to Make a Difference in the World. The talk looks at the importance of teaching WordPress to high school students and empowering the next generation of developers to keep WordPress dominant for years to come.

    Next up, WordPress Technical Director at AmericanEagle.com, Sean Blakeley, hosts The Headless Block Editor. Dive into how you can make your block editor headless with the “Block Editor Bridge.”

    Day 2- Saturday 

    Saturday is another jam-packed day with talks you won’t want to miss. 

    WordPress Executive Director, Josepha Haden Chomphosy discusses the Future of WordPress. On the heels of the 20th Anniversary of WordPress, Chomphosy will look at how we can move the CMS forward. 

    Don’t miss this panel called BlackPress: Amplifying Black Professionals in WordPress. Join panelists Ray Mitchell, Maestro Stevens, Destiny Kanno, and George H. Woodard III as they discuss how to empower Black individuals in WordPress. Learn how and why BlackPress was created, look at ways the community can better support Black individuals, and more. 

    Finally, end the entire conference with the keynote presented by WordPress co-founder Matt Mullenweg. The talk will go over the benefits of an open source ecosystem and how we can keep it healthy in the future. 

    What to Do After the Conference

    After you have filled your brain, it’s time to fill your heart with sightseeing and after parties with friends. 

    After Parties

    Friday night from 7:00-9:00 pm, WP Engine is hosting a networking event at Topgolf National Harbor. Stop by for food, drinks, and a unique golf experience as well as the opportunity to expand your WordPress Rolodex. Don’t forget to RSVP here.   

    Saturday night, from 7:30-10:30 pm, head over to The Smithsonian Museum of Natural History for the official WCUS after party. Make sure you bring your badge to enter and enjoy the exhibits. 

    Sight-Seeing

    You came all this way, you might as well see some sights! Just minutes from the hotel is the Capital Wheel, a massive ferris wheel that offers incredible views of the harbor. 

    The Capital Wheel is just minutes from this year's WCUS venue, offering great views of the harbor

    Being only minutes away from Washington D.C. gives you access to US monuments such as The Lincoln Memorial, The Washington Monument, The White House, and more. Beat the heat with thousands of free museums, or take a walking tour of the National Mall. 

    See You There!

    Doc Pop and Emily Schiola will be on site live-tweeting, conducting interviews, and meeting new people. We can’t wait to see all of you in person again!

    The post Get Ready for WordCamp US 2023 appeared first on Torque.