Unleash Your Creativity With Our “Design Your Own Theme” Webinar

Posted by download in Software on 12-02-2024

Selecting the design of your website is a critical initial step in establishing your online identity. Our “Design Your Own Theme” feature is a game-changer, offering a variety of Block Patterns to create a unique aesthetic. These Block Patterns provide tremendous flexibility, enabling you to mix and match design elements with ease, ensuring a truly custom and cohesive look across your site.

With an intuitive drag-and-drop interface, our design assembler enables quick layout and style changes. You can easily add, remove, or reposition sections of your website, bypassing the need for complex manual editing. Ultimately, it allows you to explore our diverse design concepts in a user-friendly setting.

We’re offering two sessions of this informative webinar—February 13 and February 28—where we will illustrate how to build a custom website using this innovative tool. The webinar is 100% free to attend and will include a live Q&A session to address all your questions.

More February webinars: SEO Foundations and AI-Assisted WordPress

SEO Foundations

Elevate your website’s visibility with our “SEO Foundations” webinar. Delve into essential techniques as well as how our built-in tools can transform your site’s search engine performance. Our Happiness Engineers will guide you through integrating effective SEO strategies so that readers and customers will find you with ease.

AI-Assisted WordPress

Transform your approach to content creation with our “AI-Assisted WordPress” webinar. We’ll guide you through using our innovative Jetpack AI Assistant, which has been built help you brainstorm, edit, and generally assist all your writing efforts. Join us and step into a new realm of efficient and creative content production.

Congratulations to Everyone Who Completed Bloganuary 2024! 

Posted by download in Software on 08-02-2024

On January 1, you came together from all corners of the globe, ready to answer the call of our Bloganuary challenge and write for 31 straight days. And, oh, how you wrote! 

6,140 people published at least one blog post during the challenge. A total of 33,639 blog posts were published throughout the month, answering the daily prompts and tagged with #bloganuary. All those posts reached an audience of 6,262,733 readers. That’s more than the population of Denmark!

But that’s just the beginning.

  • 401,355 people clicked the “Like” button on Bloganuary posts.
  • 34,403 people left comments.
  • Posts were written in 11 languages.
  • 152 people published blog posts answering all 31 prompts—wow!

Though we’re incredibly proud of all our Bloganuary participants, that last number is especially impressive. Life has a way of getting in the way of any creative pursuit, yet 152 bloggers stared down writer’s block, hectic schedules, overtime at work, family obligations, and who knows what else—and still published a blog post every. Single. Day.

Here’s to you, the winners of Bloganuary 2024!

Thank you to everyone who participated in Bloganuary last month. The community of bloggers grew this year more than ever, and we can’t wait to see who takes on the challenge next year! 

Help us make Bloganuary even better by taking 3 minutes to share your thoughts about the challenge in the survey below:

People of WordPress: Sunita Rai

Posted by download in Software on 07-02-2024

In this edition, we feature Sunita Rai, a content marketer originally from a remote village in the hills of Nepal. Sunita’s journey to academic and professional success, with help from the WordPress community, will inspire many.

Sunita Rai at WordCamp Asia

A strong desire to acquire knowledge

Schools first opened in Sunita’s village in the late 1970s, but most locals, including her parents, had neither the funds nor opportunities to complete their education. Over the years, they realized that an education could open doors for their children. Sunita’s parents vowed to ensure she received a full education, no matter the costs or hardships.

Her father worked as a seasonal laborer in India and ensured Sunita and her siblings could go to school with the proper supplies. Her mother cared for everything at home, both the family and the farm. Money was scarce, but determination was abundant.

To finish high school, Sunita moved in with her aunt in a nearby city. After graduation, she worked as a teacher. One of the biggest challenges was speaking and writing in English, a requirement for her first job teaching at a private English-language school. Her own education had used Nepali as the language of instruction. Fortunately, she enjoyed writing in English and became more fluent with practice. She discovered that she would always want a career where she could continue learning.

On top of a demanding teaching schedule, Sunita continued her studies at a college affiliated with Tribhuvan University. She knew that doing both would be difficult, but she wanted to be able to support her family while pursuing ambitious life and career goals. Earning a bachelor’s degree was a hugely motivating achievement that inspired her to begin a master’s degree in sociology.

Teaching for more than five years had been a full-time commitment, with hours of extra work at home. Preparing lessons, grading assignments, and handling exams made it difficult for her to find the time needed for her own studies. Sunita decided she needed more time for her coursework, so she left her teaching job and sought work that would allow her to focus on her studies while still earning money.

Sunita at basecamp Trekking Nepal in November 2023

From teaching to writing to WordPress

After an extensive search, Sunita landed a content writing job at a successful WordPress development firm in Nepal. Her salary as a content writer wasn’t high, but it grew steadily over time. She would later gain some supplementary freelance work after presenting at a WordCamp. She was able to help support her family as she grew in her career, and now she could do more.

I’m fortunate to have had the education that gave me the capacity to aspire, get into a WordPress job, meet people from around the world, and tell my story!

Sunita

Early in her career, especially in her early days with WordPress, Sunita benefited from the support of excellent mentors who played pivotal roles in her career development, nurturing her skills in content writing, SEO, and general confidence. Now, she has mentored other content writers and advocates for mentoring programs.

Sunita speaking at WordCamp Asia 2023

Sunita has engaged in WordCamps, sharing her wealth of knowledge and experiences. Her first WordCamp was WordCamp Nepal 2015, a pivotal moment where she connected with WordPress enthusiasts from various Nepalese and international companies. She experienced a welcoming environment that inspired her to become involved in the WordPress community.

At WordCamp Kathmandu in 2016, Sunita delivered a talk on SEO Copywriting for WordPress, marking a significant milestone in her journey. She later joined a panel discussion titled “Girls in WordPress – Story, Experience, Opportunity, and Career” at WordCamp Biratnagar 2018.

Most recently, Sunita helped organize speakers at WordCamp Kathmandu 2022 and 2023, and also spoke outside her home country at WordCamp Asia 2023 and WordCamp Sylhet, Bangladesh 2023. These events and her talks, helped her grow stronger connections within the global WordPress community and encourage more women speakers.

Sunita with members from the WordPress Bangladesh community

Translating WordPress and empowering others

Reading and writing in your own language is powerful. For Sunita, translation is crucial in bridging gaps and granting access to those with limited platforms to express and share their passions. When she discovered that she could translate WordPress into Nepali, she joined the many other volunteers on the Polyglots team.

“Translating WordPress to Nepali means empowering my people to access the freedom that WordPress provides.” 

Sunita Rai
Sunita with 3 Female Oganizers WordCamp Kathmandu 2023

Sunita emphasizes that coding skills are not a prerequisite for contribution: “The potential impact you can have on the WordPress community is enormous, across areas from local meetups and WordCamps to testing and translating.”

She highlights her own experience as a potential path for others. “WordPress has had a profound impact on my life… the freedom to work on my own time, to be financially independent, and to overcome my inferiority complex.”

Her advice to anyone getting started with WordPress: “Get involved in the WordPress community and contribute as early as possible. By participating, you will better understand the project and its people, so you can advocate WordPress in a better way. It will offer you a sense of satisfaction or meaning as well as success in your career.”

Share the stories

Help share these open source contributor stories and grow the community. Meet more WordPressers in the People of WordPress series, or continue your own WordPress journey at Learn.WordPress.org


Thanks to Sunita Rai for sharing about her adventures in WordPress, and to Abha ThakorNalini ThakorPooja Derashri, Meher Bala, Nicholas Garofalo, Chloe Bringmann, Maja Loncar and Mary Baum for interviews, editorial, images, and reviews.

HeroPress logo

This People of WordPress feature is inspired by an essay originally published on HeroPress.com, a community initiative created by Topher DeRosia. It highlights people in the WordPress community who have overcome barriers and whose stories might otherwise go unheard. #HeroPress

The Month in WordPress – January 2024

Posted by download in Software on 06-02-2024

January kicked off with big plans for the WordPress project in the year ahead. Work on the WordPress 6.5 release is underway, with Beta 1 scheduled for next week and early testing opportunities. Let’s catch up on all the exciting updates from the past month.

Looking at 2024

In a recent episode of WP Briefing, WordPress Executive Director Josepha Haden Chomphosy discusses some of the big-picture goals for WordPress this year. The main highlights include Phase 3 of the WordPress roadmap, which involves collaborative editing and significant updates to writing and design workflows. Another major focus is Data Liberation, a new initiative introduced at State of the Word 2023 with the ultimate goal of creating a more open web.

Data Liberation
Learn more about Data Liberation in 2024.

WordPress 6.5 is on its way

Preparations for WordPress 6.5, the first major release of 2024, are in full swing. The release squad was announced last month, and the next milestone will be Beta 1, scheduled for February 13.

Curious about what version 6.5 will bring? Check out this Hallway Hangout recap to learn about some upcoming features. You can also participate in this early testing opportunity to experience them first-hand and provide feedback.

Until 6.5 is released, you can upgrade to WordPress 6.4.3. This version includes numerous security and maintenance updates.

New in the Gutenberg plugin

Three new versions of Gutenberg shipped in January:

  • Gutenberg 17.4 featured improvements to List View and Style Revisions, more flexibility for background images in Group blocks, and significant advancements to the Data Views experience for the Templates page.
  • Gutenberg 17.5 made good progress in combining the Post Editor and Site Editor by introducing a shared preference panel, among other highlights.
  • Gutenberg 17.6 included the ability to extend allowed blocks within a parent block, along with several improvements to Block Hooks, the Data Views experience, and the Site and Post Editor unification.
Blue decorative background with dots, the WordPress logo, and text "Core Editor Improvement: Robust Revisions in the Site Editor."

WordPress 6.5 is slated to include some impactful changes and new features to current revision functionality in the Site Editor. Read more »

Team updates

https://wordpress.org/news/2023/10/episode-64-patterns-in-wordpress/

Requests for feedback and testing

WordPress events


Have a story we should include in the next issue of The Month in WordPress? Fill out this quick form to let us know.

Thanks to Satyam Vishwakarma (Satya), Jenni McKinnon, and Lauren Stein for contributing to this edition of The Month in WordPress.

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WP Briefing: Episode 72: Why Your Website Matters

Posted by download in Software on 05-02-2024

In the latest WordPress Briefing, Josepha Haden Chomphosy explores the reasons for choosing a website supporting your digital presence, covering topics from trust-building to professionalism to owning a unique online domain.

Credits

Host: Josepha Haden Chomphosy
Editor: Dustin Hartzler
Logo: Javier Arce
Production: Brett McSherry
Song: Fearless First by Kevin MacLeod

Show Notes

Transcripts

[00:00:00] Josepha: Hello, everyone, and welcome to the WordPress Briefing, the podcast where you can catch quick explanations of the ideas behind the WordPress open source project, some insight into the community that supports it, and get a small list of big things coming up in the next two weeks. I’m your host, Josepha Haden Chomphosy. Here we go. 

[00:00:29] (Intro music) 

[00:00:39] Josepha: My friends, it is February. For many of us, that means we’ve already fallen off track on our New Year’s resolutions, but not you, intrepid WordPresser, especially you, newly found WordPresser who is still on the fence about needing a website, and I get it. It seems like a lot of work, and even if you shoot for the moon, it’s not clear which star you’ll land on.

[00:01:01] Josepha: It feels easier to open a Facebook page or launch a new Instagram account, get a channel going on YouTube, but here’s a secret they won’t tell you. It’s just as much work. And even if you crack the code on today’s algorithm, you don’t own anything you build there, not the content, not the audience. So if you’re gonna make the effort to build anyway, why not build it in your space? It can be scary to take that kind of time.

So, if you’re not convinced yet, let me give you a few other reasons why you should choose a website over some social media thing. I’ve got a list here, and they build on one another, really. But the first thing is a website covers the five W’s: who, what, when, where, and why. It’s basic information, I know, but it’s what people need to know when they’re looking at your product or company.

The phone book, whether you had the yellow pages or the white pages, those are long gone, but that doesn’t mean that the need for that information is gone. When people are researching the right service or product to solve their problems, they’re getting online to do it. So you should be there, and your information should be easy to find. 

[00:02:12] Josepha: Which brings us right into item number two.

When people know these things about you when, they know who you are, what you’re doing, when to get to you, where you are, why you’re doing it. Having that information increases trust and makes you look more professional, and I’ve seen that be counterintuitive for folks. I mean, it’s a digital asset, after all. But overwhelmingly, we see consumers who are well-researched by the time they get to us. They’ve looked at all of your competitors already and checked to see if you are a human, if you share some of their values, and how you manage waste or, complaints, or praise.

You can never know who is looking for you. So, making it all as clear and easy to see as possible makes you more trustworthy. And the more trustworthy and professional you look, then number three, the more chances you have to bring in good leads and contacts, which can turn into sales or, at the very least, a sales opportunity. And it’s important to have good leads and contacts. Right?

[00:03:17] Josepha: If you have your information out there on a website, then people can sort of prequalify themselves. If they already have a sense for whether they are a good fit for your product or service, then fingers crossed. You can spend most of your time with people who are making serious inquiries.

And coming in at four, you can do this any way you want with words or art, NFTs of your latest work, or video tutorials. It lets you tell your story in ways that other mediums necessarily have to limit.

And, importantly, you can still do those things elsewhere. Right? But having essentially a digital home online that is yours, keep your stuff online in a place you own and operate, then draw people to you through those other channels. Make it all work together.

[00:04:07] Josepha: I have a fifth thing, mostly because I like lists of either three or five, and the list I had was four, but also because it’s true. Number five is still true. 

Getting domains is fun. You’ve got something to share with the world, and your domain name is title and, story, and first impression. And isn’t it great instead of having to say you can find me at LinkedIn, slash in slash, etc.?

You can say something quick and memorable. Josepha.blog or whatever it is you registered. Getting domains is fun. It’s the fifth thing, and I tried to act like it was no big deal.

But, also, it’s like one of the first things you have to do, and it’s kind of a big deal. You can have your own domain, and it can say a lot for you. So there you have it, some basic and not-so-basic reasons why you should have a website. If you are convinced or at least intrigued, I’ve got a few tutorials that can help you get started that I’ll link in the show notes. 

[00:05:03] (Music interlude)

[00:05:11] Josepha: Which brings us now to our small list of big things.

I have four big things for you today: four-ish. So, first things first, I have some early opportunities for y’all to test our next major release. Our next major release is WordPress 6.5. The target release date is March 26th. But coming up here on February 13th, we have Beta 1 scheduled. That’s an early opportunity for you to provide feedback. A lot of the features that we have coming in this release are big, and they’re moving quite quickly. And so, if you are already a routine WordPress user, pop on over into the core channel or onto make.WordPress.org/core and get your hands on that beta release. We could use a lot of feedback from you on that.

The second thing that I have is that the second cohort of the Contributor Mentorship Program has opened up, and we’re calling for participants whether you want to be mentored or mentor somebody. We are accepting applications for both. This is a fantastic opportunity for experienced contributors to help other people learn how to do this. And also, if you are learning to contribute to open source and to WordPress for the first time, I know it can be scary. It took me many, many tries to really get started. And so this is a great opportunity for anyone who is trying to contribute in a new way, in a different way.

[00:06:35] Josepha: The third thing that I have is there’s a post up about Data Liberation in 2024. This is one of our big focuses for the year.

A web where being locked into a system should be a thing of the past, and migrating your site to WordPress or around the WordPress ecosystem should be doable with essentially 1-click, and, so, there’s a lot of work that we’re doing there. You can find it on WordPress.org/data-liberation. There will be a link to that in our show notes, but also, there is a lot of work that has to be done, not only to get those resources together but also some companion tools to the resources. So head on over there, take a look at what’s out there. And if you have some stuff to contribute, share that too. 

[00:07:21] Josepha: And my fourth thing, my final thing, is that WordCamp Asia is about a month away. So you still have time to plan your attendance. If that’s something that you want to do, head on over to asia.wordcamp.org to learn more.

And that, my friends, is your small list of big things. Don’t forget to follow us on your favorite podcast app or subscribe directly on WordPress.org/news. You’ll get a friendly reminder whenever there’s a new episode. If you liked what you heard today, share it with a fellow WordPresser or specifically for this one; if you liked what you heard, share it with a fellow collaborator whether they know WordPress or not. But if you had questions about what you heard, you can share those with me at wpbriefing@WordPress.org. I’m your host, Josepha Haden Chomphosy. Thanks for tuning in today for the WordPress Briefing, and I’ll see you again in a couple of weeks. 

[00:08:10] (Music outro)