Bluehost has been a WordPress partner since 2005 and powers over one million WordPress sites. Their goal is to provide outstanding hosting services and customer support for the best possible price. Bluehost is also constantly innovating and upgrading their services and infrastructure at no additional cost to their customers. Join the millions of other website owners that have already chosen Bluehost and see how they can help you with your site.
Thank you to Bluehost for being a generous WordPress community sponsor! Their support allows us to concentrate on creating stupendous, volunteer-organized events for the WordPress community.
Great sponsors make great WordCamps possible, and we feel lucky to be sponsored by DreamHost as part of the community sponsorship program.
DreamHost is a global Web hosting and cloud services provider with over 350,000 customers and 1.2 million blogs, websites, and apps hosted. They sponsor all WordCamps in the US and Canada, including (and most importantly?) this one. We just can’t thank them enough.
Your site is often the difference between cashing in and missing the sale. Like a brick and mortar store, your website must entice the customer to “walk in,” versus pass you by. If you aren’t treating your WordPress website as a serious business development asset, or if it’s cluttered, hard to navigate, or flat out fails at the “customer experience,” your prospects are long gone before you even had a chance to sell to them.
This year, on our shiny new business track at WordCamp Raleigh 2015, we want to make sure this doesn’t happen to you. We’ve invited Lisa Arrington to join us and share from her experience. As someone who works with business owners on a daily basis, she helps transform WordPress-powered websites into finely-tuned sales machines.
In this business track session, we’ll cover:
Shifting your mindset to match the customer (and how this translates into more leads)
Best practices for making your website your #1 salesperson
Using WordPress to your advantage to answer, “WIIFM?”
Developers, this one’s for you. If you’re looking to streamline your development workflow, you’d do well to check out OpenShift. If, like me, you’ve briefly looked at OpenShift and still don’t have a clear picture of how it could save you time and pain, Michael McNeill will help at this year’s WordCamp Raleigh. But first, here’s a video from the folks at OpenShift:
Michael is a WordPress developer, consultant, and service provider who has worked with numerous companies ranging from the smallest startups to large corporations. He’s currently a solutions engineer at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (author’s note: Go Heels!), helping to manage various critical campus applications, including two massive WordPress Multisite installs, which collectively host over 10,000 total sites.
Come learn the ins and outs of OpenShift as it applies to WordPress, and how it can improve your development lifecycle.
If you’re just getting started in WordPress, the problem is not necessarily that you have bad content, it’s that people have no way of finding you. Whether you are a DIY blogger or a startup company, your biggest barrier is obscurity.
You’ve likely heard of Search Engine Optimization (or SEO) but what do you do to implement a strategy for SEO that will work for you?
For starters, get a ticket to WordCamp Raleigh, and come listen to Rob Delory as he walks you through precisely that.
Rob spends all his working time talking to clients about how to get a web strategy (including SEO) that fits them and helps them to reach their goals online. Using two fictional case studies developed from those years of experience, he’s going to walk us through how we should navigate this popular topic.
If you are just getting into the WordPress game, you might not know this: every theme is not created equal.
I’m not trying to scare you, but let me propose a hypothetical situation (which I guarantee will sound familiar to our power users and developers):
Find a theme that looks great.
Install (or worse, purchase) and activate the new theme.
Spend days or weeks tweaking the settings, learning the theme, and getting things situated in a way that looks (sorta) like the demo you were initially attracted to.
Immediately find a theme you like slightly better which promises to be “easy to set up,” and start again at step 2.
What if you had someone to walk you through how to pick the right theme the first time around, and could steer you around pitfalls common to popular themes.
Well, if you’ve got a ticket to WordCamp Raleigh this year, we’re bringing in a coach for exactly that purpose. We are excited to welcome back Kelly Phillips to this year’s conference.
Kelly makes it her business to help beginners and business owners pick the right theme and plugins to reach their website goals. She’ll be speaking to our beginners track this year.
Have you ever gotten the pre-conference advice “choose sessions based on the speaker, not the topic”? As a first time speaker this year myself, I hope you disregard it. But as your faithful speaker liaison, I have to admit that it’s good advice.
Last year (at my first WordCamp) I spent much of the time sitting in the developer’s track just watching concepts fly over my head. But one of the more memorable talks was on Gulp.js, by Jordan Cauley.
We are excited to welcome Jordan back this year, and take it from one who sat in his session last year: no matter what he’s talking about, if you’re a developer you’d do well to be sitting in on his session.
This year he’s talking about how we can work better together, technically speaking. If you’ve ever had an intern try out git push --force on the live site, and experienced that call from the client where they are steaming from the ears, this one is for you.
He’ll walk us through how to set up processes both from a code perspective and a project perspective so that we spend less time preparing to work, and more time producing results for the client (and also avoiding the client ear-steam)
And like I said, developers will do well to come hear Jordan talk, even if he was planning on reading an EULA. He’s good at what he does, and I’ll guarantee you’ll walk away with something.
Grab a ticket today (free T-shirts included for anyone who registers before October 2nd).
When you want a good smoked brisket, do you cruise down the Lowes Foods aisle looking for a pre-cooked, vacuum-packed, Arby’s-brand ArBrisket™, or do you go with the recommendation of an expert?
Well, it depends on the type of party you want throw.
If this is a late-night just-you Netflix marathon, the ArBrisket™ might be OK. Nobody will judge you*.
If you’re planning on inviting a bunch of friends over, it might be worth figuring out how to smoke a respectable brisket.
But we are talking about WordPress plugins, right?
When it comes to building a WordPress plugin, there’s a way you should do it, depending on what type of plugin you are trying to write.
Writing a just-for-you-Arbrisket™ plugin is simple. Writing a good plugin is a bit of an art. There’s a “WordPressy” way of doing things that a new developer (or a developer more familiar with other platforms and languages) would do well to learn, especially if the plugin is being written for mass consumption on GitHub or the WordPress.org repository.
It’s a good thing we’ve got Ryan Duff coming to help us learn exactly that. Coincidentally, if you want to stick around after the session, he’s also pretty well-versed in Brisketology, as well.
Come learn from the grill-master how to do things the right way when coding your plugin.
When you are just starting out with WordPress, whether it’s as a developer or as a blogger or as a tinkerer, there are important things to learn. But before all the learning, there’s a mindset that will serve you well: It’s OK to fail.
While it’s a nice thing to print on a coffee mug or a motivational poster, “It’s OK to fail” is much more difficult to actually live out in the real world. I’d go so far as to call it impossible without a community. We need someone to rally us and both show us and tell us that it’s OK to fail, to launch projects which go nowhere, and to have wildly unsuccessful products, websites, and blog posts.
There’s no better forum than WordCamp for this type of “Freedom To Fail” environment. This year at WordCamp Raleigh we’re thrilled to have Dylan Ryan come and share from his experience how starting with a “fail first” mentality is the key for success.
Dylan is a Senior at NCSU, and when he’s not busy passing classes he works for WP Valet as a support rep. He’s also released both successful and unsuccessful plugins on the WordPress repository.
Do you feel like you’re doing something wrong with WordPress? First, join the club, and then grab your ticket to come and be encouraged by Dylan.
I love that New Track smell. Our brand new business track is designed to help you find the intersection of WordPress and business. We are excited to expand the appeal of the conference beyond developers and other WordPress enthusiasts, and into small businesses, entrepreneurs, and enterprise-level clients.
We are excited to bring Lee Blue to WordCamp Raleigh this year for exactly that reason. He’s an experienced developer but also an entrepreneur himself, having founded multiple digital businesses. Cart66 is a popular membership plugin turned SaaS.
This dual focus, having launched businesses as well as helped others with e-commerce solutions, gives Lee a unique perspective on helping YOU to simplify using WordPress for your business.
Bring your business problems, because Lee is planning to bring his solutions.
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