WordPress Planet

August 23, 2022

WPTavern: WooCommerce.com Brings Back Sandbox Sites for Testing Extensions

WooCommerce.com is bringing back a feature that made it possible for customers to test extensions in a sandbox environment before purchasing them. Select extensions can be loaded up on a private test site for 30 days before the site self-destructs.

Although WooCommerce.com already offers a 30 day money back guarantee if users are unhappy with a purchase, the sandbox testing offers a frontline prevention for customers having to invoke the money back guarantee. It saves both parties time and resources by allowing customers to test extensions against their unique inventory of needs without committing to buy.

The flow for this feature is strategic in that it requires prospective customers to log in or create an account in order to test an extension. This enables users to come back and revisit their test sites later during the decision-making process. WooCommerce.com can also collect data on how many sandboxes are started for each of its extensions and determine which ones are struggling to convert. I would not be surprised if WooCommerce ends up streamlining these sandboxes for better conversions.

In my test of this feature I chose the WooCommerce Pre-Orders extension. Once logged in, the site loaded up in seconds with the extension already activated on an empty store. I was successfully able to create a product as being available for pre-order.

The live testing feature is not yet available for all extensions. WooCommerce engineer Rémi Corson reports that it’s currently active on the following products (with more on come in the future): follow-up emails, product add-ons, product CSV import suite, product vendors, table rate shipping, bookings, checkout field editor, points and rewards, and pre-orders. Any of the available extensions can be simultaneously activated on an existing test site.

WooCommerce.com’s sandbox sites are set up strictly for testing extensions in a simple way. This may not be the best if you need to rule out conflicts with other extensions during your tests. The test sites do not allow you to install a different theme or add any other plugins.

In most cases, the live testing feature should be adequate to answer most questions users have prior to purchasing an extension. It’s also great for demonstrating to a client in case of the necessity to justify the expense. Some of these extensions are in the range of $100-$249/year billed annually, which is not a trivial expense for people who are just getting started with a store and wondering if the extension will suit their needs.

WooCommerce.com is one of many digital product creators in the WordPress space that already employs this type of testing, though the life of the sandbox varies from an hour to several weeks. Offering instant live testing is definitely the way to go if you don’t want to offer a free version of your extension where users would pay to upgrade. It saves users the hassle of having to set up their own test sites and get a refund, but also allows them to truly browse a host of commercial add-ons that they may not have otherwise thought to explore.

by Sarah Gooding at August 23, 2022 01:37 AM under woocommerce

August 22, 2022

WPTavern: WordPress 6.1 to Add a Block Themes Filter to Menu on the Theme Install Screen

In July, WordPress’ Themes and Meta teams collaborated to add a new “Block Themes” menu item to the filter menu on the directory homepage in an effort to improve block themes’ visibility. Block themes currently account for less than 2% of the directory’s 9,900 themes but activating one is the only way users can take advantage of WordPress’ full-site editing capabilities.

Not all users hunt for their next theme directly on WordPress.org. One reason is that browsing themes inside the admin allows for using the Live Preview feature to see how the theme might look with a site’s particular content. Four weeks ago, WordPress contributor Jessica Lyschik opened a ticket proposing to add the same Block Themes filter menu to the theme browsing experience inside the admin.

image source: ticket #56283

The code to add this menu item was committed and users will be able to filter for block themes in WordPress 6.1, expected on October 25, 2022. This change also introduces two new action hooks:  install_themes_pre_block-themes (fires before the tab is rendered) and install_themes_block-themes (fires at the top the tab).

by Sarah Gooding at August 22, 2022 09:20 PM under Block Themes

August 20, 2022

Gutenberg Times: Experimental APIs, Testing Fluid Typography, Twenty-Twenty-Three Kick-off and more — Weekend Edition 226

Howdy,

Lots of things happening on the block editor side of WordPress. A new WordPress homepage is now available! Join a new call for testing by Anne McCarthy for Full-site Editing and another one by Justin Tadlock for the Fluid Typography in themes.

This is a round-up of many articles, blog posts and updates from various teams, and extenders. It might not have been the right time to take a two week break.

Yours, 💕
Birgit

Developing Gutenberg and WordPress

WordPress meta , design and marketing teams collaborated to revamp the design on the WordPress.org homepage and download page. They built it in public, with all the scrutiny that comes with it. The first version went live this week. More of course is certainly to come.

You can read more on the genesis of the homepage via the following posts:

This is an interative process, and more pages on .org are in the works. The next step is to get the Navigation right, as with 12 top-level menu items it’s confusion and can send people into decision paralysis as to where they might find the relevant information. The discussion was kicked-off by Matt Mullenweg, co-founder of WordPress in his latest post: Navigation. With so many different target audiences, content creators, plugin and themes developers, contributors, free-lance and agency developers, developers at companies, #nocoe site builders, there is probably not one pathway into the information about wordPress. What do you think? Chime in.

Jamie Marsland, poweruser of the block editor, video creator and educator on all thing block editor, asked in his video Can I re-create the new WordPress home page in 20 minutes?.

Sarah Gooding, WPTavern, has more details for you: Jamie Marsland Recreates WordPress.org Homepage in 20 Minutes Using the Block Editor


In here Design Share: Aug 1–12, Channing Ritter, gives a shout-out to the work in progress from the design team. Among other things, she highlights:

  • Visual template building
  • Pre-publish sidebar summary section
  • Editor welcome guide with setup
  • Global Styles previews
  • Stepped Slider

All could use your input while in the process of being designed. Chime in on the linked GitHub issues.


Andrew Ozz, Core Committer, explained in his latest post the WordPress Development Setup and answered questions, like: “Why is Gutenberg being developed on GitHub or why is Core not being developed there?” and “Is Gutenberg a WordPress feature plugin?” He started out stating: Core is Gutenberg and Gutenberg is Core.


After discussion over several months, Adam Zielinski published a Proposal to stop merging experimental APIs from Gutenberg to WordPress Core. The Gutenberg plugin is in active development and new features are created all the time. These new features come also with new APIs that are declared ‘experimental’ until the team is sure that it’s a prudent implementation for this part of block editor.

When a major WordPress release is worked on, Gutenberg plugin code is merged with WordPress Core, and when these experimental APIs make it into the stable version of WordPress, they also earn consideration for backwards compatibility and de-facto code that needs to be maintained for a few versions before they can be deprecated again.

Adam Zielinski suggests that before a feature makes it into Core that experiemental APis are audited and either are not merged into WordPress or worked on to migrate them as stable APIs. If a feature depending on an experiemental API is not yet stable enough, and other features also depend on the API, both should not be deemed mergable to the next major WordPress version.

Other developers caution, that it might slow down the pace when new block editor features come to WordPress. For the impatient that might be of concern, I also have the feeling that it’s not a bad thing, when Gutenberg latests features stay in the oven to bake a little longer before they are merged and used by millions of people.

Sarah Gooding also New Proposal Calls for Contributors to Stop Merging Experimental APIs from Gutenberg to WordPress Core.


🎙️ New episode: Gutenberg Changelog #71 – Gutenberg 13.8, Fluid Typography, updates to the Block API and more – with co-hosts Grzegorz Ziolkowski and Birgit Pauli-Haack

Gutenberg Plugin Releases

Sarah Gooding wrote about Gutenberg 13.8 on the WP Tavern. Gutenberg 13.8 Introduces Fluid Typography Support and Revamped Quote Block

With Gutenberg 13.8, the first implementation of fluid typography is available. Justin Tadlock posted a Call for Testing and Feedback for the Fluid Typography Feature asking theme developer to stress test the feature with classic, hybrid and block themes and various other scenarios.

In the meantime Gutenberg 13.9 was released. André Maneiro was the release lead and published the posted What’s new in Gutenberg 13.9? (17 August). It adds tooltips to Image block, and a long-awaited View Site link for the site editor. Now you have a one click method to see the actual design you are building with your templates.

Tooltips enhancements of the Image block

On the Gutenberg Changelog we will produces a double-feature episode at the beginning of September with the 13.9 and 14.0 releases and more.

Theme Development for Full Site Editing and Blocks

Justin Tadlock explains in his post Layouts and Wide Alignments in WordPress: Then, Now, and Upcoming Changes the progress with align wide and full width settings of blocks its behavior as inner blocks, or in template parts. Sometimes the settings causes ompatibility issues for classic theme adoption of theme.json. Tadlock has some clarifying code examples and use cases, and also mentioned what’s in the works to help any theme developer to control their layouts and at the same time allow for different width of blocks.


Channing Ritter, WordPress Design Team posted the Twenty Twenty-Three default theme — Project kickoff. First she introduces the the base theme, and then invites theme developer from the community to submit their Style variations via GitHub. Colin Chadwick submitted the first style variation called Maresa already. Ritter also has a few tips on how to create Style variations, amont them to use the Create Block Theme plugin.


Nick Diego recently published an article on Exploring Per-Block Stylesheets in Block Themes. You will learn how to conditionally register per-block stylesheets with wp_enqueue_block_style as well as a more advanced registration technique using this function. Diego also discussed the advantages and disadvantages of such an approach.


Caroline Nymark updated her Code Block markup Extension for VS Code. For the version 1.3 she added the markup for the new blocks and patterns: the Avatar Pattern, the No results block, the Read More block and the experimental Table of Contents block. She also added Block Pattern php file header and the Cmment template part section.

 “Keeping up with Gutenberg – Index 2022” 
A chronological list of the WordPress Make Blog posts from various teams involved in Gutenberg development: Design, Theme Review Team, Core Editor, Core JS, Core CSS, Test and Meta team from Jan. 2021 on. Updated by yours truly. The index 2020 is here

Site owners and nocode site builders using the Block editor

In his post Create a WordPress website with a Block (FSE) Theme ( Beginner Friendly) Marko Segato, Anariel Design walks you through the process of creating a website with an FSE theme from scratch and explore the latest WordPress features. It’s a primer that takes site owners from selecting hosting to add content, and additional functionality on a new WordPress site.


Munir Kamal, Gutenberg Hub, shows you in his video: How to Create Image Sliding Overlay Hover Effect in WordPress using CSS and how to create the creative content design in Gutenberg using default blocks without a 3rd party block plugin


In Three Ways to Enhance Custom Layouts with the WordPress Block Editor, Eric Karkovack shows you how to create layout by writing CSS, set default styles via theme.json and or customize your site via the Editor Plus plugin


Sarah Gooding reported that Automattic is now testing the Gutenberg editor on Tumblr and Day One web apps. She also went and tested the beta experience on her Tumblr account. This is her review.


In his opinion piece, Jamie Marsland wonders Are Gutenberg Third Party Plugins heading in the wrong direction? In a clever back and forth with scenes from the movie Jurrassic part, Marsland, also answers the question what Dinosaurs have to do with WordPress and Gutenberg editor. It’s an interesting perspective on a discussion on how plugin follow along core development or isolate their features from future core development and by that lock any plugin use in their specific functionality and architecture.

Building Blocks and Tools for the Block editor.

The workshop: Using the create-block Tool, with Jonathan Bossenger is not available on WordPressYC. “The WordPress create-block tool allows you to quickly scaffold a new block plugin. You will learn what you need to get started with create-block, how to use it, and review the code it generates.


Adam Zielinski posted a tutorial on how to create your First App with Gutenberg Data in the block editor handbook. This tutorial aims to get you comfortable with the Gutenberg data layer. It guides you through building a simple React application that enables the user to manage their WordPress pages. It had five chapters. You’ll learn the environment setup, build a basic set of pages, create an edit form, create a page form and how to add a delete button.


Ryan Welcher covered in his live stream on how to access and use attributes from other blocks in a custom block. He followed up on a suggestion by David Gwyer, who had a use case for consuming a block’s attributes from another block on the same page.


Another post by Adam Zielinski describes A new system for simply and reliably updating HTML attributes. In collaboration with Dennis Snell and Grzegorz Ziolkowski, the team introduce a dedicated tool for reliably updating the HTML markup. It’s called WP_HTML_Walker PHP class. The article provides code examples with preg_replace and explain why this is method is prone to errors and adjustments. The underlying code for the WP HTML Walker class takes advantage of the same official HTML specification major browser engines use as well. More details and explanations are in the post. To review the Pull Request join the conversation on GitHub.

Grzegorz Ziolkowski tweeted: “I’m glad to see this proposal that should make it more ergonomic to adjust the attributes in HTML rendered by blocks or in other areas of WordPress.”


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by Birgit Pauli-Haack at August 20, 2022 01:00 PM under Weekend Edition

Post Status: Languages of Contribution and Creation

The Creator Economy owes a lot to WordPress, but that doesn't mean WordPress is valued or even understood by Creators as an open source project and community. Are the stories we tell and the words we use compelling to newcomers and the younger generations we need to succeed us? Is the story and language that got WordPress where it is adequate to take it where it wants to go?

Estimated reading time: 10 minutes

I've appreciated much of the criticism that's been offered to the Five for the Future program in the last few weeks. It represents an investment in time, thought, and care of a lot of people who all have positive intentions, however harsh many of the more candid takes have been.

And it has been a real heap of opinion that's not easy to sort. Still, it's been an occasion to learn and think more deeply about the culture and history of WordPress, how things work or don't work. WordPress needs that.

It's not a bad thing if pushback on some concepts like “tragedy of the commons” and “free riders” drives us to find better ones.

It's not a bad thing if pushback on some concepts like “tragedy of the commons” and “free riders” drives us to find better ones. Clarifying language and coming to some consensus about the terms and definitions that help people understand the project is really important.

However, a lot of valid points about those terms and the details of the 5ftF program got deep into the weeds or focused on things that simply are what they are and aren't going to change.

(That's the stuff that gets labelled “drama” and falls on deaf ears or gets batted around unhelpfully by people who should have better things to do. Everyone has heard it a million times. Don't worry, I'm not going to touch any of it.)

We can only move forward, but are we living in the past?

As an open source project, the only question that really matters is, “What will drive WordPress forward?” Not in an ideal or theoretical world but with the army we have.

Or, as Josepha Haden-Chomphosy put it: “How can we rebalance the tenacious need for contribution with the immense benefit WordPress brings to everyone” in the WordPress ecosystem?

That question got lost in the reactions, but it's the one that matters most.

Notice how these words are delicately balanced and easily tipped over. You can read “tenacious need for contribution” as a threatening demand — a clawback on a “benefit” you might not consider “immense” or as immense as someone else's.

Notice how these words are delicately balanced and easily tipped over. You can read that “tenacious need for contribution” as a threatening demand — a clawback on a “benefit” you might not consider “immense” or as immense as someone else's. You can read it as a description of scarcity all on one side and abundance all on the other. You could tear it up and set it on fire.

And some people do do that.

The world as it is

Especially in the world of WordPress extenders, builders, and generally small business operators doing well enough to start a podcast or opinion blog, this seems to be where we get stuck. (That's the big, long tail of the open source communities I've been in for two decades.) I've watched this all happen before around an open source CMS that once dominated the market. Imbalances, inequities, and unfairness got emphasized, and the community didn't get past its deadlock of grievances.

I'm not going to say there aren't imbalances and all the playing fields are perfectly level because that's not true. (It never is, anywhere.) But I will say it doesn't do any good to keep saying this. Repetition of failed patterns is not just a definition of derangement, it is a failure to grow into mature thinking. To really face the world as it is requires a capacity for living with apparently unsolvable contradictions. It is less about “being smart” and more about a tolerance for the mental stress and pain of not having control or all the answers. It's fucking hard, but not being able to do it does harm to individuals and the groups they're in.

We can cope better with hard problems and survive to solve them another day if we first get ourselves united around common interests, motivations, and values. And that is the task our oldest, most adapatable, legacy systems — human languages — were invented to do as we muddle along together on this planet.

I'm also not going to say we can make deep problems disappear by not talking about them or by using evasive language. I do think we can cope better with hard problems and survive to solve them another day if we first get ourselves united around common interests, motivations, and values. And that is the task that human languages were invented for.

There's nothing like an external threat to unite people, usually. Lately there's been a lot of concern about the end to growth and possible losses in WordPress' market share. I'd worry more about losing relevance with younger generations of people with different outlooks, interests, and needs. That's people doing stuff. It's real. Market share will always be a statistic that dimly reflects what people are doing long after they started doing it. Today's failure to connect and communicate won't register on the BuiltWith pie chart for years when it's too late to get in front of.

Creators in community

So let's talk about the “Creator Economy.” It's not a trend but a pretty established thing now. Creators with a course, service, or product to sell generally don't want to focus too much on tools and even less on code — unless code is their service or product.

That's where WordPress should be, and in a sense it is, but it uses the language of a 20 year-old open source project that is illegible to people in their 20s today.

WordPress and ever-increasing, low-cost, easy-to-use SaaS platforms have enabled Creators to focus on their business. Unlike those of us who were doing this back in the Stone Age, Creators don't have to install WordPress, try to bolt on installs of phpBB, GNU Mailman, and learn PHP4 to cope with a once-popular horror like osCommerce. Creators are in, or adjacent to the WordPress community, but they're unlikely to participate in it and contribute in the old, traditional ways that start with bugs and hacking. Software that's free as in beer and speech isn't attractive or even meaningful unless it's presented as a useful platform for their particular niche.

This is painful to hear, especially if this is how you entered the open source and WordPress community. Many of us became developers, designers, freelancers, communication and marketing consultants, and even product or agency founders this way. That was a different time in a different country — once the main doorway into WordPress, it's now a small, creaky backdoor.

If you think this means Creators are narcissists and mercenaries who don't participate in communities or care about their tools, you are wrong. Helping them organize into communities that give them value is a smart move. WordPress products, especially ecosystem plugins, virtually grow their own communities. With a now-private Facebook page that's grown to over 133,000 members, Elementor is the biggest example of this, and they are pivoting to redefine themselves accordingly. Their identity doesn't emphasize a WordPress plugin but a platform (and community) for Creators.

That's where WordPress should be, and in a sense it is, but it uses the language of a 20 year-old open source project that is illegible to most people in their teens and twenties today. And if they look a little way into the very limited “WordPress news” space, Creators aren't going to see Creators there. Certainly not a wide range of artists and makers. They may see “drama” and arguments, or “inside-baseball” like this post.

Craft + Commerce and WordCamp US

I found Joe Casabona's “Tale of Two Keynotes” really helpful for understanding some key threats and opportunities WordPress needs to face in the context of today's Creator Economy. Joe's main point is that Creators focus on earning and growth in their businesses in a context where this message is encouraged and prioritized — and WordPress needs more of that. I'm not opposed to that view, but it's not the main thing I got out of Joe's post and want to elaborate here.

Joe looks at the language ConvertKit founder Nathan Barry used to invite community participation in his last keynote for Craft + Commerce, a major conference aimed at Creators in his hometown of Boise, Idaho. Then he looks at the language of participation in Matt Mullenweg's speech in the last State of the Word.

Barry emphasized goals that could be summed up as, “You can and should make a good living doing what you love in the creator economy!”

Here are the Post Status team responses to SotW 2021. Rereading my own remarks, I'm reminded of how optimistic that moment was — about all the same themes I'm touching here.

Matt emphasized learning through contribution and the danger of more being taken out than given back. What stands out most in my memory is his “Give a penny, take a penny” analogy for open source.

(That's not a knock on Matt, pennies, his analogy, or least of all the idea that you learn by doing — with others who know more. Post Status is all about that. We repeat “learn by helping” all the time. An example of this actually went out in our latest newsletter. But I do think “learn how to earn together” is a unique emphasis of the Post Status community within WordPress, and it is closer to Barry's language than anything as close to the project as Post Status is.)

As he seemed to intend, Matt's keynote reminded me of the values of small towns at their best, where I've lived about half my life. That part of me sees Barry as a bit of a huckster — sure, everyone's winner! What exactly is he giving you? Lifetime free access to ConvertKit? Or just high fives?

I don't see the two keynotes reflecting scarcity versus abundance thinking or even two very different attitudes, but if you wanted to polarize people over them you could. Pick on the vulnerabilities of one, and amplify the strengths of the other.

There are strengths and limitations to both emphases — Creating and Contributing.

What if we tried to combine the strengths of the language of contribution with new, complementary ideas and language from the Creator Economy?

“Creators” vs. “Contributors”

There are strengths and limitations attached to both of these words when they're used to define identity and participation in a creative community. Creating and Contributing. They don't seem very different until you take a close look.

Creating manages to hold together both ideas of giving and gaining. Creativity is about making things you care about deeply and are inspired to work on. When you create something it's a gift to everyone, potentially, and to yourself.

Contributing has distinct emphasis on giving, not getting back. It is a zero-sum transaction between a contributor and recipient of contributions. To use the language of contribution effectively, you probably have to be seen as truly having a greater need than the people you are asking to contribute more. Better yet, they should see themselves as implicitly benefiting from their contributions.

If they don't believe this is true, repeating the old magic words will not work unless you do it live on air, interrupting normal programming until enough contributions have come in. Until next time. (Kind of like Admin Notifications used for upselling premium plugins.)

Creating manages to hold together both ideas of giving and gaining. Creativity is about making things you care about deeply and are inspired to work on. When you create something it's a gift to everyone, potentially, and to yourself.

So what should we do differently?

Am I proposing a massive Search and Replace targeting all forms of the word “Contribute” in WordPress? Nope. I personally find calling people “Creators” more cringey than the older, grammatically tortured term, “Creatives.” But I recognize when I am out of date, and I am willing to adapt where I see value in doing so.

I'm not proposing anything but that we think more carefully about language, tone, and audience. What we emphasize with one word or story as opposed to another may close or open doors with different people. It's good to have a lot of options to engage a lot of people. It's good to be flexible and adaptable. It's good to know what connects and unites.

Do we know?

Can we create it?

Can we teach it to each other?

Post StatusPost Status - The Community for WordPress Professionals

by Dan Knauss at August 20, 2022 03:28 AM under WordPress Community

WPTavern: Join the WordPress World Photography Day Challenge

photo credit: ChrisEdwardsCE

In celebration of World Photography Day, WordPress’ Photo Directory team has issued a challenge designed to get people contributing:

Submit a photo that captures something unique about your local area, in a way that helps represent the geographic diversity of the WordPress community.

Since its launch, the WordPress Photo Directory has grown to 3,633 free, CC0-licensed photos. The purpose of this challenge is to raise awareness of the directory project and encourage people to contribute photos to expand the collection.

Photo contributors are encouraged to submit an original image of something from their local area (neighborhood, town, city, or country), such as a landscape, street, local wildlife, nature, or a landmark. In addition to following the directory guidelines, participants should also add the following information to denote their work as part of this initiative:

  • (1) The location or where the image was taken (e.g. the city and/or country)
  • (2) The word WorldPhotographyDay22

Photo Directory team contributor Marco Almeida has an additional recommendation for well-known locations that have an English counterpart for the name in the original language:

Quick suggestion for submissions: if you’re uploading a photo that has regional interest and the name of the place is not the same in English and the local language, do repeat the photo description in both languages. For example: “Walking on Lisbon’s sidewalk – A andar na calçada de Lisboa”. This will ensure the photo is both searchable by “Lisbon” and “Lisboa”.

Submitted photos that are approved may be featured across WordPress.org’s social media channels. Photo contributors will also get a contributor badge on their WordPress.org profiles, which I was surprised to find on mine after contributing a picture of my morning oatmeal a few months ago.

Participants can submit up to five photos at a time but will have to wait until those pass through review before submitting more. If your photo is approved, the Photo Directory team requests you leave a comment on the challenge post with the link to the photo and the story behind it.

More specific instructions for submitting photos are available in the announcement. If you are a photography enthusiast, this challenge is a great opportunity to give back to the world of free WordPress resources. The challenge will conclude on August 28, 2022.

by Sarah Gooding at August 20, 2022 01:24 AM under photography

August 19, 2022

WPTavern: YITH Wonder: A New Free WordPress Theme with Support for WooCommerce and Full-Site Editing

YITH, a WooCommerce plugin development company that was acquired by Newfold Digital in March 2022, has released its first block theme on WordPress.org. YITH Wonder is now listed among 122 other block themes that support full-site editing and have recently gained their own menu link in the directory to improve their visibility.

YITH Wonder includes 24 different patterns – many of them aimed at shops. Since the company specializes in WooCommerce products, it’s no surprise that YITH Wonder offers corresponding styles for WooCommerce products, shop pages, cart, and checkout.

The theme also includes three full-page patterns for different homepage layouts and designs. These are very helpful for quickly putting together a page without having to hunt for and place each pattern in the right place. The full-page patterns can easily be previewed on the theme’s listing on WordPress.org: (Homepage 1, Homepage 2, and Homepage 3).

YITH Wonder comes with six different style variations that make it easy to change the the accent color combinations and typography for the site.

Check out the live demo on the theme’s website. One handy feature on the demo is that you can click “Launch Sandbox” to instantly spin up a test site with the theme and WooCommerce pre-loaded. The sandbox sites expire after one hour. This gives a user the opportunity to explore the full-site editing features and see if the theme will work for their particular use case. For example, users can see how the WooCommerce product catalog template will look with their own customizations applied. The theme packages two dozen different templates and template parts that can be customized inside the Site Editor.

YITH Wonder is listed as a multi-purpose WordPress theme in the directory but it really shines as one of the few free block-based themes built with WooCommerce in mind. Creating a new page and slapping one of the full-page patterns on it is a delightful experience that will save users time in getting started and also enable them to build targeted pages featuring different product categories or sale items.

YITH Wonder is available to download on WordPress.org for free. I couldn’t find any documentation for the theme, but it may be available once the company formally announces the theme on the YITH website.

by Sarah Gooding at August 19, 2022 09:29 PM under woocommerce

Post Status: Post Status Excerpt (No. 65) — How We Talk When We Talk About WordPress

What's it like to enter the WordPress community media space, especially as the editor of a publication with many voices, personalities, and perspectives?

Estimated reading time: 10 minutes

My friend and dialogue partner, Nyasha Green, is six months into her role as Editorial Director at MasterWP, so today we're talking about what that's been like for Ny, what she's learned, and how we look at the WordPress media space we both work in.

Unsurprisingly we talk about conflict, communication, personality, and the importance of in-person events. That brings up WCUS — a first for both of us — where we'll meet each other and a lot of people we've only known remotely. It also sounds like I might get roped into a karaoke duet. (Not if I can help it.)

🔗 Mentioned in the Show

👋 Credits

Every week Post Status Excerpt will bring you a conversation about important news and issues in the WordPress community and business ecosystem. 🎙

You can listen to past episodes of The Excerpt, browse all our podcasts, and don’t forget to subscribe on Spotify, Amazon Music, Google Podcasts, iTunes, Castro, YouTube, Stitcher, Player.fm, Pocket Casts, Simplecast, or by RSS. 🎧

Transcript

Dan Knauss: [00:00:00] Hey NY, how are you doing today?

Nyasha Green: Hey, Dan, I'm doing well. How are you?

Dan Knauss: Good. Good. Pretty good for, uh, winding in towards the end of the week. I know. Um, let's see, your, your newsletter from master VP goes out Tuesday in our productions Friday. So maybe you can, it goes out Wednesday. Oh Wednesday now. Okay. Yeah.

Tuesday, Tuesdays. You're getting it already. Yeah. Okay. So you're kind of, is this the down slope for you? easier time,

Nyasha Green: eh, yeah, it is. It is. The beginning of the week is always like, alright, make sure everything's together. And then it's like, ah, you know, breathe and like can hop in and getting ready for next week.

So it definitely is. And it's almost Friday. Yeah. All good news.

Dan Knauss: yeah, for us it's like, yeah, it's the, the high, when you get it all done on, on Friday and then the weekend. So, um, you've been at it for about six months. I read your your six month. Article, uh, post [00:01:00] there and reflection on all the stuff you, you guys have done in that time.

Um, yeah. How are you, how are you feeling about, um, about not just doing master WP, but this is kind of a new thing for you jumping straight into the, um, the WordPress community as someone who's, um, you know, come, come in from, uh, not that, not that long ago for the first. .

Nyasha Green: Yeah. So, um, I've had, I have a experience in WordPress, so I've been coding in WordPress for a couple years.

Um, I've been writing and editing for what 16 years. Um, and just, yeah, putting it all together to be like a part of the community to be a part of the writing, to be a part of, you know, everything that's going on. Um, it has been. Fun. I don't wanna say that first. It's been very fun. Um, it's also been very entertaining.

it's been [00:02:00] very interesting. Um, Hmm. It's been. Oh, oh, it's been just a journey. And, um, it's just been six months, but I've learned a lot. I've met a lot of really good people and I've got to do, I've gotten to do a lot of really cool things. Um, I'm really excited for the rest of this, the next six months. I'm just I'm ready for that year article, like to just talk about everything we did in a year, um, But, um, I think the most interesting thing about it is, um, just, just getting to know so many people in the community, not just in the community, because like I was, I've been in the community for years as a coder, but I haven't been like, you know, an active participant in like, as far as meeting people.

So meeting active people in the community has been really awesome.

Dan Knauss: Yeah, that's really different. Isn't it? I, I relate. It's a lot. I feel, um, I, I feel similarly because despite going back early long way with open source and, and WordPress [00:03:00] site, I probably got more involved long ago in other communities and I've stayed.

Stayed for a long time in a, you know, relatively quiet, neutral space relative to, to post status and, and, um, and just, um, my own work for a long time. But it's, yeah, it's relatively recently that my role has kind of expanded and changed and re not, I wouldn't say required, but made it natural to, um, and if not, Necessary to, uh, you know, be more engaged in social media and, um, and just, yeah, the kind of networking that, that comes around from that and the, the way that people, uh, connect with you more when you're, you're taking more of a public role.

Um, yeah. There's ups and downs, ups and downs to that. How, how do you, what, what do you see the pros and cons [00:04:00] or what have been the highs and lows for you?

Nyasha Green: Um, the pros would be the people I've met, um, as a relative newcomer to the community and someone that's trying to get more people in, um, being, you know, editorial director of master WP has opened me to so many resources.

There are so many people that want to help in this community. And I feel like that does not, nobody really talks about that. That doesn't, uh, that never makes it out of the screams. Drama whatever's going on that week in WordPress, but there are so many people that want to help the community, especially newbies, but they don't know how, or they they're more.

So I will, I have resources for you to help, which is still helping. And I was able to connect with a lot of people. Um, I have been given a lot of resources for just starting my own word, press meetups in my city. I was just living in and the city I'm doing now. People just they've read and they've seen things I've [00:05:00] doing they're let me start over.

They've read things I've written and they've seen things I'm doing and that spurred them to help. So it's been mostly positive. Um, for me. Great. Um, some of the cons is, um, something I, I'm not new to leadership. I'm not new to taking ownership of things. I've had my own business before, things like that. Um, I guess the biggest thing for me is when master WP gets negative, press.

that's all people wanna talk about to me. Uh, if they talk about that, amongs the self that's, whatever that's it's okay. But when lots of really positive things happen, like I said, like me gaining these resources, us having, helping new people get into the community, people, uh, you know, changing their tune on things.

They just didn't have information about which we've, we've been told all of us that that's helped at least someone, no, it is nothing. Nobody really wants to talk about it. And it could be because negative stuff, you know, people aren't louder when they're negative. Versus they're a little bit more [00:06:00] quiet when they're positive, but that's something that it didn't bother me at first, but it was overwhelming after a little while.

Mm. Because. I'm a person, like if it's something's negative, that's going on, I would like to work with you on it. But I quickly discovered a lot of people don't want that. They just wanna be negative and, you know, yeah. So navigating that's been interesting. Um, and then we, we, we shifted a lot. Master WP is completely different than what it was under.

Um, the old ownership. And I think a lot of people had a problem with that as well. Um, especially when we talked about race and diversity and oh, my favorite giving people money. I understand that. Cuz I talk about that in regular life. I've been a community organizer for years. I do community service. Um, and I don't, I don't have to answer to an organization to do that.

I do stuff out of my own pocket. That's how I am. So this stuff is not new to me. Um, but it's, it's interesting to see people [00:07:00] take on those. You shouldn't be helping people or you shouldn't be doing. In a space where they constantly is, need a need for help. So I've, I've learned a lot. It's it's it helps me ponder and wonder.

And, um, I, I don't know. I'm just, I'm very interested to see what else I learned because six months, depending on who you talk to is not a long time. I don't feel like that was a long time, but I poof I've learned a lot. So this year should be pretty epic.

Dan Knauss: yeah. You really jump right in and yeah, when you do so.

Public like that. And you're, you're putting out the kind of material you do on, um, writing and, and podcasting mm-hmm um, yeah, you get, you get a lot, learn a lot from getting a lot of reactions fast and when you become the news it's, it's not, not awesome. I have a little experience with that. But yeah, no one can really control the message all the time.

And, [00:08:00] uh, being able to roll with that is, is good. But, um, yeah, I hope the, the positives outweigh the negatives. Where, where do you think the, um, some of the pushback or raised hackles? Come from, is it just, who are you to say, just where does this new, you know, just reaction of, of established or familiar, um, people who are familiar with the space and, and feel really, um, comfortable in it, the way it is.

And then I don't know who you are. You just come out of, you know, you're offering new perspectives and, you know, different, different takes on things or, um, is that. Is that just kind of the newcomer, um, challenge that I don't know, human social groups always seem to, to

Nyasha Green: have. Oh, I would be surprised if that wasn't playing a part into it.

I mean, because, um, some people I have talked [00:09:00] with interviewed, you know, written to they've written to me, you know, they've been in this community like. Years and years while I might have been still been in high school, things like that. So I definitely, I, I could see some of that. Definitely. Um, I guess the big thing is nobody really addresses a lot of negative issues with me, which, which I'm totally prepared for as editorial director.

I it's, it's always secondhand stuff. And it's like, how do you address that? I'm one of these people, like I said, I address things and that people take that in a negative way. I don't understand that. Like I. I have always been able to communicate with people. If there's a issue, I think we can solve it if we talk about it.

But I don't think a lot of people have that point of view. They don't want to talk, they don't wanna solve issues. They just want you to know they are not feeling it. And that's also fun. But, you know, as a person who's a doer, I can only accept so much of that, you know, send it to me, but what do you want me to do with it after a while it's gonna be my response.

Um, so it, [00:10:00] you know, there. I'm a newbie, you know, we're new, I guess we're as a whole newish people on the scene. Um, although Rob and Brian and a lot of our, uh, developers have been in WordPress years. Mm-hmm um, there's also I don't know what I I'll call it. I always try to make up my own names for things.

Um, it's getting into the group. I guess liking what everyone else likes and hating what everyone else hates, which we, we won't do. And master WP is right. Individual people. We, we also, that's a big issue too. We get, if Rob has an issue on something, that means we all think it, if Brian has an issue on something that makes we all think it, if I have an issue with something that means we all think it and, um, that's not true at all.

Yeah. We are very open and diverse about that, but that, that gets lost too. So I think it's. , you know, we're not as a whole waiting and liking the right things. I can tell you as a person, an individual that will never be me. I've never been able to do that. [00:11:00] Friends, family work. Yeah. I've never been able to do that.

So it won't be me, but, um, I think that plays a part into it too. And then I just think, you know, We're saying things that some people have told me privately, they wanna say, but they can't. So it's a number of things which I am so interested and totally down to explore in the next six months.

Dan Knauss: That's good curiosity.

helps, especially with, with negatives. Um, yeah. Why in, instead of just hardening up or closing off or writing people off, um, there's always something to learn. You know, it occurred to me listening. what you're, um, saying there about a publication with a lot of voices. Mm-hmm um, it occurs to me that there isn't we, and we talk about this a lot, the WordPress news space or whatever you want to call it.

It's pretty small. Mm-hmm and um, most of the people in it are, you know, we're pretty [00:12:00] small team at post status, but, um, there's, there's multiple voices and we, we aspire to. To have that, um, kind of sense of dialogue, but a lot of people are just doing, you know, it's one, one person, one personality. And so you, you get kind of used to their perspective on things mm-hmm , mm-hmm and maybe there's not as much of a familiarity with, um, in, in the space with, um, Hey, this is a publication where we actually want to have a lot of D.

People and different diversity of views and they may not stack up or align and it's not planned. It's not to, to do so. It's not meant to, um, push a certain stance, but yeah, inevitably there are some kind of ranges of opinion that a, a publication will kind of get known, known for. Mm-hmm um, I wonder if that's just too new of a thing.

People don't [00:13:00] distinguish between, oh, who wrote this? Who wrote that? Um, yeah, I think that can, that can easily be part of it, but, um,

Nyasha Green: you know, I didn't, you pray up a good point. I didn't, I, I did not. And we have talked about this, but I never really, I didn't, I didn't think about that. You just like enlighten me at that moment.

There are, uh, a lot of publications where it's not as many people. Getting a platform to talk about this many different things. So that could be very confusing to readers and people consuming our media. And that's. Thank you. That's something we need to work on.

Dan Knauss: Thank you. Yeah. And, and a lot of, a lot of those individual voices have kind of been typecast, maybe unfairly.

I think sometimes even individuals change their views, moderate them, come to new opinions and things. But over time people tend, oh, this podcast, he thinks this way, she, she looks that way. [00:14:00] Um, That might be some of it. And, and also everyone's just guilty going so fast, having so much going by how, how deeply do we read or listen to things?

Yes. And we just kinda box people up quickly. Yes. Um, I, I, I, I think we're in personality. We're probably a bit alike in that, you know, liking a certain amount of. Friction and difference to have some have things to talk about, um, to learn from something that's not familiar or someone who doesn't agree with you.

Oh yeah. Um, yeah. And you guys actually, you know, pay for advertise that you want, you disagree with this. You, we pay you just as much to write for us.

Nyasha Green: yeah. Come pay. We'll pay you $300 an article to come disagree with us and yeah. S I'm hearing again, secondhand. So many people have these disagreements and I'm like, why not get, get paid for it?

That's my dream to go disagree with people and get paid for it. Like if [00:15:00] someone had given me this opportunity when I was younger, I probably would be a lawyer because I would be so good at arguing with people. but, uh, yeah, we do because we do, we want to. Opposing views. Like we don't all, and we all don't agree with each other, you know?

Um, I love BTS. Brian does it. Um, Rob has his views on multisite. I'm indifferent to it. , you know, we, but we all get labeled, like, you know, oh, if that's Rob's idea, then it's our idea. And I, I don't completely blame the community for that because that's life. Right. You know, when you think about, well, it's you think about like companies, sometimes companies get, um, mislabeled.

Like, I, I like to use the New York times as an example. Like the New York times is pretty progressive. Most of the time left leaning, in my opinion, that's subjective. And they will run op-eds with conservative point of views and Republicans and things like that. And they get crucified and it's like, everybody forgets that , they're running different opinions all the [00:16:00] time.

So, you know, I, I think that's that's life sometimes too, so I don't take it personally. And, um, right. It's something we can always work on. I'm always open to working on things. Yeah. And that's

Dan Knauss: what you get from a democratized publication space that no, one's able to squash out one particular voice and, and ideally it, they can be in some kind of productive dialogue with each other.

You know, I, I think too listening to if, if you go, if your publication is, and, and a lot of, a lot of the. WordPress space is, is geared towards what's the drama of the day or what's, you know, what's the controversy up here. The, um, I wonder how much of it has to do with like energy levels, cause that stuff can raise energy and levels, expenditure and anxiety.

Um, and, and it also, there's a cognitive load to who is this? Who wrote this? Do I know them? Who are, you know, there's all this, it, it takes real effort to. To make that three dimensional to [00:17:00] make that connect, um, more deeply. And, and I think that's just what happens on the, on the internet, unless you make the effort or, you know, you meet it at word camp or something, something like that.

You don't, you don't have context. And, um, I understand you don't want to deal with, um, a lot of noise some of the time. And, um, since I'm not really running. Opinion or oriented, um, publication and actually going slow and focusing on more business pragmatics, a lot of the time and avoiding drama. That's, that's kind of what our longstanding, um, Attributes that people like that I

Nyasha Green: thinks for the special sauce where's in that Dan where's oh, actually life is meant to be fun.

I [00:18:00] like to have fun. risk. Oh,

Dan Knauss: it's in, it's in there. I think it, I think it just comes SL it comes slower and. When you're able to do more listening and, and cover a lot of things, not just like what is going on in the core project, but, or automatic, but there's a whole ecosystem. There's little fish and big fish.

Um, there's middle, middle sized ones. There's, there's all these different, um, concerns around the. The commons around, uh, WordPress that everyone has in common as they're what they're basing their business on in some way. So I don't know. I don't, I don't, I don't, I think that's fun too. It's a different kind though.

and, and it doesn't, uh, it's, it's definitely, um, definitely a different maintains, a different mood. Um, but. [00:19:00] Yeah. What do do you, do you think that there's a, there's a, a regular current, we need to maintain in this space where there's critical questioning, um, a kind of dialogue going on that, um, that hits maybe some of the bigger, um, Bigger tougher questions.

Nyasha Green: Nope. I think people should be able to say whatever they want, you know, um, as long as it's not hate speech and no one yells bomb in a crowded theater, that's my opinion on that. Um, no, one's even when. Profess your love of things. People are going to disagree. I think no matter what you write, people are going to dis disagree.

And as you said, post status, you know, y'all, y'all have a pretty neutral stance on things and y'all do a good job of it. And people still disagree with you. So, oh yeah. Um, no, I mean, you know, so it's like, there's no ways to avoid it. I don't think there's a plan for that, but, um, I don't, I don't, I don't [00:20:00] know the, I guess I'm ponding that answer as well.

And that's something I'm thinking about, but until then, I'm not going to, you know, limit anyone. I want them to speak about everything. If we could talk about everything everywhere all at once, I would love that, but being realistic, you know?

Dan Knauss: Right. Yeah. I wasn't suggesting it'd be a limit limited in some way, but that, um, just the, the, this, the public, the WordPress public sphere, I say sometimes, you know, kind of the, the debate, um, arena, the public square it's.

It's not always in the greatest shape, especially now you might, might, might exist. um, is there, is there work to be done there where there are unavoidable differences, disagreements, big thorny questions that do need to be maintain? Yeah. There [00:21:00] needs to be some dialogue maintained about those. And is that kind of more, what you're you're tackling.

Nyasha Green: Um, honestly, no. Um, but because this is the thing and I, I'm not just, just saying it for you. It's something I had to work with too. We're all. We're all from different places. We have different cultural backgrounds and we have different, even if we have the same cultural background, we have different upbringings.

We're different people. I don't think there's going to be a uniform way to do that with so many different personalities. I'm not saying, you know, if it could be done. Sure. I just don't think it can be done. Um, we're also different. And I think honestly, if we embrace that more people wouldn't be, as you know, what's the word.

it wouldn't come off as, um, antagonistic. Is that a word? Did I make that up? Yeah. Yeah. I think people wouldn't be, be like that, but it's, it's like, okay, this person is this type of way. And we're just gonna write [00:22:00] them off as oh, that's them? No, let's, let's bring 'em in. Let's see why they're that way let's work together in this, this, this community, like a community should, um, if we're a community, a community.

They take, they take care of each other, they're they, you know, even their craziest member. Well, I gotta stop saying that. Um, even their members that we think are eccentric or we think are not like us, we take care of our, we take care of our own. And, um, I don't see that in the WordPress community. I see. Oh, that's just the way they are when that person could be one of the greatest people you've ever made in your life.

If you gave it a chance, um, or they could be horrible, but you know, what are we gonna do? We're gonna try. We're gonna not try. We're gonna give. Are we a community or not?

Dan Knauss: Yeah, that, that's kind of what I mean, like, do you see yourself as kind of in your mission to, to try to create an inclusive space?

That's not one person or one, you know, organization or just one particular agenda and on any issue, [00:23:00] but, um, open kind of the open stage, um, ally, ally kind of brought that up. What was the mm-hmm the, um, podcast episode she did recently where. She talked, she called it debate club, which to me sounds a little little on the antagonistic side of, and she meant it more on, you know, like back in the olden days when maybe high, high school debate clubs were, were, uh, not, not as, uh, intense as I imagine they might be now.

Um, just a space where, where you can, um, you. You can try out different ideas and it's, you know, it's not to be taken personally like this is, we're gonna try to, what's the best case you can make for this. What's the best way to look at this issue. And, and then how does someone who totally takes it another way?

How do they respond to it? Is that the kind of, would that be like a healthy, healthy thing [00:24:00] that you guys are shooting?

Nyasha Green: we don't have a uniform goal. So that's, that's again, a thing like is master WP. Doesn't have a, a, a one thing we're all trying to do. Um, so I mean, if you're asking me personally, um, I, again, I don't think that's possible because the people are so different and, um, I wanna just spin that on. Like, I'm not saying like, everybody is like so different from me and I just feel overwhelmed.

Like I meet a. Uh, kindred spirits in the community. Um, but it's just like, even when you just said like, you know, debate club was kind of harsh, that was like probably the most, I think, polite thing you can say. I can't think of anything polite or to say and that's not anything wrong with you. That's just something I have to look at.

Like, um, I try to, I'm trying to make my language more accessible. Like not say things like crazy, like it tears me up to say that like, so, you know, that's something, um, I think, you know, I wanna work on, but also like I [00:25:00] don't, I don't know. That's something I've never thought about. That's a that's Ally's idea and, you know, ally works with master WP, but we, we haven't talked about that as a whole, as master WP because master WP lets everybody express themselves and be their own person and have their own ideas.

Um, Not saying no one else does, but yeah. Um, I don't think it's possible me. Naisha saying that now the rest of my team may have different thoughts on that. And actually I think that's really awesome. And I want to talk to Allie about it. I wanna talk to my team about it. So, um, yeah, I'll definitely talk to them about it, but, um, I just don't see it as possible.

I also don't see it as necessary. Um, I don't, I don't, people are always going to yell and Twitter has given people the ability to yell from their homes. Like, you know, it's people who would yell at about stuff and complain and say things. They would never say if they had to say it in public, Twitter has given them that space and right.

We can't really take it away. Um, so I don't know Dan, to answer your question. I don't think it'll work, but I don't, I don't like saying nothing will work. I think everything should at least be [00:26:00] tried. Hmm.

Dan Knauss: Well, I think, yeah, the more good models there are, um, the better, yeah, like checking, checking ourselves on the, what seems like crazy far out irrational, extreme opinion.

I mean, that's just, so that's such a common feature of when things get bad in a, in a community, um, inability to talk because. You're, you know, some other perspective is just so far, far out. And, uh, that, that may be the case. Maybe things are, you know, really that broken sometimes. But I would like to think, and I, I don't think they are in, um, something like in an open source community like WordPress.

Um, you just kind of have to give people that, that tolerance. Forbearance is a good word. Um, and step back from, you know, recognizing this, okay. I don't know where they're coming [00:27:00] from. This doesn't make sense. I'm gonna try to find out, I'm gonna try to understand it from their point of view rather than oh yeah.

You know, call it just nuts. Um, yeah, I think that's hard to do when we don't, we don't have a space where that, um, seems to happen. A lot. And it reminds me, it actually reminds me of way back when I did a lot with Jula kind of when they're at their high point and then over it, um, it's a lot, it was a lot similar to WordPress in that, um, They developed a, a third party plugin theme ecosystem is where there are a lot of people making good money and agencies and so on, and who really feel in invested in, in the product and then very, sometimes alienated from where it's going and how decisions get made and so on.

Um, and. That kind of language emerged, like just complete your perspective is so far out from mine clearly. , [00:28:00] it's, it's, um, not worth any time to try to understand. And yeah. Do you see that kind of thing going on? Is that something we can help in, in some way, is that just helped by letting more people. Have the

Nyasha Green: floor, more people need to be elevated in the community.

Yes. Um, I get asked to do a lot of podcasts and things, you know, like what we're doing now. Sometimes I just say no, because I don't think I should be the only voice. I don't think I should be the only one talking for master WP. I don't think I should be the. No, nobody's like done this, but in, uh, outside of nobody's done this in the WordPress community, but outside of the WordPress community, I don't think I should be the black person you go to talk to about, about black issues.

I think, um, Once I, I, you know, I, I have my voice and if I wanna say something and if I wanna talk to people, I can do it. Um, but other than that, I think we should be elevating people. I think if the community was a little bit more diverse, I know I say that all the [00:29:00] time, people would know how to deal with opposing opinions, from different people who may be from different backgrounds.

I see that I see it as diversity issue. I see some of the same people who click together, not agreeing with some of the other people who were the same and click together. And I'm like, if you guys didn't do that, maybe you wouldn't be so upset all the time, but I don't know. What do I know? I'm new. I'm I'm joking.

But, um, I guess would the, would there be a space where everybody could just be, not use bad language or threatening language and it'd be like a little safer space for people. Again, culturally, I, I think that's impossible. Um, because you know, my, you could disagree with me as long as you don't cuss at me or yell at me.

You can disagree with me all day, but that's not with other people. It's like, you can't use certain word and completely understandable. You can't use certain words with me. You do that. That's that's, that's why I tap out. We have to learn that about each other. And if like, if [00:30:00] nobody's willing to learn that, and I mean, on both sides of people who don't want you to use any strong language, don't wanna learn that about other people.

That, you know, strong language is not a big red flag to them. And I think people are misunderstanding each other. They're like, wow, he's, you know, they are just so threatening toward me. And they're like, I thought we were having a regular conversation or maybe on the other side of that, like, you know, I, I just it's people need to talk to each other.

I think it's communication problem. It's a diversity problem. It's communication problem. If we want those spaces to happen, people need to talk to each other. I don't see a lot of people talking to each other in the C. unless they agree with each other and that's bad in any community,

Dan Knauss: right? Yeah. The absence of, of any, any friction there, it's, it's a tough mm-hmm seeming paradox of the absence of, of conflict tends to indicate a problem because people are just individuals and, and different and you, and you need that.

You need questions and [00:31:00] friction to be. To come up with better ideas and to grow, to grow, to see things that you didn't wouldn't otherwise see. And, and if you're repressing all of that, it's gonna blow up some more dysfunctional way. Oh yeah. So yeah, the high conflict personality, I think in. Psychology is, is actually someone who, who just doesn't doesn't have any repertoire of responses to it.

It's a normal part of life and they try to avoid it and try to suppress it. And that actually causes more conflict than they just don't have the tools to, um, to deal with it.

Nyasha Green: Do you think, uh, maybe I, I have a question. I'm sorry. You said high conflict people. Yeah. Right. Who, what would, uh, be your definition of high conflict people?

And then I'll tell you mine, and then I can tell you, and then we can talk. Um,

Dan Knauss: I think, I think the psychological model, um, that I dimly have read about is, um, it, you, it is [00:32:00] just the simple definition would be someone who ends up in conflict a lot. Um, and maybe they don't know why , um, mm-hmm they may not think they are because they're trying to avoid it all the time.

Mm-hmm and. you know, like, um, say like the worst example would be like, you know, estrangement in a family or something like that. Mm-hmm so these two people don't talk mm-hmm at all. That's not a condition of detachment or peace. Uh it's a, it's a cold, it's a simmering thing that will go off as soon as they get together or something triggers it.

So mm-hmm um, Yeah, high conflict tends to come from not being able to manage reasonable levels of conflict in reasonable ways, because that's just what human groups require.

Nyasha Green: You don't think like most of what you said is kind of subjective though.

Dan Knauss: Oh, sure. , it's just a, a model, uh, a hypothesis, I guess,

Nyasha Green: but like, I, I think I could fit into [00:33:00] that because I, like I said, when I told tell people, like I address things, people can take that as like, if.

She'll like yell at you. If you say something to her, I can say, but it's not that I like to talk to people like positive, or it could be positive or negative. You could come to me and say, oh my God, ni I just had the great day ever. And I'm gonna say what happened? Let's talk about it. You could come to me and say, I just had the worst day ever.

I'm like, dude, what happened? Let's talk about it. My responses will not change. Um, but just people who address things because we're in a community, we're in a society. , we're in a place where. People are very nonconfrontational. They are very nonconfrontational in the text space, not even just WordPress.

Right. So I, I could come off as like confrontational or aggressive and I'm not I'm I will, my responses will be the same. I just, yeah. I like, I'm curious. I told you, I'm a naturally curious person. I ask you like 50 million questions a day and you always answer, and I appreciate you. and I, I, that, but that could be taken the wrong way.

So it's [00:34:00] like, I'm not a psychiatry person or psych psychological person. I can't look into all these things to see how we should treat these different people. And that, I just think we should have more opposing or diverse thoughts so we can, you know, get more people who are not just like in a echo chamber together, and then we can grow and make changes from that.

We just, there's no way we're gonna get to a point where everybody's nice to each other because nice is subjective.

Dan Knauss: Right. Well, yeah, and there's a lot of culture in it too. I, I think what in the way I I'm looking at it, um, the way you describe yourself and, um, I would probably fit in that, in that too, is, is not a high conflict personality, but people might who, because, because you're a pressure valve because you're, you're, you're not gonna bury stuff or, and it's not that big of a deal to you.

Yeah. But the per the person who's trying to avoid. Conflict that every turn is suppressing. What they really think is suppressing, [00:35:00] uh, things that probably matter a lot to them. And you don't even know. And then boom, it comes out at one point that's. Oh yeah. That's a really negative kind of conflict to have.

So if, I don't know, you keep it kind of at a Luke warm level. A lot of the time, it's not, you know, that's pretty good. I'm I'm originally from the, the Northeast and. And there's , there's generally more time, especially in the Metro Northern New Jersey, New York, um, region there it's um, it's, uh, it's probably looked on as, as high conflict personality.

It's aggressive. aggressive. Yeah. Drive. Sure. Learning to drive in, in New Jersey is fun. Um but it's actually, it gives you a lot of, it's a lot of tolerance. It's a lot of space because you can, people can push each other a long way and it's, and they have a lot of options to, um, , there's a lot of moves you can make.

And, and a lot of it is. You know, [00:36:00] it's just, it's just talk it just Jerry Feld, people like to talk um, but then, you know, moving to the Midwest or the south at different times, totally different thing. And people don't interpret, um, you know, the threshold that they have for tolerating. Um, Um, open disagreement or questioning is lower.

Oh. So low differently.

Nyasha Green: And , they love me here.

Dan Knauss: yeah. I mean, I kind of missed the Southern ways of, of kind of. Backhanded dealing with

Nyasha Green: things. I don't miss this. We see we, we are opposing each other again. I, I love that New Jersey, New York, Boston way of, of being of talking to people because it's, you know me to understand it's it's so it's genuine, like here, like people could be talking to you and hate your gut, so you'd never know oh, bless your heart.

So awesome. Like, [00:37:00] oh God, I hate that. Those are fighting words. So again, like someone might say, bless your heart. Oh, they're they're blessing you. I'm like, no, they wanna fight. I'm just kidding.

Dan Knauss: I got used to it. I don't know it, but it's, it's a way of everyone knows is they're putting it off to the side. I, I never really figured out the, the Midwest.

Um, doesn't really have anywhere for it to go and that, uh, that's a problem. I don't have a lot of west coast experience. I don't get it at all then. Oh, I love the west.

Nyasha Green: You don't like the west coast. We disagreeing again. Dan, we're supposed to be, I don't

Dan Knauss: know. I'm just saying I'm neutral. I mean, I hardly, I've only been there a few times.

I'm kind of probably biased against Southern California car, all that. I probably like the north in the bay area, but we're gonna, we'll actually meet each other. In San Diego so we can, yes, we can check it out.

Nyasha Green: that's gonna be fun now that you say that I love the voice closed. The people are so laid back in my opinion.[00:38:00]

They're so laid back.

Dan Knauss: that's the reputation. It just, yeah. Is there, is there something else going on underneath? I don't know.

Nyasha Green: That is so funny to me.

huh? Insidious Californians.

Dan Knauss: Well, yeah, it's a big, well, that's, it's a huge, we generalize like that. So these it's like GDP of a top, one of the largest countries, big population, very first, every respect and yeah, WordPress is, it's like California. It's like, like any big country. It's just, I think the diversity is there.

It's not, yeah, it's in, it's

Nyasha Green: in. I'm

Dan Knauss: sorry. There's there's not, there's a lot of underrepresentation of mm-hmm underrepresented groups. We that's definitely there, but there's huge diversity in the types of personalities and people and what their [00:39:00] experiences are and how they came into WordPress and how their business works and what ships they've got on their shoulder or what words will trigger them off.

And we don't know that, that stuff until you get up pretty, pretty close and. Yeah, I don't, I don't know if there's much we can do, um, podcasts or articles to, uh, smooth that process of, um, connection. I think that's more of an in person thing, your, your meetups that you're starting are probably most important.

The mentoring, you know, gets people together.

Nyasha Green: Yeah. But I mean, if it's me mentoring and you. I have this stigma against me who people really be happy about that. not saying I do. I'm just saying, um, just adding on what you said about diversity. Um, we need more diverse people too. I know we had diversity diverse minds, but if we were as diverse as Iowa am comfortable with every podcast I would get asked on, wouldn't be led by [00:40:00] white men.

There's been one, there's only been one I've been. Or been asked to be beyond that wasn't led by white man, and it was led by alley my homie alley. So it's like, yeah, that's not diverse. That's that's not it at all. Um, diverse minds. Yeah. What do those mind, what are those minds attached to so I I'll, um, I think we need to go a little further with that.

I think, I think we need to go a little further with that, but, um, I lost my thought. I'm sorry. We need to go further. We need to go further.

Dan Knauss: Definitely. And well, yeah, I think you've affected change in that area. Winston, I think was early voice there and Allie and love her and you and love her. Um, yeah, I mean all people I, I hope to meet, um, and getting, um, kind of beginning to normalize.

What would you call it? Uh, travel [00:41:00] scholarships. Um, and yeah, you know, you wanna have underrepresented people here. Well, let's, let's meet the needs. Let's actually talk about that. I kind of like it's, it's too bad that, um, people are kind of desperate for getting tickets to word, word, camp us. Um, but I kind of like the fact that.

People are talking more openly about, um, about the process, you know, there's the whole what's, when are you going? What, what days? And all of this stuff, that's kind of all out, out in the open rather than just, um, I don't remember seeing that quite so much. It

Nyasha Green: used to be as like a secret, what was it? Tell me about it.

You know, I don't know. No, no, no.

Dan Knauss: Maybe I just wasn't paying attention. It was not a secret, but, um, I think, I think that. That it's been a couple of things that it it's been so long since the last one, that this is kind of a [00:42:00] reboot plus everything else that's going on in the community. And then 600 5650 tickets, um, that went on the market and got snapped up in 45 minutes.

Um, it's, it's definitely, there's definitely more talk about. About the journey there and the importance and the importance of it. Um, and I don't know, that just seems good. Um, in some ways I, I wish, um, you know, I hope everyone can, well, I wish everyone could make it. Who wants to, I wasn't, I wasn't sure if I would, um, initially, but, um, Yeah.

When people are saying, Hey, I need . Is there a way I can get, um, then, then that's in the, in the community there it's in like an a, it's a basic question of, um, can I get there? Can I be in, I wanna [00:43:00] be included in this, is that possible? Um, I just haven't seen that, that come up before. It's just a very private thing.

Yeah. Oh,

Nyasha Green: well, I think that's. Well

Dan Knauss: it's upside. I mean, it's not awesome that people, people are gonna get shot out. I or it's to something. No.

Nyasha Green: Yeah, of course not. It's awesome. That. The want is that high, like, oh yeah. Especially to network and meet everybody in the community. Cuz I mean meeting face to face, I think, eh, it is COVID, I'm kind of hesitant on that and what monkey pop now?

Ugh. Oh yeah. But um, I think meeting will actually help people too. I think the internet gives you a lot. Gives not you. A lot of people louder, negative voices than they. Would usually have, yeah. I think a lot of, um, impersonal contact will, that'll be one thing that helps. So that that's an answer to your question earlier.

I think that's gonna help. We're gonna have such a good time at work camp and like, everybody's gonna be like happy and they're gonna love each other and your face. [00:44:00] I, I just wanna see your face, but I think you be like, Hmm, we're gonna, what,

Dan Knauss: but it's gonna be good. You're reminding me of my. Friend and cop neighbor when I lived in, in Milwaukee and he, uh, what, nothing go ahead, get a certain personality type.

And, and he was actually very sensitive and, uh, well, red guy, but, uh, if I mentioned. Anything that sounded like that. He'd say something about like, uh, yeah. And all the animals and people will hold hands and dance around the trees together or something like that was

Nyasha Green: his. And why can't we do that? It's California.

It's Southern California. We can do that.

Dan Knauss: Well, it's always, it's always worth the effort of getting, getting people together and it does happen. It's a very individual thing and I, I hope there is. More of that. I've only gotten it online when, when I take the time to, [00:45:00] you know, take some blows and talk to people, um, listen, don't react and, and try to understand where they're coming from.

And that's just, yeah, it's, it's so much easier in person usually because, um, yeah,

Nyasha Green: just empathy. Oh yeah. We need a lot more. You do you want me to end by like singing some Julie Andrews? I have a really great voice. Oh, wow. I'm joking. I'm joking, Dan. No, you look too excited. Never mind you look so excited by me.

No,

Dan Knauss: there's a, there's a karaoke request from Miriam Schwab. Um, in our, in post dad, slack. Yeah. People are lining up. And then out burger trips

Nyasha Green: and I do love karaoke. Okay. We'll we'll do it in California. We're

Dan Knauss: you are, you are a singer. Is that

Nyasha Green: true? I am not. I lied. No. Okay. I, I have like a people tell me I have a singing voice.

I don't know what that [00:46:00] means. I guess I kind of, I, I like, sometimes my sentences are like long, like a song, like I'll extend out a word that I, I don't know, but I cannot sing. I will sing though, especially at karaoke. So you'll see. All

Dan Knauss: right. I will definitely be watching. avoiding . I have never, never really?

Um, no, I don't think

Nyasha Green: I've ever done it. No duet. We can't do it. Duet. Wouldn't do it. Oh, really? damn. Come on. Depends what

Dan Knauss: it is. I'm sure you'll pick something. All

Nyasha Green: right. Something

Dan Knauss: fabulous. All right. Well, good talking to. You

Nyasha Green: too see you

Dan Knauss: next week. Do you think we're the same? What's changed. Who's we WordPress Royal.

We, if you'd like to carry on this conversation or start another one, get in touch with us post status, you can email me Dan, post [00:47:00] status.com. And if you're a post status member, you know where to find me. If you're not, it's not a cult. Come check us. We've got the most amazing slack channels where members give and grow together.

And we have a lot of fun on Twitter at post underscore status.

Post StatusPost Status - The Community for WordPress Professionals

by Dan Knauss at August 19, 2022 03:11 PM under Writing

Do The Woo Community: Five for the Future, Drawing the Line

Some say that all contributions outside of contributing to teams on WordPress.org should be part of for Five for the Future. I question that logic.

>> The post Five for the Future, Drawing the Line appeared first on Do the Woo - a WooCommerce Builder Community .

by BobWP at August 19, 2022 09:50 AM under WooBits

August 18, 2022

WPTavern: Jamie Marsland Recreates WordPress.org Homepage in 20 Minutes Using the Block Editor

In response to the recent controversy about how long WordPress.org’s new homepage and download page designs should take to implement, Gutenberg YouTuber Jamie Marsland decided to try his hand at recreating it with the block editor.

Matt Mullenweg had commented on the plans for the new designs moving into development, saying that it should have taken “hours not weeks to implement.” His most incendiary comments, that fired up a subsequent conversations about the realities of working with the block editor, referenced WordPress’ competitors.

“It’s such a basic layout, it’s hard to imagine it taking a single person more than a day on Squarespace, Wix, Webflow, or one of the WP page builders,” Mullenweg said.

Marsland decided to take the challenge using Gutenberg. For this exercise he used WordPress’ most recent default theme, Twenty Twenty-Two. His results are not identical to WordPress’ new designs but are very close, and he was able to whip up the homepage in approximately 20 minutes.

In the video (embedded below), Marsland walks through the creation of each section of the homepage. He is what one might describe as a power user with the block editor. He can quickly shuffle rows, columns, and groups around, adjusting padding and margins as necessary, and assign each section the corresponding color for the design. At this point, this is not something most average WordPress users could do, which is why the video had such a strong response from viewers. Marsland’s YouTube channel is centered around helping users master building pages using Gutenberg and stores with WooCommerce.

“My conclusion was that it’s pretty easy to quickly get 95% of the design done, but it’s the final 5% that always takes the most time in my experience,” Marsland said. “My guess is that it was more about internal process that caused the delays, but without being involved its hard to say for sure. I really wanted to show that it wasn’t a Gutenberg issue with building the design (as Matt Mullenweg mentioned Wix and Squarespace and other WP pagebuilders.)”

Alex Shiels, an Automattic-sponsored contributor on the project, cited a few items unrelated to the block editor, that caused the delays, including working towards “reasonable standards for a11y, responsiveness, browser compatibility, SEO, and performance,” as well as collaborating with contributors across different continents.

In response to Marsland’s attempt, WordPress developer Patrick Boehner commented on how the little details remain extremely important. “You can definitely tell what was design driven first vs designed in the editor,” Boehner said.

Five years after Gutenberg’s debut in WordPress, theme developers are still challenged to bring designs to life that were not created with a block-first approach in mind.

“It remains today fundamentally difficult to impossible to take a traditionally mocked up page design and execute that design using blocks,” WordPress developer Jon Brown said. “This is a problem.

“Sure, blocks are fine to ‘design a page in the browser’ and accept what you get out of blocks, but blocks continue to lack the flexibility and controls needed to produce a responsive, accessible, pixel perfect layout based on a mock-up.

“What used to take a day and a dozen lines of php and a dozen lines of css, now takes weeks of building custom blocks because the core blocks can’t easily be tweaked via hooks and lack the basic controls necessary.”

Gutenberg contributors are making strides by introducing fluid typography and are tracking a host of issues related to improving design tooling consistency. In the meantime, theme developers are enduring the necessary growing pains as the block editor matures to accommodate those hoping to make their designs instantly responsive.

“I’ve been building a full FSE theme from scratch and was surprised at how much of my design I was able to successfully replicate with the editor, theme.json and minimal-to-no custom CSS,” veteran theme developer Mike McAlister said. “Sure, it took a lot of tinkering, but I was impressed nonetheless.

“However, as Jon mentions, the second you need to adjust something for a smaller screen (or bigger screen if you dare to try mobile-first design in the editor), you hit a wall. It’s particularly apparent with margin, padding, and block gap, which have no responsive controls yet. You can see this adjusted via CSS in the new theme on .org.”

Responsiveness is one of the issues Shiels cited in why implementing the designs took more time than simply recreating the design in the block editor.

“However, there are hints of improvements coming for responsiveness,” McAlister commented. “Fluid typography and clamp() certainly have helped get typography in check, but there will always be circumstances where you need even finer control. Every other site builder has solved this, there’s no reason to think WordPress can’t or won’t. (I certainly hope so, as ~50-60% of traffic is coming from mobile devices these days!)

“One of the best ways to push past these growing pains is to have as much dog-fooding as possible — using the editor and FSE to build for as many real-life scenarios as possible to uncover these blindspots.”

Marsland’s short exercise shows just how close you can get to recreating WordPress.org’s design in a short amount of time if you know your way around the block editor. He was successful in proving that the Gutenberg page building UI isn’t the holdup in reproducing designs created in other applications. Rather, it’s all the other related checklist items that developers generally have to resolve outside of the editor – including accessibility, responsiveness, and SEO considerations. The closer Gutenberg can get to reducing extra work related to responsiveness and accessibility, the more approachable it will be for regular users trying to produce the designs they dream up on their own.

by Sarah Gooding at August 18, 2022 09:34 PM under WordPress

Post Status: Post Status Picks for the Week of August 15

Post Status Podcast Picks 🎙 Shop Talk Show: Andrew Walpole and Alex Riviere from Traina talk about their WordPress experience but also how they want to go further with more tools. Matt Report: A nice chat with Yaw Owusu-Ansah with a reminder of how big the WordPress space is. Changelog: If you are an RSS…

Post Status Podcast Picks 🎙

Get our weekly WordPress community news digest — Post Status' Week in Review — also available in our newsletter. 💌

And don't miss the latest updates from the people making WordPress. We've got you covered with This Week at WordPress.org. ⚙

Post StatusPost Status - The Community for WordPress Professionals

by Dan Knauss at August 18, 2022 08:16 PM under Writing

Post Status: Tech Roundup for the Week of August 15, 2022

This week Daniel shares some resources for creating React Apps using Gutenberg Data, static WordPress sites with Eleventy, and a Figma to FSE workflow. Also a reminder to test and give feedback on fluid typography — and one cool tool: Programming Fonts.

Estimated reading time: 10 minutes

WordPress Development Around the Web

A glimpse of what’s going on in the world of development and design in the WordPress space.

Create your First App with Gutenberg Data
Are you struggling to understand how to work with React in WordPress? Automattic developer Adam Zieliński has put together a very nice tutorial to get you comfortable creating a simple React application and learning how to work with data. I know I’ve tried to learn React several times, but this was very succinct and explained the details in a way that made me realize the “why” for creating something like this.

Block Theme Builders: Figma to Block Theme
Last week I alluded to some folks working on finding a good workflow from Figma to FSE. This week there’s a webinar on one of those methods! Even if you can’t join, I’d encourage you to check it out later. This session is the follow up to a previous webinar, Block Theme Builders: Design in Figma, which showed how to use the Theme Template — something I did NOT know existed! Very exciting!!!

WordPress & Eleventy: Part 1 | Part 2
Have you ever wanted to try using WordPress to create a static site? Here’s a great walkthrough on how to do that from interaction designer and front-end developer Dana Byerly. They show us how to use WordPress with the static site generator Eleventy. I have to say, this was one of the easiest and most straightforward tutorials I’ve seen in a long time. Very well done! Also their site design is simply gorgeous and wonderfully accessible. Hat tip to Maciek Palmowski for the find!

Testing and Feedback for the Fluid Typography Feature
The Make WordPress team is looking for feedback on this new feature in Gutenberg. In case you’re not familiar, fluid typography will scale to the screen’s available room so it always looks good. It’s important that theme developers take a look and see how it might work. For instance, in the comments, Post Status member Mark Root-Wiley mentions that using clamp might have some accessibility issues that need to be looked into further.

Cool Tool

Each week we’ll feature one cool tool that can help make your life easier as a WordPress builder.

Programming Fonts

This website helps you test drive monospaced fonts for programming. My personal favorite for the past few years in VS Code and the terminal has been Fira Code, but using this little website I discovered JetBrains Mono, and I’m in love! 😍

Post StatusPost Status - The Community for WordPress Professionals

by Daniel Schutzsmith at August 18, 2022 08:02 PM under WordPress

Post Status: Winning Together in a Decentralizing Plugin Ecosystem

Are OrganizeWP (and Newsletter Glue) leading indicators for trends and opportunities in the plugin space?

Estimated reading time: 10 minutes

Cory mentioned Jon Christopher‘s debut of OrganizeWP last week, calling attention to its unique and unusual pricing model: no subscriptions, you just buy all releases within one major release and then renew for the next release. The idea is to keep a happy, honest relationship between product development and its users.

Jon's been around the WordPress product entrance-exit block before with SearchWP. His thinking about OrganizeWP goes back a few years too. (Actually it goes back a decade, with OrganizeWP's predecessor, Hierarchy.) He's documented a lot of the planning and iteration on his site, so there's a lot to learn from if you're interested in a different business model for WordPress products.

Will it work? A lot of people with “subscription fatigue” seem to like the idea, what about the challenge of maintaining multiple major versions? That concern drives a skeptical take from Carl Hancock.

The WordPress Admin Experience: Still a Blue Ocean

Looking at Jon's model, I wonder if OrganizeWP might be seen as a leading indicator for a couple of important trends and opportunities in the plugin business.

OrganizeWP is a cool and needed product in an area that hasn't received a lot of love from plugin developers, let alone WordPress core: the wp-admin interface. WordPress core will catch up to the rest of the WordPress user experience on the other side of Gutenberg, but that's a few years away. So it surprises me how few plugin shops and developers have looked for opportunities in backend customization. (Only PublishPress comes to mind as being really committed in this key area with their plugin suite.)

The WordPress admin experience is something everyone wants to change when they're building sites for a team or larger group of users with unique content types and workflows. There's a large gap in what is available to that potentially high-end niche in the premium plugin marketplace. That's whose needs Jon is aiming to meet — freelancers, site builders, agencies. It's a good bet there's opportunity in those spaces, if you can go directly to the people there.

Selling Outside WordPress.org: Don't Go Alone

Going directly to your target market touches the last and biggest item of note with OrganizeWP: it's not in the WordPress.org plugin repo. There was probably never any thought of putting it there. No freemium model. And at the same time, Lesley Sim has gotten attention for pulling Newsletter Glue out of the .org repo. Althought it's not exactly uncommon, the reasons why that choice gets made are worth deeper consideration for what it may say about the business and .org ecosystem today.

Dropping Newsletter Glue's free version was a decision made some time ago, but the reasons behind it are really instructive for anyone starting out on the same path. Speaking to Sarah Gooding at the Tavern, Lesley noted the challenges of the freemium model with a basic version in the plugin repo, especially if you don't have prior experience developing a product and marketing strategy for this approach. There's no onboarding for plugins owners where sharing current best practices (or simple checklists) with first time plugin owners helps them enter the WordPress.org marketplace.

Opportunities for Partnerships

According to Lesley, the main upside of using WordPress.org for distribution is access to the “[b]iggest distribution channel in WP.” It's an “easy way for reviewers to check out the plugin for free” without contacting the plugin owner too. And finally the .org repo serves as a “[s]ource of credibility” from customer reviews.

Without alternative centralized marketplaces, going outside .org requires plugin owners to create and maximize their own distribution channels, generate their own sources of social proof and provide an interface for customer support. Then there's the barrier of customer confusion and frustration with having to assemble all the parts of their site themselves. Meanwhile, SaaS and no code alternatives are more visible than ever. WordPress hosting platforms targeting eCommerce niches are making the “looking for an easy button” market increasingly competitive. There are mature, established models for building a market outside the .org plugin repo, but that may also be a disadvantage to newcomers entering the space.

To get past all these hurdles, why not work together more intentionally? Partnerships, networks, and community building could be the key to success. If other plugin shops and owners see the value in working together and trying to help their customers reach their goals simply and quickly, they can amplify their marketing and distribution networks together rather than try to do it all alone. (See “On the Web Publishing Tool Race.”) I'd love to hear from anyone doing this or trying to do it, as a smaller, independent product owner today.

Challenge: Lack of Market Data

When a premium plugin leaves or never enters a centralized distribution channel, it goes off the radar. We have less data about it and the overall shape of this part of the plugin ecosystem. Assuming the number of plugins sold outside centralized marketplaces has only grown over time with WordPress, we know less about the ecosystem as time goes on.

The .org repo which can be measured. So can the new and growing WordPress.com marketplace. Large ecosystem plugins like Elementor with their own marketplaces are highly visible. But outside of centralized distribution channels, we don't know what's happening or even have a map of that market with any depth or breadth. That's another disadvantage to product owners in that space.

Are the centralized and decentralized products and markets all growing? At what rate relative to each other? However limited it may be, a key metric like active installs becomes an even bigger unknown when product owners set up shop outside the .org repository. That's data they could benefit from most directly. If that's something you're working on or thinking about deeply, I'd love to chat.

Speaking of Market Data…

  • In the WooCommerce ecosystem compared with WordPress, Ellipsis has some new data and analysis published that attempts to answer the question, “Who is winning in the WooCommerce marketplace?” Their conclusions:
    • WooCommerce has been a lot stronger than ​WordPress this year.
    • 70% commission on sales makes the WooCommerce Marketplace a viable sales channel.
    • $85,498,900 in estimated revenue from the WooCommerce Marketplace.
    • They've also got the top 5 highest grossing products in the Woo marketplace, all estimated as grossing over $2 million (USD).

Post StatusPost Status - The Community for WordPress Professionals

by Dan Knauss at August 18, 2022 03:30 PM under WordPress.org

WPTavern: Upcoming Free Workshops: Learn How to Convert Figma Files to a Block Theme and Take Block Patterns to the Next Level

If you’re not following Learn WordPress Online Workshops on Meetup.com, you may be missing out on some high quality events. WordPress experts from across the world have been collaborating on virtual events with instruction at the same caliber of excellence that you might find at an in-person WordCamp.

On Thursday, August 18, at 3:00 PM EDT, WP Engine-sponsored developer advocate Nick Diego will be hosting an online workshop titled Taking Block Patterns to the Next Level. Diego will be uncovering “some lesser-known pattern implementations:”

In addition to a review of how to register patterns in block themes, a new method introduced in WordPress 6.0, you will learn how to create semantic, contextual, and page creation patterns. We will also review multiple real-world examples of this advanced functionality that you can apply to your own projects.

Diego identified the following learning objectives for participants in this workshop:

  • Learn how to register a pattern in a block theme as well as with the designated registration function.
  • Learn what properties are available to patterns during registration.
  • Learn what semantic, contextual, and page creation patterns are and how to use them.

This session is aimed at intermediate to advanced builders and will be held via Zoom in English with live Zoom transcription. More than 127 people have already signed up to attend this free workshop.

Later in the week, WP Engine-sponsored developer advocate Damon Cook and Automattic-sponsored WordPress educator Sarah Snow will be conducting a workshop for block theme builders titled Figma to Block Theme. This follows up a previous session called Design with Figma where participants learned how to use the WordPress.org Figma community’s Theme Template file to get started with block theme design. That session is already available on WordPress.tv.

Theme authors interested in learning how to convert Figma design files into a block theme can catch this event on Friday, Aug 19 at 3:00 PM EDT. Cook and Snow will demonstrate how to set up colors, typography, and more. Anyone interested can sign up to attend online for free.

by Sarah Gooding at August 18, 2022 03:24 AM under News

August 17, 2022

WPTavern: Iconic Releases Flux Checkout 2.0 for WooCommerce with New Modern Theme

Iconic has relaunched its Flux Checkout plugin with a new, modern checkout theme. The plugin was created to minimize customers abandoning their carts due to checkout complexity. It breaks the checkout experience into steps to make the process feel faster and simpler with a distraction-free design.

Flux Checkout 2.0.0 adds a new “Modern” theme in addition to the plugin’s previous “Classic” theme that offers a more app-like checkout experience. Modern has a more minimalist black and grey design. Check out the live demo to interact with the checkout preloaded with a few products.

“The default Woo checkout is not optimized at all,” Iconic founder Jame Kemp said. “It presents you with the required fields, in a pretty unfriendly and overpowering way. If there are too many fields, the user is less likely to checkout.”

Comparing the default Woo checkout experience to Flux is a bit jarring, and it’s easy to see how customers may feel overwhelmed with the default. Fortunately, WooCommerce is extensible. The space could use more varied checkout plugins so store owners have more options to customize the experience.

Default WooCommerce Checkout

“Flux reduces this friction by splitting the fields into steps and reducing the number of fields required to fill in,” Kemp said. “It also integrates an address auto complete to make filling in your address into a single field. We also cache the fields so if you accidentally refresh or navigate away, you don’t lose your info.”

Iconic acquired Flux Checkout in 2020, just as the pandemic was kicking off. Its chief competitor is CheckoutWC, which offers a similarly modern design, auto-populated fields, and additional templates at a higher price point. More than 3,900 WooCommerce sites are using CheckoutWC, but Kemp says Flux Checkout “wins on ease of use and simplified checkout.” In a few months, the company plans to release FluxPay, which will make it possible to “buy now” from product pages and will add other time-saving features for checking out.

Kemp reports Iconic’s WooCommerce products are active on more than 21,000 sites. The company is part of StellarWP and the Iconic team includes four developers, 2-3 support agents, a content writer, and a designer.

“Our most popular product is WooThumbs, but Flux, Delivery Slots, Orderable, Attribute Swatches, and our All Access bundle are the most popular/profitable,” he said.

Kemp first launched WooThumbs on CodeCanyon in 2011. The Iconic brand was formed in 2018 as a means to consolidate all of his WooCommerce offerings and move off of CodeCanyon to become an independent brand.

“We’re fortunate enough to have been in the WooCommerce space for many years and have a well-established customer base and set of products,” Kemp said. “Right now, and particularly throughout the pandemic, the Woo space has been booming. We’ve consistently seen growth as a WooCommerce product company. It is becoming a very competitive space and it’s important to stay on top of the features you’re offering. You can quickly fall behind.”

by Sarah Gooding at August 17, 2022 09:43 PM under woocommerce

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by Courtney Robertson at August 17, 2022 04:26 PM under Writing

WPTavern: #39 – Marieke Van De Rakt & Taco Verdonschot on Yoast, the Past, Present and Future

On the podcast today we have Marieke Van De Rakt & Taco Verdonschot, and they’re both from Yoast SEO.

I think it’s quite likely that you’ve heard of Yoast SEO, but in case you have not, it’s a very popular WordPress SEO plugin, installed over 5 million times. They’ve been optimising websites for many years and make significant contributions to the WordPress project, committing to Core, sponsoring events and many other things.

I sat down with them both at WordCamp Europe and we talked about some of the recent changes that have taken place within the company.

Having worked hard to build and maintain their company’s reputation, they decided that it was time to steer the business in a new direction by selling it to Newfold Digital. We get into the reasons for this acquisition and the subsequent reshuffling of the management of the company. What were the details of that agreement, why did they join forces with Newfold Digital in particular, and how has the acquisition gone?

We also talk about their longstanding commitment to contributing back to the WordPress project. Why have they done this and what benefits have they seen from this approach? Why do they bring so many of their team to WordCamps?

Although Yoast is well known in the WordPress space, they recently brought their product into an entirely new market, Shopify. This has led them to create a SaaS version of their SEO solution and has brought them into contact with a completely new market. How has this move gone and does it mean they’re moving away from WordPress?

Typically, when we record the podcast, there’s not a lot of background noise, but that’s not always the case with these WordCamp Europe interviews. We were competing against crowds and the air-conditioning. Whilst the podcasts are more than listenable, I hope that you understand that the vagaries of the real world were at play.

Useful links.

Kagi search engine

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, running a successful WordPress plugin business.

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 and paste that URL into most podcast players.

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

So on the podcast today, we have Marieke Van De Rakt & Taco Verdonschot. And they’re both from Yoast SEO.

I think it’s quite likely that you’ve heard of Yoast SEO, but in case you have not, it’s a very popular WordPress SEO plugin installed over 5 million times. They’ve been optimizing websites for many years and make significant contributions to the WordPress project, committing to Core, sponsoring events and many other things. I sat down with them both at WordCamp Europe, and we talked about some of the recent changes that have taken place within the company.

Having worked hard to build and maintain their company’s reputation, they decided that it was time to steer the business in a new direction by selling it to Newfold Digital. We get into the reasons for this acquisition and the subsequent reshuffling of the management of the company. What were the details of that agreement? Why did they join forces with Newfold Digital in particular? And how has the acquisition gone?

We also talk about their long standing commitment to contributing back to the WordPress project. Why have they done this? And what benefits have they seen from this approach? Why do they bring so many of their team to WordCamps?

Although Yost is well-known in the WordPress space they recently brought their product into an entirely new market, Shopify. This has led them to create a SaaS version of their SEO solution and has brought them into contact with a completely new market. How has this move gone? And does it mean they’re moving away from WordPress?

Typically when we record the podcast there’s not a lot of background noise, but that’s not always the case with these WordCamp Europe interviews. We were competing against crowds and the air conditioning. And whilst the podcasts are more than listable. I hope that you understand that the vagaries of the real world were at play.

If you’re interested in finding out more, 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 of the other episodes as well. And so without further delay, I bring you. Marieke Van De Rakt & Taco Verdonschot.

I am joined on the podcast today by Marieke van de Rakt and Taco, go on.

[00:03:48] Taco Verdonschot: Verdonschot.

[00:03:49] Nathan Wrigley: I tried that many, many times in the past. How are you both doing?

[00:03:53] Taco Verdonschot: All good.

[00:03:53] Marieke van de Rakt: Yeah. Great, great, great being back at an in-person event.

[00:03:57] Nathan Wrigley: Yeah. What are your thoughts about that. Genuinely, what are your thoughts about being back in in-person events? Because I know the Pavlovian response is, it’s great to be back. I think that, but is there any bit of you, which is mmm?

[00:04:08] Marieke van de Rakt: I have a hard time recognizing people because it’s been two years. I see now that everybody has that problem, so it’s like, I know you I’ve danced with you. I don’t know who you are.

[00:04:20] Taco Verdonschot: And especially when people are masked. You just see the eyes and, and if they like gained a lot of weight or became a bit grayer like me. Or lost a lot of weight, there’s definitely.

[00:04:33] Marieke van de Rakt: It’s harder.

[00:04:34] Taco Verdonschot: It’s a change and with a mask on it’s a lot harder to recognize people. So I’m really happy with the badges that have the names on both sides. Which means that it will at least always give a clue and not be turned the wrong way like sometimes happens at WordCamps. Yeah.

[00:04:50] Marieke van de Rakt: So I think it’s good being back, but it’s also, it’s different. It’s just, it’s been a while seeing people in such a way. We’ve talked online, but that’s really different.

[00:05:01] Nathan Wrigley: For me what’s strange, and I know this is gonna sound ridiculous, is that you are not this big and I’m making a gesture about six inches high, but also you both have entire bodies. It’s not just from the sort of waist up. We are on contributor today, so basically very little has happened so far. But what are your expectations of this event? What does Yoast bring when it comes to an event like this? What are you hoping to do? Do you have like a battle plan? Do you just bring the whole team and just see how it goes? I know you’ve got sponsorships and lots of things like that. So tell us what your agenda is.

[00:05:32] Taco Verdonschot: We’re sponsoring, as you said, and we brought a nice booth. There will be activities, and of course there will be stroopwafels, loads of them. So make sure that if you’re here you don’t miss out.

[00:05:43] Nathan Wrigley: I’m gonna pause you there because I don’t know what that is.

[00:05:46] Marieke van de Rakt: You don’t know what stroopwafels are?

[00:05:49] Nathan Wrigley: No

[00:05:50] Marieke van de Rakt:You can have like a lot of them because we don’t bring them back anymore. Right?

[00:05:52] Taco Verdonschot: Yeah. So stroopwafels are cookies, are waffles with sort of a caramel in between. And they are delicious. That’s that just says it.

[00:06:04] Nathan Wrigley: In the brief time that I’ve been around the auditorium, you win in terms of t-shirt density.

[00:06:11] Marieke van de Rakt: I saw the same thing. I think a lot of companies don’t give their employees, t-shirts to wear or different ones. We also, because I have a new one actually Taco but it’s exactly the same color, so it matches.

[00:06:23] Nathan Wrigley: And there’s nobody with the purple, so it genuinely stands out. But it also means, I think, that you bring a big team. Which also tells me that you’ve got a big team. 140, something like that? And I was looking earlier today at the stats for contributions in the version 6.0 of WordPress. Automattic, always the big circle and then there’s companies, which are vying for second, third. And it always seems like Yoast is number two by a long way. Is that a big part of the Yoast system? Do you encourage your team to contribute and all of that?

[00:06:58] Taco Verdonschot: Yeah, so we have a Core team. That’s four people working full time on WordPress Core. And that’s a big part. We also host internal contributor days. Well, actually we’ve opened them up to the community. So everyone can join remotely, or at the office nowadays. One of the reasons why you’re seeing so many of the purple shirts today is because our entire team is signed up for contributor day, and everyone is contributing to WordPress today. So probably you’ll see more brands and, and more colors tomorrow, but bringing people to contributor day is definitely a part of who we are.

[00:07:35] Marieke van de Rakt: It’s what got us started. So we are really invested in making WordPress better, because that’s just what we’ve been doing from even before Yoast was a company.

[00:07:44] Nathan Wrigley: It’s been an exceptional commitment though. It’s not an ordinary commitment.

[00:07:48] Marieke van de Rakt: I think so, too. So I, I’m really glad you’re saying that. We have an exceptional commitment to making that better. And I think more companies should follow that lead because that way we can really make it better together. So we can bitch with each other about what should be better, or we can just sit down and make sure the work gets done.

[00:08:08] Nathan Wrigley: Yeah. It’s been a busy couple of years for Yoast. Obviously there’s been the pandemic. Presumably you had to figure out what the office looked like or didn’t look like and what zoom calls you were gonna foist on people and so on and so forth. You mentioned that you’re back to the office a bit. But apart from all of that, there’s been quite a lot of personnel change, especially recently. Joost as in Joost, the man not the product, has changed roles. You’ve changed roles. Taco has got a new role. I saw a photo the other day with several people who’ve got new roles. Tell us a little bit about that. What brought that about, and then maybe we’ll get into the acquisition piece.

[00:08:42] Marieke van de Rakt: Yeah. Well, because that was the trigger. I think about a year before we had the acquisition, we started the process. I already knew that I wouldn’t want to be the CEO of the company anymore. I think that role is really, it’s a really heavy one, and it’s also a very public one, and it’s just been tough. And COVID was tough. So, when we decided to sell, I already knew that I wouldn’t want to be the CEO of the company anymore, but I still wanted to work there. But go back to a role I had before I was the CEO.

So I think the acquisition got us all into that change process. So the first thing was that I announced that I wasn’t going to be the CEO. Now, Joost is an advisor. Omar left. Our CTO, well, I just texted him that I really miss him. But I also understand we’ve been doing this for quite some time.

Joost himself got a bit bored, not with WordPress though, but with SEO, and wants to do other things as well. And is currently experienced a lot of FOMO he said. But he’ll be here tomorrow. So he’ll be on Friday. He said to me, oh, you’re all contributing and I’m just writing a blog post.

So, yeah, those things changed, and I’m really excited because we, um, we now have room for new people to grow because you could see Yoast as this big old oak, and that’s good and that’s solid. But it also takes away the sun for other trees to grow. So now it’s the time for at least within Yoast, to have new talent and new leadership.

[00:10:17] Nathan Wrigley: Yeah. Okay, so just sticking to the top tier management, just run us through the changes. Who’s now in? Who’s got those key top tier jobs?

[00:10:25] Taco Verdonschot: So I think that list should always start with Thijs, our CEO. He took over that role from Marieke, I think last year, October.

[00:10:34] Marieke van de Rakt: Somewhere like that.

[00:10:35] Taco Verdonschot: Around that time, and then as of April this year we had the bigger change, that we introduced a seven people leadership team. So that’s obviously Marieke as head of strategy. That’s Chaya as chief operations officer.

[00:10:51] Marieke van de Rakt: She was already also in the old board. She came in COVID time. So this is her first WordCamp. She was with us for quite some time.

[00:10:58] Taco Verdonschot: Yeah, and then there’s four new names, and that’s Irene on the R and D side. Inge on the marketing side. Herre for all the technical stuff. And me as a head of relations.

[00:11:12] Marieke van de Rakt: And those four have been working with us for more than five years. All of them. Yeah.

[00:11:16] Taco Verdonschot: Yeah. All of those.

[00:11:17] Nathan Wrigley: So if we rewind the clock about five years, it feels like nobody was being acquired in WordPress. It was all very quiet. And then about four years ago it began. And then two years ago it was really, there was a daily news cycle of somebody’s been bought in the WordPress space. And then you came in and I must admit I follow the WordPress news pretty closely. I didn’t see that one coming. Tell us how that came about. How far do we need to go back before the dates that it was announced, when all the negotiations started, and why you mentioned that Yoast himself was getting a bit bored. But for other reasons, I’m sure as well, why did that process begin? And how long was that process?

[00:11:54] Marieke van de Rakt: So we talked to parties before just because you get a lot of questions. So it’s not that we never thought about a possible acquisition or funding before. But we’re totally bootstraped, and I think Christmas 2020, so the first COVID Christmas, that was when Joost and I decided we should sell or get major funding. And the major reason was that COVID got us scared. We were doing great but it was so much work. We sell in dollars, so we make money in dollars, but all of our costs are in euros. And that makes you very vulnerable for the exchange rate of the dollar.

And that’s something you can’t control. And with a hundred, I don’t know 125 people on your payroll, the responsibility was weighing heavily on both of us, and that’s just something that we didn’t want to do anymore. So then we hired, we hired a banker actually. Someone who helps you to sell your company. And we’ve talked to a lot of, well, the usual suspects. Then decided eventually to sell to Newfold.

[00:13:03] Nathan Wrigley: So what was it about the offer that they presented, which said, okay, that’s it, the green light over there. Was there something in particular? Were there any red lines that you presented to them? Right, this cannot happen, if we’re gonna sell to anybody. Yeah, just that kind of idea. What were the things that gave the green light to them and not to others?

[00:13:19] Marieke van de Rakt: So when we were selling, we thought about three things. We thought about ourselves. What’s good for us. And then we thought about what’s good for Yoast the company, and what’s good for WordPress. So we wouldn’t sell to a company that would just do things that would be bad for WordPress. And we won’t sell to a company that would say you have fire half of your staff or something like that. So would be good for our employees. It would be a good fit for WordPress. And I think the offer of Newfold, Newfold wanted to buy us because of our commitments in WordPress.

So they were impressed with our WordPress Core team. They wanted to do more in WordPress and, so them inquiring us was part of their mission to show we love WordPress, which is the best reason to buy us, I think. And I thought their leadership was really diverse. And I’ve talked to a lot of boards and they’re mostly male and white and a bit gray, and there’s nothing wrong with people that are male and white and gray. But it’s nice to see some diversity in that. Well Newfold Digital is led by a woman. I’m really impressed by her. So that was at least, for me personally, a big reason to choose for them as well.

[00:14:33] Nathan Wrigley: It’s a name which doesn’t roll off the tongue. What I mean by that is, you know, everybody’s heard of Yoast, everybody’s heard of Automattic, but maybe not so much Newfold Digital. Can you just tell the listeners which bits of Newfold Digital may we have heard of before? Because I know they’re a company which are behind other companies.

[00:14:48] Marieke van de Rakt: They only exist for like a year and a half now and they’ve been combined. So the Endurance group, which Blue Host is the biggest brand. And then you have the web dot com side, but that’s not a WordPress side. And those two companies were combined into Newfold Digital, and they only existed like a half year and then they acquired Yoast. So it’s a really new brand.

[00:15:09] Nathan Wrigley: In terms of job stability and all of those kind of things, you mentioned that that was an important part. How’s that going,? Have roles changed? Has the company still got the same focus that it had a year ago? Well, let’s not say a year, six months ago, or have you noticed any changes and I’m firing this one at Taco.

[00:15:27] Taco Verdonschot: So yes, there have been changes due to what we just described in, in changing in leadership, but in terms of direction of the company, it’s not that Newfold comes in and says, Hey, you need to go left or you need to go right. For exactly what Marieke just told, is they bought us for what we do and who we are. That’s still true today. So they kept their word from that whole process and are still supporting us in being Yoast and offering SEO for everyone.

Have there been changes in the company in the last six months? Yes, we, we are slowly changing. The workforce landscape is changing, and we’re changing with it. But nothing forced by the acquisition. This would’ve happened anyway if we weren’t sold.

[00:16:14] Marieke van de Rakt: Ah, and nobody left after the acquisition for a few months.

[00:16:17] Taco Verdonschot: No.

[00:16:18] Marieke van de Rakt: So that wasn’t related to that.

[00:16:20] Taco Verdonschot: Yeah.

[00:16:20] Marieke van de Rakt: I think the biggest change was just that the office is opened up again. And so everything’s different.

[00:16:26] Nathan Wrigley: In terms of how the company can behave, the inflow of money I presume, you mentioned payroll and how concerning that was. Does that kind of thing evaporate a little bit more? Do you need to worry it a little bit less about payroll, because that’s now worried about somewhere further up the food chain?

[00:16:42] Marieke van de Rakt: For me that’s changed dramatically. So I used to look at the sales every day. I think Joost would look at it every hour, and see if it’s all going well and that changed, and that gave us a lot of… I was talking to Joshua Strebel, who of course also sold and to like, taking a coat off, that’s what it is. It’s taking a coat off, and I still feel a huge responsibility of getting that company with new leadership into a stable, good new path, but it’s different.

[00:17:11] Taco Verdonschot: Yeah. The funny thing is for me, it’s quite the opposite.

[00:17:14] Marieke van de Rakt: Yes.

[00:17:14] Taco Verdonschot: Because before, Marieke and the rest of the board would take away all those financial concerns from even the highest management level.

[00:17:25] Marieke van de Rakt: That wasn’t the best idea though.

[00:17:26] Taco Verdonschot: Yeah.

[00:17:26] Marieke van de Rakt: We did that. We never told anybody about our financial stress. We were doing great, but we were experiencing, oh, we have to grow, and…

[00:17:34] Taco Verdonschot: That was really something that was kept away, and now with, my new role, I’m suddenly seeing all the numbers and seeing what the numbers mean and how they influence decisions that we’re making in the company and vice versa, how decisions are influencing our, our revenue stream or our cost. And that’s a whole new world. So, for me, I’m looking more at numbers and for you, it’s obviously with less worry than before. Yeah, we, we found common ground now.

[00:18:05] Nathan Wrigley: Two years ago, or whenever it was 2019, if we’d have had this same interview, we would’ve been talking about Yoast SEO and nothing more. But now we can talk about Shopify. That’s a big change. A giant of a platform. Just give us the theory behind why Shopify? Why not, I don’t know something else like Drupal, or some other thing like Squarespace? Is that product receiving the same care and attention, shall we say as the WordPress side? Do you have any plans to go into other CMSs, maybe SaaS products, like I said, Wix and Squarespace and so on.

You don’t have to release any of that valuable information if you don’t want to of course. But tell us about the Shopify thing first. Whoever wants to take that.

[00:18:43] Marieke van de Rakt: We have a TYPO3 extension, of course.

[00:18:45] Taco Verdonschot: Yes and Neos as well.

[00:18:47] Marieke van de Rakt: So we, we had some before, but we, as a pact internally would say that we wouldn’t do any non open source CMSs, but still we are doing Shopify. So we made the decision, partly because we wanted to be less dependent on WordPress, because although we love WordPress, it’s very scary if you bet all your money on one thing. So it could be a wise business decision to go into Shopify.

They asked us to come. So Shopify wanted to improve their SEO so they worked together with us. They asked us can you build Yoast SEO for Shopify? So that was a big reason, and their core values are pretty aligned with us. So that was the thing. Okay, we’re going to let go of the open source part because they’re really for the small businesses.

So it’s either Amazon because that’s how people sell, but at least on Shopify, you have your own website, your own store, and that’s really important. So that’s why I think why we decided Shopify.

[00:19:44] Taco Verdonschot: And I think it’s the close source system or SaaS that comes closest to the open source mindset, because it really supports the small businesses, and you can get started super easily on Shopify and anyone and everyone can start a shop. And that is different for a lot of other systems.

[00:20:06] Marieke van de Rakt: And it’s growing like crazy. So it’s also a really good business opportunity.

[00:20:10] Nathan Wrigley: Yeah I have no insight into how that’s going. So it is growing.

[00:20:15] Marieke van de Rakt: Yes.

[00:20:16] Nathan Wrigley: Are you growing with it? Is it taking you along for the ride? Basically, has it been a good move?

[00:20:18] Marieke van de Rakt: Well, We’ve built the thing ourselves, which is a lot of work because Shopify isn’t WordPress. we’ve launched it. We had a successful launch, but we’re not as well known in the Shopify world yet. So we’re growing gradually and that sounds like bad news, but I love that because that’s what we want to do.

It’s so much fun. We’re celebrating every five star review we get. So we have a dedicated Shopify team and they’re so excited to get people to like our product, but Shopify just works a little differently and you can’t paste your WordPress product over it. So we’re tweaking it and it gets better every day.

[00:20:55] Taco Verdonschot: Every single day. So the good thing about our Shopify app is that it fully is a SaaS which means that were not bound to releases that people then have to install. And if we decide to push something, it’s live right now. That’s a very big difference compared to WordPress, where you’re relying on people to install your updates and to actually keep their site up to date, et cetera. So it’s a really different way of developing.

[00:21:25] Marieke van de Rakt: Yeah.

[00:21:26] Nathan Wrigley: Marika. You’ve got a, I was gonna say a talk, but it’s not. You’ve got a panel. Just tell us what this panel’s about.

[00:21:31] Marieke van de Rakt: This panel is about acquisitions and WordPress. I’m just going to sit there and if they ask me a question then they’ll answer. I think a lot of people want to know, the ins and outs of what happens and what does this mean for WordPress?

[00:21:43] Nathan Wrigley: SEO in general. What is going on in the future? I’ve been seeing quite a lot coming out of the Google verse. Awful lot of people talking about things like AI content and whether or not that’s gonna be squashed. What do we need to be mindful of in the next 12 months in terms of SEO?

[00:21:58] Marieke van de Rakt: I think the main thing Google does is wanting to present the best result to the user. So if you’re stable in SEO and just create good content, AI or not AI because it just has to be good. And there are really good AI tools out there, but it should be something your reader will want to read.

And not just something you, nobody wants to read. That’s not serving anyone. That’s the thing you need to do. But at the same time on the technical side, we are really looking at what Google is doing. So then you need to just install Yoast SEO, because we’ll make sure to get the latest technical stuff in there. So the way Google crawls and stuff, we’re really mindful of that. But I think a normal user wouldn’t be able to adapt that in a website settings.

[00:22:42] Nathan Wrigley: I have this concern that we’re gonna be creating content with AI, which is then in turn, the sole purpose of that is to be consumed by Google’s AI. And it’s like this cyclical effect where…

[00:22:55] Marieke van de Rakt: But then you’re doing it wrong way because you should always create content for a user. Yeah. And I am a writer. So I am not particularly fan of AI created content, but I have to be honest, sometimes it’s pretty good. But it should be original content.

So, you should at least insert enough information in your AI that it’s an original thought, because an artificial intelligence can never come up with something new. It’s always something that’s already out there. So make sure you write something that people want to read. That’s the only advice that I can give you. Maybe Google won’t be the only search engine out there.

There are all kinds of rumors that Apple is doing stuff and rolling out his own search engine. I don’t know if it’s true, but that’s something that could happen as well. Google doesn’t have to be the only, Yoast SEO isn’t the only SEO plugin. Google doesn’t have to necessarily be the only search engine.

[00:23:50] Nathan Wrigley: Is that what you focus most of your energy though, because presumably if there is an Apple SEO search page, your work then sort of doubles because you’ve got to try and figure out their algorithm as well as the Google algorithm.

[00:24:02] Marieke van de Rakt: They’re probably doing the same thing. It’s the same with Bing and…

[00:24:05] Taco Verdonschot: Yeah, in the end they have the same goal. They want to answer a user’s question. So in order to do that, you need that good content. If you want to rank first, you need to be the best result. That’s basically it. Regardless of which search engine you use to find that.

[00:24:23] Marieke van de Rakt: Wouldn’t it be fun though? I would get excited again with SEO, if there would be a different kind. Maybe a privacy more minded kind, because that would be awesome.

[00:24:32] Nathan Wrigley: Have you heard of a search engine called Kagi? K A G I.

[00:24:36] Marieke van de Rakt: I haven’t.

[00:24:38] Nathan Wrigley: Do you remember ManageWP? It is created by him. It’s in beta only at the moment. And it’s gonna be a paid for search engine and you’ll pay them a hundred dollars a year, something along those lines, for no tracking. So the gamble is that you pay. It’s actually really interesting. K A G I.

Yeah. So what are you gonna do over the next couple of days, the pair of you? What are you hoping to get out of this specific event? Who are you gonna go and see? What things are you excited about?

[00:25:03] Taco Verdonschot: So we made a great start yesterday evening. There was a party by Pagely, and it was on a, on a boat, with so many people and a lot of familiar faces that we hadn’t seen in three years. And that’s going to continue because over the course of this event, we’ll see our old friends and meet a lot of new friends.

[00:25:23] Marieke van de Rakt: Interesting conversations with possible partners. It’s exciting to meet our Bluehost new colleagues and our Yith colleagues who are all part of the Newfold family, so that’s something I’m looking forward to as well.

And I am looking forward to talking to actual customers because I use WordCamps to talk to customers and ask them why they like our product and what they dislike. And, well, I haven’t done that for ages, so only with people in our local community.

[00:25:51] Nathan Wrigley: I’ve got a feeling I know what the answer to this question is. In 2023 WordCamp Europe, wherever that may be, will you be back?

[00:25:57] Taco Verdonschot: Yes.

[00:25:58] Marieke van de Rakt: Yes.

[00:25:59] Nathan Wrigley: Taco, Marieke, thanks for talking to me today.

[00:26:01] Taco Verdonschot: Thank you so much for us.

[00:26:03] Marieke van de Rakt: Thank you.

by Nathan Wrigley at August 17, 2022 02:00 PM under yoast

WPTavern: Gutenberg Designers Explore Adding Configuration Options to Block Editor Onboarding Modal

Gutenberg designers are considering replacing the current welcome guide modal with a new onboarding screen that prompts users to configure some of the editor’s many individual preference settings.

The existing welcome setup was designed during the earlier days of the block editor when many WordPress users were experiencing it for the first time. It briefly introduces users to the concept of blocks and invites them to customize them. The editor has matured since this welcome guide was created and it could use an update.

The existing welcome guide

The editor is now loaded with more settings for personalizing the content creation experience, such as document toolbar placement and accessibility features, that users may not ever discover on their own.

“To create an editing experience that feels intuitive, folks will often need to tailor these settings based on their individual preferences and needs,” Automattic-sponsored designer James Koster said in a post on the Make Design blog. “There is no such thing as a one-size-fits-all.

“Instead of relying on people to find these settings on their own (admittedly they’re a little scattered, but that’s another issue), it might be good to surface them during onboarding. Consequently, users can set up a comfy editing experience straight-away.”

Koster is proposing users configure these settings when getting started with the editor for the first time. He shared a video demonstrating how that might look.

The modal is much bigger than the existing welcome guide. It is also more interactive. When users mouse over the options in the left side, it shows a preview in the right side of the modal. The following user preferences are included in Koster’s prototype:

  • document toolbar display
  •  the block toolbar
  • text formatting tools
  • accessibility options for toolbar button display, editor styles, and block keyboard navigation

The first screen of the modal allows users to skip the setup and go straight to writing. This will be useful for those who do not care to configure any user preferences or those who are in a hurry.

Koster posted the proposal a couple weeks ago, asking whether it is a good idea in the first place, but hasn’t received much critical feedback.

Visually, the larger modal is an improvement on the existing welcome guide, but will it be overwhelming to users who are brand new to the block editor? Will it even make sense to them? A certain level of familiarity with the block editor is required to have any context for the editor customization options. An onboarding wizard with a lot of new terms could take a psychological toll on new users. It’s a lot to take in before getting started in the editor. Are these preferences so important that they need to be the first thing users see when they open the editor? Something like this will need some real user testing before it makes its way to millions of users.

Koster and the Gutenberg design contributors are still looking for feedback on the project. If you have thoughts on these designs or suggestions, leave a comment on the proposal.

by Sarah Gooding at August 17, 2022 02:52 AM under WordPress

August 16, 2022

Post Status: WordPress at a Massive Scale

Cory Miller talks with Lead Solutions Engineer at WordPress VIP, Sean O'Shaughnessy. Learn about WordPress hosting at a massive scale with some blind case study examples.

Recorded on August 12, 2022.

Topics Discussed

  • How Sean got into his present role
  • The trouble with caching, internal and external requests, and dynamic database-driven publishing platforms.
  • Headless and Hybrid approaches to WordPress
  • Customer support partnerships

About Sean O'Shaughnessy

Sean O’Shaughnessy is Lead Solutions Engineer at WordPress VIP. Sean has a background in infrastructure and dev ops. He's been working with WordPress for 13 years and for Automattic since 2014. Sean helped design, build, and manage site reliability engineering for WordPress.com, Pressable, and WordPress VIP.

You can listen to past episodes of Post Status Live, browse all our podcasts, and don’t forget to subscribe on Spotify, Amazon Music, Google Podcasts, iTunes, Castro, YouTube, Stitcher, Player.fm, Pocket Casts, Simplecast, or by RSS. 🎧

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by Olivia Bisset at August 16, 2022 08:46 PM under XAMP

Post Status: On the Web Publishing Tool Race

What if it's not between open and closed but centralized and decentralized?

Estimated reading time: 10 minutes

Our job at Post Status is to help our members think ahead, get ahead, and stay ahead. Thus, I’ve been eager to write more about the Web Publishing Tool Race, as it’s one of the keys I see to ensuring a healthy economy for WordPress.

So I keep asking myself: How are we doing in relation to other tools like WordPress?

How Are We Doing, Compared to the Competition?

This week John O’Nolan tweeted that Ghost is now at $5M ARR, and it took them 5 years to get to $1M ARR.

That spurred me to take a quick look at Ghost again and reflect more deeply on this question: How is WordPress doing by comparison?

Is WordPress at Risk of Losing the Creator Economy?

Ghost caught my attention in relation to two areas I’m watching closely:

  1. The growth of the “Creator Economy. (Ghost seems to cater directly to it.)
  2. Keeping up with innovations in other web publishing tools.

First, WordPress is the veteran of what is now called the “Creator Economy.” But Ghost’s Twitter byline says, “turn your audience into a business.” It’s looking to be a one-stop shop for “publishing, newsletters, memberships, and subscriptions — all in one place.”

Find and Assemble All the Pieces vs. All in One Place

Those are all things where historically WordPress has been dominant, but the “all in one place” speaks to a growing challenge for WordPress in our “assemble all the pieces” model. It points toward customer friction and frustration as more and more individual creators try to find easy ways to monetize and build their businesses.

Second, I want to know how we’re keeping up as a vital web workflow tool, so I keep my eye on other publishing platforms like Webflow. I also constantly experiment with tools/features comparable to Gutenberg. (This week it was ConvertKit’s landing page mini-builder.)

Two themes seem to be standing out for me in my rough anecdotal review: Great modern design “headstarts” and uber-simplicity in creating and publishing content.

Our focus, I believe, as a web publishing workflow tool (and ecosystem) should be our answers/solutions to this question:

How easy are we making it to help our users get the results they want?

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by Cory Miller at August 16, 2022 07:45 PM under WordPress

Post Status: New Voices

It’s with pleasure we welcome Daniel Schutzsmith and Nyasha Green to the Post Status contributor team this week. Daniel is taking point on curating our weekly Dev/Tech news and “cool tool” roundup. Nyasha and I are rebooting The Excerpt as a weekly podcast focusing on one or two key topics, from employment to business and WordPress development.

Both Nyasha and Daniel have voices I've looked forward to hearing for a while, so it's great to get to work with them a little at Post Status.

Previously David Bissett covered these areas for us as a prolific podcaster and superhuman news aggregator. We still have Olivia Bisset as our intern and post-production audio engineer, and she is terrific too!

Both Nyasha and Daniel have voices I've looked forward to hearing for a while, so it's great to get to work with them a little at Post Status. Maybe you'd like to join us as well? Please get in touch if you have an article you'd like to write/co-write or an idea for a podcast episode you'd like to be on.

WordPress needs more and better conversations. Respect, cooperation, and appreciation for each others’ roles even across differences and real disagreements — is it possible? A baseline of trust, tolerance, and willingness to learn from those we disagree with is indispensable to any community or relationship if it’s to last. Our aim is to live by these values in the WordPress community.

I hope you can help us create the spaces and have the conversations necessary for trust to develop and disagreements to be as productive as possible.

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by Dan Knauss at August 16, 2022 07:30 PM under WordPress Community

Do The Woo Community: Taking On a WooCommerce Integration with David Henriquez

David Henriquez from Klaviyo shares his story with WooCommerce and WordPress and insights on building an integration for WooCommerce.

>> The post Taking On a WooCommerce Integration with David Henriquez appeared first on Do the Woo - a WooCommerce Builder Community .

by BobWP at August 16, 2022 09:22 AM under Developer Advocate

WPTavern: WordPress Launches New Homepage and Download Page Designs

WordPress.org is now sporting a new look with a refreshed, jazzy design that complements the recently updated News pages.

“The new homepage brings more attention to the benefits and experience of using WordPress, while also highlighting the community and resources to get started,”  Automattic-sponsored WordPress marketing team contributor Nicholas Garofalo said.

“The new download page greets visitors with a new layout that makes getting started with WordPress even easier by presenting both the download and hosting options right at the top.”

The Download page now clearly offers two paths at the top – buttons for downloading and installing WordPress, and hosting recommendations for setting it up through a hosting provider. It also includes help getting started with resources linked further down the page WordPress courses, developer resources, support, and user forums.

Although the designs have received overwhelmingly positive feedback, their journey to development was not without a few bumps in the road. When the Meta team published an update about taking the designs into development, less than three weeks from the design kickoff, Matt Mullenweg’s criticism of the pace of the project drew the ire of some community members who were offended by the interaction.

“This is not a good use of time, nor does it further the actual goals of a new homepage or download page, and we have better places to spend our development time,” Mullenweg said in response to the plans to create a block theme for the new designs.

Responding to the criticism on Twitter, Mullenweg said, “Regardless of whether someone is a volunteer or sponsored, open source developers need to be able to debate and discuss our work in public, as we have since the dawn of wp-hackers, so that we arrive at the best outcome for users.”

Automattic-sponsored contributor Alex Shiels defended the amount of time spent on the project and elaborated on some of the behind-the-scenes work. Mullenweg contended that turning Figma designs into a theme should have taken far less time to launch.

“On the ‘hours not weeks’ to implement — it’s such a basic layout, it’s hard to imagine it taking a single person more than a day on Squarespace, Wix, Webflow, or one of the WP page builders,” Mullenweg said.

“So, if we’re just doing a prettier version of the same thing, make those changes in place with the existing code approach quickly and move on to something higher value. If you are trying to further WP itself, you need a fundamentally different approach.”

Some interpreted these comments as a referendum on the block editor’s usability. The development plan Shiels outlined included the creation of custom blocks in order to launch an MVP of the new theme. This called into question whether the block editor is delivering on its “dream it, build it” promises.

“The core team has to edit the core blocks for such a simple layout – after 2+ years, what should ordinary users/developers expect?” WordPress developer Aleksandar Perisic commented.

“Dog-fooding is needed just as much as code-focused contributions right now,” WP Engine software engineer Mike McAlister said. “One informs the other. I’ve been knee deep in FSE for months and honestly it doesn’t feel like anyone has tried to make a REAL site with this.”

In addition to giving WordPress.org a fresh coat of paint, the project has sparked a larger conversation about how challenging it still is to build out simple designs with the block editor, even for the people who make WordPress.

by Sarah Gooding at August 16, 2022 01:29 AM under News

August 15, 2022

WPTavern: Newsletter Glue Closes Free Plugin on WordPress.org

The creators of Newsletter Glue have removed their free plugin from WordPress.org in favor of focusing on the commercial version. The plugin streamlines the publishing workflow for newsletter authors who also publish to their WordPress sites. It includes blocks and patterns for email templates and subscriber forms. Five months ago the plugin’s authors warned users that they would be closing the free version and would no longer be updating it as of May 1, but the process of removing it was delayed until today.

Co-founder Lesley Sim announced the plugin’s closure on Twitter and shared a few valuable lessons for WordPress product businesses looking to use WordPress.org as a their primary distribution channel.

“We made a bunch of noob mistakes in the way we set up free vs paid,” Sim said. “Which made the customer upgrade flow kind of weird. I think it could’ve worked. We just didn’t set it up right, and it just doesn’t make sense to fix it.”

At the time of closure, the free Newsletter Glue plugin had approximately 200 active installations, which seems low for a growing commercial plugin. This is because the free version got uninstalled when a user upgraded to pro, so it was never a good representation of how many people were using the product. Sim said Newsletter Glue wasn’t growing the free user base and “it was just sitting there like a dead tree stump.” The company had not updated it in over a year.

“We stupidly set it such that when a user upgrades, they install the pro version and the free version automatically uninstalls,” Sim said. “So we lost free active users as a ‘reward’ for new conversions.”

This architectural choice meant that WordPress.org wasn’t bringing the product a significant flow of traffic and prospective upgrades.

“A year ago, we simply didn’t have enough features to make good decisions on what to put in the free versus pro,” Sim said. “So we went from having all our integrations on the free plugin to gating some integrations instead. I think this was a poor decision and led to our install count instantly stagnating. This could have been reversed, so I don’t think this was a key reason. But it was an instigating reason to begin considering removing the plugin from the repo since it was no longer bringing us traffic and installs.”

Despite not finding WordPress.org a good source of traffic for the product, Sim said the decision to close was not easy.

“Here are some things we lost out on:” Sim said. “1) Biggest distribution channel in WP. 2) Easy way for reviewers to check out the plugin for free without having to contact me. 3) Source of credibility (reviews).”

Current users can still use the free plugin but it will not be getting updates anymore. In lieu of a free plugin, Newsletter Glue is offering a test drive option where users can try it on a demo site before purchasing. The company has taken a unique path to becoming a commercial plugin that is fully independently distributed.

“I hate the free to paid user experience on the WP directory with a passion,” Sim said. “We had a full standalone pro plugin so the upgrade flow was really clunky. We’d get users using the free version emailing us saying, ‘I’ve just upgraded, but I don’t see any pro features on my site. What’s wrong?’ I also had some wonderful customers who would upgrade then continue using the free version for over a year, not even realizing they were on the free version.”

By focusing focusing exclusively on promoting the commercial product, the Newsletter Glue team is now free of the burden of supporting customers transitioning from the free version. The trade-off is missing out on exposure on WordPress.org. It’s an approach that works for the company at this stage but may not be suitable to other new products without strong marketing in place.

“Unless you already have experience marketing a plugin from scratch AND you have a good go to market plan, I think the default choice should be to be on the [WordPress] repo,” Sim said. “Just make sure you set up the commercial part of your plugin correctly so that it makes sense.”

by Sarah Gooding at August 15, 2022 08:19 PM under newsletter plugin

WordPress.org blog: A New WordPress.org Homepage and Download Page

The WordPress experience has significantly evolved in the past few years. In order to highlight the power of WordPress on WordPress.org, the last few weeks have seen a homepage and download page redesign kickoff and shared mockups. Today, these new designs are going live! Like the News pages before them, these refreshed pages are inspired by the jazzy look & feel WordPress is known for.

The new homepage brings more attention to the benefits and experience of using WordPress, while also highlighting the community and resources to get started. 

The new download page greets visitors with a new layout that makes getting started with WordPress even easier by presenting both the download and hosting options right at the top.

This redesign was made possible through great collaboration between Design, Marketing, and Meta teams. Thank you to everyone involved throughout this update:

@abuzon @adamwood @adeebmalik @alexandreb3 @alipawp @angelasjin @aniash_29 @annezazu @beafialho @bjmcsherry @chanthaboune @colinchadwick @crevilaro @critterverse @dansoschin @dd32 @dufresnesteven @eboxnet @eidolonnight @elmastudio @fernandot @geoffgraham @iandunn @javiarce @joedolson @jpantani @kellychoffman @laurlittle @marybaum @matt @maurodf @melchoyce @mikachan @nikhilgandal @pablohoneyhoney @peakzebra @poliuk @priethor @psmits1567 @renyot @rmartinezduque @ryelle @santanainniss @sereedmedia @sippis @tellyworth @tobifjellner @webdados @willmot

Your comments, including some feedback from the 2016 redesign, were taken into consideration with this work. Expect more updates to come as efforts to jazz up WordPress.org continue.

by Nicholas Garofalo at August 15, 2022 03:34 PM under Meta

Post Status: Post Status Excerpt (No. 64) — LearnDash’s Adoption of Gutenberg, Full Site Editing, and How to Protect Your Course Content from Theft

Jack Kitterhing joins David to talk about adopting (and adapting) Gutenberg — and Full Site Editing — at LearnDash for their LMS product. The conversation touches on the problem of people in the WordPress community having their course content stolen and resold. What can you do to protect and brand your learning product to deter theft?

Why This Matters: You'll gain insight into Learndash as a WordPress company and learn why it's crucial for product creators to onboard and help their customers do great work with their tools. Support the tool you build, the person using it, and the work they do with it if you want to keep them as long-term customers.

Every week Post Status Excerpt will bring you important news and insights from guests working in the WordPress space. 🎙

You can listen to past episodes of The Excerpt, browse all our podcasts, and don’t forget to subscribe on Spotify, Amazon Music, Google Podcasts, iTunes, Castro, YouTube, Stitcher, Player.fm, Pocket Casts, Simplecast, or by RSS. 🎧

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by David Bisset at August 15, 2022 05:04 AM under WordPress Community

August 12, 2022

WPTavern: OrganizeWP Launches with “Old School Software Pricing Model”

WordPress developer Jon Christopher has relaunched OrganizeWP, a commercial plugin that organizes content in the admin with a single, unified view and UI for streamlining common actions. It’s a utility plugin that Christopher has had on his mind since before he released its predecessor, the Hierarchy plugin, eight years ago.

“The WordPress Admin felt really disjointed once Custom Post Types were a new thing (this is how long ago we’re talking) because there were top level content ‘buckets’ mixed and matched with Plugins and Settings and everything else,” Christopher said. “Then products started using the Admin Menu as a form of advertising to an extent, putting top level Menu items in place when they absolutely aren’t necessary, and the problem just got worse and worse.”

Christopher aimed to tackle this same problem with OrganizeWP but redesigned the UI and rebuilt it with JavaScript to accommodate new features like groups and drag and drop. The new product is now out of beta and is catching some attention due to its unusual pricing model.

For $29.00, users get access to updates and support for Version 2. OrganizeWP is selling licenses for the current major version with no subscription.

In a post titled Rethinking WordPress Product Pricing Models, Christopher highlights the drawbacks of using the subscription model, which is used widely in the WordPress ecosystem for software products that users host on their own websites.

“Support, I would argue, is by far the reason so many WordPress products have adopted a subscription-based pricing model,” Christopher said. “The support burden for products in the WordPress space is hugely significant. It goes hand-in-hand with the self-sufficiency that comes with WordPress.

“We run into problems when the platform relies on self-sufficiency but the customer is not self-sufficient.”

 Since OrganizeWP is an admin-facing tool with no frontend output, Christopher decided it was “a prime candidate for a more old school software pricing model in that licenses will be sold for each major version, with no automatic expiration.” He plans to support version 2 of OrganizeWP indefinitely in terms of compatibility with WordPress and bug fixes.

“With heavily committing to major versions being the big planning milestones, updates will involve (primarily) bug fixes when applicable as opposed to adding new features,” he said. “Each major version will be feature frozen, so the updates will look a bit different when compared to most WordPress products today.”

Christopher identified subscription fatigue as the inspiration for this pricing model experiment. One might be hard pressed to build any type of business website on WordPress without purchasing any subscriptions for plugins. Users are so inundated with subscriptions that MasterWP was inspired to create WP Wallet, a service that helps users keep track of license renewals and helps agencies bill for client subscriptions.

Fellow veteran product creator Brian Gardner called OrganizeWP’s pricing model “a bold (and refreshing) move,” but it’s the market that will decide if it is successful. Will customers be grateful for purchasing the plugin as a one-time payment or will they expect a constant stream of new features for the price?

“The market may say that WordPress product customers have come to know, expect, and be comfortable with the subscription model,” Christopher said. “Selling major versions means that updates will be nothing more than maintenance releases and bug fixes, no new features.

“New major versions will need to be pitched to existing customers and that feeling of getting features ‘for free’ is gone with this pricing model. Customers may hate that, I’m not sure yet.”

by Sarah Gooding at August 12, 2022 09:30 PM under News

WPTavern: WooCommerce to Stop Registering Customizer Options in Upcoming 6.9 Release

WooCommerce is making a strong push towards getting the Customizer menu out of the admin for those who are using a block theme. In an effort to clean up the admin and eliminate confusion, the plugin will stop registering Customizer options when a block theme is active beginning with version 6.9. This will go into effect with WooCommerce 6.9, which is expected to be released in September 2022. 

The problem is that site owners can get confused by having both the “Edit site” and “Customize” menu links in the admin.

This change is an important one for WooCommerce developers to acknowledge if they are still registering settings within the WooCommerce panel in the Customizer. Developers can opt to use the customize_register action to include Customizer menu items, but continuing to offer Customizer options is not an ideal user experience.

“Subpanels or sections registered within the WooCommerce panel on the Customizer will no longer be accessible since the Customizer links will be removed,” WooCommerce engineer Alba Rincón said in the announcement. “If you’re the developer of a theme or extension that relies on the presence of these you will need to make changes to ensure a smooth transition.”

WooCommerce core developers recommend plugin authors update their products to relocate any Customizer settings to a block, pattern, or the Global Styles menu.

Community developers are also invited to weigh in on a change that may impact developers’ debugging workflows. It is a proposal designed to address the problem of the growing size of the WooCommerce zip archive, which is rapidly approaching a size where it is difficult for some users to update with out timing out. The core team is considering removing JavaScript and CSS source files from releases, but this major change requires community feedback. The discussion will be open on GitHub until August 26th, 2022.

by Sarah Gooding at August 12, 2022 07:40 PM under woocommerce

Post Status: Post Status Picks for the Week of August 8

Should you build or capture an audience? JR Farr notes the pros and cons for each. On the Matt Report, Marc Benzakein shares a retrospective on ServerPress. Allie Nimmons and Teron Bullock discuss how to deal with negative criticism online in Press The Issue. Do we need a WordPress debate club? Bob Dunn has tips for first-time WordCampers, and Working Code looks at reducing the complexity of shipping code.

Post Status Podcast Picks 🎙

Get our weekly WordPress community news digest — Post Status' Week in Review — also available in our newsletter. 💌

And don't miss the latest updates from the people making WordPress. We've got you covered with This Week at WordPress.org. ⚙

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by Dan Knauss at August 12, 2022 05:23 PM under Working Code

Post Status: Post Status Excerpt (No. 63) — Pay Transparency, Mutual Respect, and the Community We Need

People don't realize how long ago “long ago” wasn't. We're not talking about two, three, four hundred years ago. My family always stressed working somewhere your employer respects you, because it wasn't that long ago they didn't have a choice.

Nyasha Green

We're rebooting Post Status Excerpt as a weekly chat between Nyasha Green and Dan Knauss (and guests—please join us!) about a few of the active topics and discussions in the WordPress community that we feel are most important. Big thanks to David Bisset in his former role as host and curator here, and also to our intern and post-production engineer, Olivia Bisset.

This week we're talking about pay transparency. Ny relates some personal experiences where an employer did not disclose pay or how employees were selected for raises. This leads us into a discussion of pay transparency in the hiring process — how it matters to everyone but especially job seekers who are black, indigenous, or other people of color. (Ny has written about this before, and Piccia Neri has been investigating the topic lately.) We also talk about how a lack of transparency can seem to emphasize an employer's distrust and an employee's disadvantaged position — and the effect that can have on workplace culture.

Next, we talk about our own family histories which are touched — in living memory in Ny's case — by slavery and colonialism where work and dignity were extracted from some people by others with the power take their labor without compensation. Ny's great grandfather was born a slave in South Carolina in 1858 and lived until 1963. Dan's ancestors include German settlers in North Carolina who abandoned their earlier beliefs against slavery and began to practice it in the late 1700s. In the Americas and beyond, the past is much closer than we often assume, especially for BIPOC people. History only “bends toward justice” if people choose to bend it that way. It can also go the other way.

Finally, we close with how Allie Nimmons experienced a surprising level of hostility to a survey she presented to the WordPress community about the ways we contribute to the project and how we feel about it. There's the community we have now — and the community we need to become. How do we get there? What are the barriers? How can you help?

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Every week Post Status Excerpt will bring you a conversation about important news and issues in the WordPress community and business ecosystem. 🎙

You can listen to past episodes of The Excerpt, browse all our podcasts, and don’t forget to subscribe on Spotify, Amazon Music, Google Podcasts, iTunes, Castro, YouTube, Stitcher, Player.fm, Pocket Casts, Simplecast, or by RSS. 🎧

Transcript

Dan Knauss: [00:00:00] Hey Ny

Nyasha Green: Hey Dan, how are you?

Dan Knauss: All right. Pretty good. Good to see you again. so what's on your mind in world of WordPress this week.

Nyasha Green: Pay transparency. Yeah.

Dan Knauss: Okay. Me too. Yeah. So peach and Mary, um, who's, uh, I think pretty well known and post status member, um, proposed this some time ago and I've been, you know, kind of encouraging and helping along towards an article.

Um, we know that we do job listings and there's always, there are things around. Time zones and where people specify they want people to be from or language that sometimes need a little nudging about [00:01:00] appropriateness, um, for being inclusive, but probably the single most vexing thing to people is, um, a reasonable pay for positions in a field that tends to be.

Somewhat underpaid where we want to bring that up. Um, but you know, as in most job listings, LinkedIn, anywhere, a lot of employers just won't pay post any salary at all. And there may be kind of vagueness about, is this a senior position entry level? And yeah, what's the compensation. Some companies are really awesome about it.

Um, but some are vague to just don't don't mention it. Mm-hmm so, um, So she was surveying. Yeah. What did you think of her, her poll and the discussion that happened on Twitter?

Nyasha Green: I thought it was really good. Um, I actually wrote, um, for master WP a little while ago about pay [00:02:00] transparency and how more companies need to just post their salaries.

And, um, of course it gets pushed back, not my article, but that idea gets pushed back from companies, especially in places like South Carolina where, you know, They really do want to discriminate and pay and not care about it. Um, but I thought it was excellent and I think more companies should do it. Also.

I wanna point out that Colorado already has a state law that does this. And, um, one interesting thing about that is so many companies have been major companies like Southwest airlines have been trying to, can I name. Oh, yeah. Okay. they, um, you know, they're one of the people to fight against it and the companies are like trying to like take the jobs out of Colorado.

Um, I think it was Southwest. Let me not slander Southwest. And it's not them. I'm gonna double check

Dan Knauss: because they're so embarrassed about their salary. They don't wanna have to post it. I mean, you'll leave the state cuz of that.

Nyasha Green: Like I feel like, but that, and also they want to pay people differently. [00:03:00] Like yeah.

Dan Knauss: So they don't wanna be seen doing it.

Nyasha Green: Yeah. Like they know it's wrong. So like they know it's wrong. They know it's not the right thing to do, but they're still going to do it. And it's just come on, man. It's 2022. But like we were talking about, we're not that removed from first of all. Well, a lot of discrimination still happens today.

That's undeniable, but we're not that removed from legalized discrimination. Mm-hmm . Yeah. And I think a lot of companies, you know, we don't have a federal law to make you post, um, your salaries, but we need to one, um, two, a lot of companies don't know how much. Better. It makes them look, if they go ahead and do that, just jump ahead of the curve and have those salaries up there.

So people know like we're getting paid, what we're worth one. We're not wasting our time with the interview. We don't want the pay and we're not being discriminated against by color, race, [00:04:00] gender, sexuality, things like that. Yeah, absolutely.

Dan Knauss: So I think, um, it's gonna be interesting to see how, how PT develops that, how we pull that article together.

Maybe I'll, I'll have to get, get you in on that too, for some feedback, or maybe some, some quotes too. Uh, have you had experiences directly with where you applied for, for something not quite knowing what the range was cause they didn't tell you or do you have personal rule about like, I'm not gonna look at that.

Nyasha Green: Oh, yeah. Um, so living in South Carolina, almost most of my life, um, it's a state that doesn't have a lot of, um, protection for employees, a very anti-union state. Um, I remember, um, working in college for a, I'm not gonna name, drop them. Um, I don't want them to get the attention, um, working for a company where I made food and delivered it.

And, um, they told us when we were first hired, they were like, you [00:05:00] know, We're open about this and I'm like, oh, it's gonna be something positive. And I'm like, what are you hoping about? Well, uh, raises are given at the discretion of managers. So, you know, mm we're just gonna let you know. I'm like, why were you so excited to tell me that, that, that sucks.

So if you don't like me, I don't get a raise. Yep. But they were like, well, at least we told you, we didn't just like do it like that. Doesn't make it better, but they thought it made it better. And, um, I worked at that job for a little while and. Uh, personal story. So I, I don't, I haven't told the story a lot.

I think publicly, um, our manager was very sweet, very sweet guy and, um, very personable. I had no issues with him and I remember one day he asked if I wanted to come to his house and like, just hang out and like, I didn't think anything of it, but I was busy. I wasn't gonna do it. like, I was like 20 at a time.

I didn't really care. I was like, um, oh no, I'm I'm busy. And he was like, oh, okay. Like, I thought it was like a simple conversation. He was like, okay. You know, no worries. And I guess a couple people had, they went and hung out with him one on one. [00:06:00] And I noticed in the next couple of weeks, it was just like a complete personality change.

He just like made little side comments about working with me. Um, like I said, oh, you're on the line with Naisha today. Ugh. Okay. I guess. Nice, you know, I'm joking. And I'm like, what? And I didn't think of it at the time. I was just like, whatever, I'm in college, like I'm taking like four, like 20 credits and I'm doing the shop.

Part-time, I'm not gonna think about it. But, um, I remember like in the next few weeks, like people who were getting hired on after me, cuz I help open the store. Um, they had raises. They got their 25 cents, which was a big deal at the time, I guess. And, um, a couple of them that I trained, they became like managers and supervisors.

And I was sitting there with my $7 and doing all this work for nothing. And when I quit that job, you know, some of the guys were telling me, cuz it was mostly a, a guy job that they hired and then they rarely hire people of color. Um, they were like, you know, you really should have, uh, been nicer to. So and so, and I was like, [00:07:00] they were like, yeah, we used to hang out and do all the stuff that cover in.

You never wanted to do it. Yeah. What. . I was like, that guy asked me one time when I first started to come to this house. I said, no, and that's why y'all wouldn't pay me or promote me. Yeah. So I was like, you know, I was done with that company. I, I don't even eat their food to this day. Um, and they're not doing well as a company either, which is great.

Uh, I shouldn't say that, but it's great to me now. but, um, I just, that was like the first time as an adult. Cause I was 20 or 21, um, that something was so blatantly. That blatantly happened. And it was like, I didn't even think until later on I'm like, what if he, like, would've tried to like touch me or something like, like, I, I didn't even think of that at the time.

It was just a simple, like, I'm busy, I'm in college, I'm doing all this stuff. Like, dude, we can hang out another time. And it was like, after that, there was this just whole narrative of she's mean she doesn't wanna do this, deny her money. So I think at a company where there would've been paid transparency, Where you didn't rely on [00:08:00] being favored by the boss?

Um, things like that, that I would've been paid what I was due, which probably still, it was 25 cents more. It wasn't, I still think I was worth more than that, but I would've been promoted. I wouldn't trained my, you know, replacements in, you know, superiors. Um, so that's, I always think about that story when I think about pay transparency because.

Like I was very young and naive and I was, I was naive for a long time and it's like, how do we protect other people from that? Not just women, cuz it happens to men, but mostly women. How, how do we protect people of color from that? Like how do we stop that from happening? And I think pay transparency is the first step.

Dan Knauss: Yeah. I'm, I'm really, um, impressed and pleased that Colorado took that step. And that's, that's interesting how. Impacts distributed companies with people working remotely employers there, like, like yours, like Rob mm-hmm consulting, um, based [00:09:00] in, in, in Colorado, but teams all over the place. Um, so you're kind of benefiting from Colorado is progressive in South Carolina, despite South Carolina.

Oh, nice. This is, this is something we can do in distributed companies to change cultures, to make. Where we see, you know, kinda gross inequities. Um, but yeah. What do you, what do you think, um, what do you think it does to for, I, I think, I think a lot of employers have the great intentions and I'd stick up for 'em.

Um, you know, there's reason. There's plenty of feedback and reasons for why, why we, we want to have this conversation later, or it's, it's a variable thing, or we don't wanna scare people off who we'd like to get in the role by, um, you know, that's kind of a feed, but who's time are you, you wasting here [00:10:00] potentially, but yeah, they want to cast the net maybe widely, but there's two sides to that.

Um, if they really value building. A positive, collegial, collaborative environment that makes their people better as they grow there and is inclusive. Um, what does it do potentially? To start off with this kind of shell game or, you know, what's the three card Monty kinda game of how much would you would require her to be paid for this?

How much do you think you're worth? Which is, um, some personalities and some people in certain experiences and some people on a depressing day. I mean, that's a hard, you're just not gonna represent yourself. Well, and you don't have like an advocate at your arm to do this and. What do you, you know, you can tell what I, I think about it, but what, [00:11:00] what are your, what are your thoughts for the long term impact on that company culture?

If you start off with oh, degree of non-transparency and, and suspicion, or trying to leverage the power, you have to employer side advantage, um, over the employee, um, .

Nyasha Green: A lot of people probably won't agree with me because this is the status quo, but the world is changing. If companies continue to do that, these mind games, they won't have a company you're losing good talent because you want to play these mind games.

You want to, I'm the guy in, not this, I'm the person in power. I don't want to, um, say it's only guys that do it, cuz it's not only guys, but I'm the person in power. Let's see what let's see if I can, uh, how many tricks I can get out of them. before I can get, you know, them in. And then to me, it sets the stage for how it's going to be working at [00:12:00] this company.

So I'm gonna apply into this job with all these mind games and tricks, and I'm jumping through hoops and I have to make sure it's not a joke when he says this or that. And they say this or that. Oh my God, I'm so sorry. Um, but um, I have to go through all these hoops and then. I'm stressed out. I'm like sweating.

I need the money. I need the job. I get the job. I'm like, whew. All right. It's Monday. What game do I have to play today? So you're going to have depressed workers. You're gonna have stressed out workers. You're gonna have burnt out workers and eventually. Hopefully when they learn their value, they're going to quit.

So I think employers can do this, but they're gonna have, they're gonna have a high turnover rate. They're not going to attract the best talent because they're, so they're just losing so many with that. And the company's culture is going to suck as well as the world. Yeah.

Dan Knauss: And I, I kind of appreciate more and more how, um, how, you know, there's an interpersonal [00:13:00] ethical level where.

You're maybe hurting someone in their, you know, immediate lives with, um, with a, a work environment that doesn't build them up. And mm-hmm, , um, puts them in a situation where they have to, um, you know, not really know if they're at parody with their peers and, and colleagues or what they're worth, or, um, and if you damage.

I mean, there's, there's a certain amount of human capital that employers just assume, you know, we just produce it, you know, our mm-hmm and it, you know, there's a whole, all the people that are holding us up, family, friends, and, and, and time off and rest and, and all of that. If, if you're just depleting people and you don't put that back, ultimately you're hurting the.

Culture like for us, um, WordPress tech industry, you know, it's, it's, [00:14:00] it's damaging how the larger culture works and, and, you know, your, your employees move on to someone else than they mm-hmm , you know, they're are we, we should want to pass people out better than they were when they came in. Yeah. Or at least as, as good.

And, um, so it's not, uh, you're not damaging people. You're not damaging our ecosystem. Um, I, I feel like a human, I don't like the term. I kind of reject the term human resource, but mm-hmm , if you're gonna look at things kind of ecologically, you shouldn't draw down on that human resource. That's a commons too.

Our labor commons in, in WordPress. So yeah, hopefully this conversation that, that will, will continue and. Yeah, your, your article, I think was the first I've seen someone kind of bring that out and yeah. I want to have to put you impeach it together. [00:15:00] Oh, okay. Have you met her?

Nyasha Green: I have not. No. Okay.

Dan Knauss: Yeah. It's, it's an important, important issue.

Um, so I think two, we were, we were talking earlier about, um, mm-hmm, the, the history that's kind of at our backs too. Mm-hmm and. what people have been through and what in living memory, in their, in their family touches them, you know, it's different and we're not always sensitive to that, that kind of thing.

And in the United States, you know, Canada's got another version of this here. There's if you're people don't exist in a vacuum and they don't come to you, um, in a vacuum and. When you, when you faced employers like that, where there's a clear, you know, we're gonna arbitrarily use, give managers power over you, does that.

What does that, [00:16:00] how does that register to you in the context of your family history? That someone like me probably doesn't have,

Nyasha Green: well, it's always a red flag, especially with power plays and. You know, I'm gonna tie it back to American slavery. Everyone's favorite topic . And so, uh, we talked a little bit about, um, living memory and how it's not that far back for that many people.

And I have a very large family, a very old family and the things they experienced that they it's still, first of all, it's not that long ago and it's still. Just basically shapes what I do and how I feel about things today and specifically, um, you know, people like to talk about slavery. Um, well, so long ago, none of you guys knew any slaves and things like that.

And that's not true, especially from my family. Um, so I sent you an article about my great, great grandfather Jefferson do. And, uh, he was born in the 1950s. So he was born into [00:17:00] slavery in South Carolina and he lived a hundred. In 1850s, he lived 105 years. That's how old he was when he died. Wow. Um, so he lived until the 19, um, sixties.

Mm-hmm um, as a matter of fact, the equal pay act, um, was, um, It passed in 1963, that was there. He died. So, um, my great-grandfather was alive for, uh, slavery. He lived through the civil war. He lived through the creation of the automobile. He lived through, you know, the early civil rights movements, um, Rosa parks.

He was alive to see Martin Luther king Jr. Walk, you know, and my mom was alive. My mom was, um, about eight. When he, he died, she still remembers running errands for him. My mom knew him. He was a slave. He was born into slavery. Um, his granddaughters, they were in their thirties. When he, when they died twenties or thirties, they're still alive.

Three of them, um, in their late eighties. And, um, he was the patriarch of our family and the things he taught [00:18:00] them, the things he taught his sons, the things he taught his grandsons, his great grandsons that shaped our family that shaped our worldview. He would tell them, you know, these are things we did in slavery, but now that you all don't have to do that, this is what you should.

He told people that are still alive that today . Yeah. Um, so people don't realize how long ago, long ago. Wasn't yeah, we had laws in the book with just when he, he was not a, a free person when he was born. And by the time he died, there was a equal rights amendment for pay between men and women that was in the sixties that wasn't that long ago.

So . Legalized discrimination and pay is still happening. You know, they, that amendment doesn't go far enough. It doesn't protect against race, sexuality, religion, things like that. Um, just the things that happened to him. What happened to his daughters? What happened to his granddaughters? Those things follow me today.

His grand, his great granddaughter. [00:19:00] My mother integrated her high school. She was always paid less than everybody else. She went to H B, C U cuz. She could not go to other colleges. This was the seventies. Yeah. I'm not talking about 2, 3, 400 years ago. Um, you know, so you know, my family always stressed education, getting the best education.

They always stressed working somewhere where your employer respects you because it wasn't too long ago where they didn't have a. Yep. So I think it would take these companies. They would be well reminded to remember the people that they deal with, especially people of color in the United States. We've been dealing with this stuff more recently than you think.

So do you want to be a company that's known as one that lived in the past that kept these bad things going? Or do you want to be known as a progressive company that was ahead of the curve? Yeah, they had the laws in Colorado, but your company in South Carolina, why don't you, why don't you jump ahead of the curve too?

Why don't you do this? Why don't you do that? Yeah. Why don't you be the best you can be? Why don't you take this lemon me memory cuz it's all of our history, even though it happened to a certain subject we're Americans, it [00:20:00] happened to all of us. Yeah. All of us were a part of this. When this happened, our, our ancestors.

Touched

Dan Knauss: all of the Americas touched everything and it Europeans doing it it's it was a global global system. And yeah, in a hundred years, you know, two, three generations in a family that's living memory and it's it's a hundred years. And that seems like a long time, but that's body memory. That's, you know, you're, was it.

This is kind of more tended to in, in trauma, uh, psychology and understanding of that. And, you know, the, what is it? The genetically you are part of, um, an egg formed in your mother's mother mm-hmm and. This goes, it's a long, it's a long way back his, and you don't have to scratch the surface of any community to, to find the history [00:21:00] of, um, traumas there.

Um, mm-hmm , you know, I think I told you about, like, when I researched family history, one, one branch of my, um, uh, German Moravian ancestors who started out pacifists and abolitionists. And, and so on one branch went down and founded Winston Salem, North Carolina. And, um, they decided it would be okay if they had slaves, but treated them as spiritual equals, just not labor equals mm-hmm oldest black church in, in America is still running there.

And they're still in a kind of reconciliation process cuz there's um, it was, um, yeah, not a. Not a good thing, not a good outcome. And it's um, so yeah, my part of my family is on the other side of that. And you, I think if you, you dig down, it's not that far in Canada, we're dealing with. What everyone knew, but is now very publicly aware that [00:22:00] as late as the sixties, indigenous kids were being stripped from their families, put in the religious schools and, um, for cultural assimilation by force, and a lot of them were abused and died in there.

These mass graves that are coming up. And, um, what do we have to say about that is people are. Very touched in their families by, by that, that experience. Um, so yeah, I don't, I don't see how you can talk about, we want an inclusive culture without, and being historically ignorant of these mm-hmm of these things.

Nyasha Green: Yeah. And people need to listen to people of color when they talk about this too. Like, I can trace my family back to here and we experience this stuff until now. Like, this is what you should do to make it more inclusive to help us. Oh, yeah, that's fine and dandy, but no, mm-hmm, no more butts. No, if ands or butts.

Yeah.[00:23:00]

Dan Knauss: So moving, moving from one, one survey to another. So, you know, peach is doing the survey unemployment, um, Practices and, you know, it's a, it is a bit of a hot button, potential thing there mm-hmm um, and as far as I know, um, she's had all kinds of responses that have been cordial and professional and, and fine.

She's a, a white European woman. Um, and I'm, I'm glad I hope I'm right about that. That that's, that's been. A question and a public kind of probing that we can handle maturely. But then yesterday we see Allie Nimmons, um, talking about a, what I would think is a much more benign survey, um, and getting a [00:24:00] lot, lot of shit mm-hmm and that's just not a not appropriate.

And she's an African American woman. Um, Makes you think what, tell, tell me what your thoughts are, what, what, um, and what Allie was, was trying to do there.

Nyasha Green: Um, so Allie was, you know, just trying to do a survey. Um, she's really, everybody knows. Allie is really big on WordPress contribution and, um, she's just trying to get a feel of how easy or hard it is for people to contribute.

So we can go about addressing ways to make it easier for. Simply it, you know, I think that's great. Um, you know, I see stuff every day about, we need more contributions to WordPress. Why anybody would be against people trying to help that I have no idea, but, um, the, a lot of comments she got were so passive aggressive, and that's not the first time I'm seeing that in the WordPress community.

Um, People are very, [00:25:00] very passive aggressive. When you ask questions. Um, no matter how benign they are, people, they have to flip it, especially if it's not like the questions they want to ask, which to me, I'm just going to say they need to work on, but you know, that's all I wanna say about that, but I just think.

A lot of people didn't consciously see, it's like, she's asking these questions. This is African American woman. The, all of the bad responses I saw were not from African Americans. And I don't think anywhere from women and they were just kind of jumping down her throat like, oh, you didn't ask this question the way I want you to ask it.

Oh, I can't do this because this is not the way I would do this.

what, first of all, what do you like? I, I wanna ask these people, like, do you talk to people like that at your job? Do you say, no, I can't help you with this project cuz you didn't do it the way I, [00:26:00] I wanted you to do it. Right. I, I, how many people like yourself do you talk to like that? But you know, I'm not saying they were consciously malicious.

I will give them the benefit of the doubt, but that was something I just really didn't like to.

Dan Knauss: Yeah. And did you say, since you were working on, on this with her, this was, this was for, um, master WP, um, surveying. Um, yes, yes. Yeah. Did you say that there was, um, like you have some guys. Giving the kind of response of like, is this open to white people?

Is this a closed survey? Like for, there's no reason to think that, right. Yeah. Other than that, she's

Nyasha Green: running it black. Yeah. Why would you ask, why would you ask someone that

Dan Knauss: they just assume, because she's running it, that

Nyasha Green: it's a diverse survey. Yeah. There's no, it's only people of color. What, in your mind, how does your mind work to do that?

That, that, that was the response that annoyed me the [00:27:00] worst.

Dan Knauss: I have a hard time believing. They actually think that they are just have a chip on their shoulder because of their perception of what all kind of stands for in their mind. As I think reasonably outspoken person who is really good at taking on a lot of issues, we need to talk.

Nyasha Green: The best, honestly,

Dan Knauss: really okay.

Nyasha Green: And, um, yeah, I just, I think it also comes from it's the community. That's another issue with us in diversity. We need a more diverse community.

Dan Knauss: Well, she's doing it. Oh, basically for a long time anyway. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, you're, there's other, there's a lot more, but

Nyasha Green: yeah, people had like interactions with people who don't look like them.

They would know when a person is asking a genuine question. That's why I'm yelling from the clouds. We need a more diverse WordPress, because it's not enough to tell people this is how you're diverse or what we're just talking about. Like, you know, the history of us, and this is how we [00:28:00] interact, and this is how you can make it easier for us.

It's not enough to tell people that they need to experience this. They need empathy. They need to, they need to talk to people. Yeah. So pushing from more diversity and WordPress will definitely help with that. It definitely will. I I'm sure we will see the difference. and I,

Dan Knauss: I think kindness and basic respect, um, the negative outcome here is, you know, at least in the moment and the emotion of it now, like ally says, she's not gonna do one of these surveys again, and that's not what we want.

And just having, doing something as simple as that, asking people on about a contribution to the project, um, That she gets kind of targeted in that way is just not a not okay. And to, to demo demoralize people, anyone out of doing productive, constructive work, like that is, is not something that is [00:29:00] healthy in any way.

It's still, you know, it's completely what we don't want. Mm-hmm um,

yeah, I hope I hope that comes out. In a better, better result than just we never ask these, these kind of things again. But, um, I, I re I, I recognize I was, you know, telling you about this before. I, I recognize where that comes from, and it, it's not just men, but there is, there is that white male fragility.

And, you know, I have, you know, I have that inside me too. There's like the, everyone's got a scared, frustrated child or, you know, there's that part of you, it's not your best self. And maybe in some people it gets the better of them a lot more. It it's in charge. Um, you got your own wounds, you got your own sense of grievances and why [00:30:00] wasn't, uh, why am I not, blah, blah, blah.

All you can see is someone else is getting preference ahead of me or something like that. I mm-hmm, totally admit to having a part that feels that has felt that. So I don't, I don't know. The big question for me is, and that came up in Michelle's misogyny article an issue. I don't know quite what to say to men who, um, I recognize where that comes from.

Mm-hmm. and it's really hard to know how to say this is something you gotta grow on in a con in a constructive way. Cause I think it's a genuine failure. It's mm-hmm , it's a, there's not a better, uh, better word for it. It's a, it is a genuine and common thing to have from being. Growing up in a, in a culture that doesn't have this kind of history at its back that we [00:31:00] were talking about that takes for granted things that are privilege, but we don't see it that way until we learn to see it that way.

Mm-hmm until you, you move into it a different environment or something changes for you for, for me, it was, you know, after I was 12 or so, that was probably the last time I lived in a highly. Homogenous kind of environment and was mm-hmm generally in a minority myself. So, um, if you don't get stuff like that, I don't know.

It's, it's not an easy thing to grow on. And then you got grown men who, you know, they're, they haven't grown on that. Do you have any, any thoughts on that? Like how is that a, how do we crack that in? And it it's, it's a tough one, cuz you can. It deserves to be aggressively treated, but that, but still with, in some kindness and [00:32:00] understanding because you don't get anywhere with people, um, when you're both feeling grievance and anger,

Nyasha Green: I think, and I don't know if this is like, I would have to think on it more, but my first thought.

I think this process, cause it's been a while it's called, I think they called it sugaring. I don't, if that's not it, please forgive me. But, um, it's a process of just going through an unlearning internal biases that you may have, because like I said, I don't think most of these people did it maliciously.

Um, and just for an example where I learned this term, um, I got to meet some of the feminists of South Carolina, some of the, uh, older ones who helped write like the sexual assault laws and things like that. The most badass women I've ever met in my life. Oh my gosh. And um, my old neighbor actually was one of them too.

Um, Hey, Dr. Sally Boyd. Um, but, uh, they were just incredible women and they talked about, you know, just fighting for different things for [00:33:00] women in the seventies and sixties and eighties in South Carolina. Um, they help integrate the Sears downtown because they didn't, uh, have black, uh, they didn't want black clerks out.

Funny story from that, what they did was one of the women had like five children and. They went to Sears and she was like, they told 'em just to let her children go. And they ran everywhere because they would go to talk to a manager and the manager would just never wanna talk to them. But when they let those children, wow.

The clerks were so busy. The manager had to come out and talk to them. So , you know, but before they got to actually actions like that, which was incredible by the way, cuz these were rich, upper class white. And, you know, they believe in the quality for all, they were fighting for African American women to have this right.

But before they got to that step, they had to unlearn biases that they had. Again, they were upper class, white, rich women from the south. They were in a whole nother, you know, ballpark, a whole nother ballgame. And, uh, one of them talked about how one of the women they met was a doctor, but before they met her, they just heard they were talking to [00:34:00] Dr.

So, and so let's say Dr. Brown, Dr. Brown was coming to meet with them and they thought it was going to be her husband. and the woman walked in and it's like, you know, these are, these are feminists. They, they have, you know, actions they've done, but they still had this notion that when I hear doctor as a man yeah.

Um, things like that. So they told us like, you know, even though you all may think you're feminist, you may think you're, uh, freedom fighters. You may think you're, uh, fighting for people underneath you or your own race or your own gender. We all have these biases that we have to unlearn. And we all have to go through this process.

And I don't think white men in particular. Told a lot to, you know, we need to go through this process and this is how so I think sugaring and I hope that's the word again, um, is what they do. If that's not the world, I'll correct myself. Next time we talk, I'm gonna look it up. But, um, we just have to get together.

Well, they have to get together and, um, just unlearn stuff and it starts with education. It starts with talking with other people, um, check your privilege, I guess, is what the kids say these days. [00:35:00] yeah. So yeah, I think that would be the most helpful.

Dan Knauss: Yeah, sugaring to me sounds, sounds, um, I'm thinking of sweet tea and yeah.

Trying to sweeten a otherwise bitter thing, but, um, mm-hmm yeah. I hear, hear what you're saying. I, yeah, and it, it probably never, it never really ends. My, my experience with it is, is you just kind of find, um,

we're probably all better off acknowledging that we've got, you know, you got, you got a shadow, you got a dark spot and you know, everyone's heart has got, uh, you know, that, that side that go, when things go, you know, you, you don't want the person you don't want to be, or hopefully you don't, you don't want, you know, the, the worst self is, is there in everyone.

And. um, doesn't wanna [00:36:00] listen to other, other people is more concerned with its own, own sense of, um, entitlement or injuries or, or, or even even needs. And, um, yeah, that's a tough, tough thing to, um, to get people to, to take seriously and, and handle well, unless it's in, in a kind of community relational context where you can.

Friendship and peer collegiality and respect as such a part of the culture and a priority that it's hard. You, you, it gives you a baseline. I, I, I think that's where all, all forms of contribution should feed that, that, um, that we're, we kind of hold each other up because. Open sources based on trust, like any, any good [00:37:00] community, any good relationships.

And when you got that, you can kind of hold each other up a bit and tolerate some of some degree of conflict that's necessary and, and disagreement and hurt feelings and, and all that. But I not, not really that good at it all the time, probably better than some other communities, but I don't know if that matters.

Nyasha Green: No worries. I, I agree with you. It's just communication and holding your community. A responsible charity begins at home. My grandmother always said that. So we look out for our community. Our community will look out for other communities. It's kind of like paying it forward.

Dan Knauss: Yeah, yeah, yeah. I, um, I think it's important.

I'm glad I, I kind of know, we know something of each other, like where we live our stories or mm-hmm, , you know, background and I feel like in. Context. That's important to kind of slowly tell those stories and know that stuff for each other grounds, grounds things makes it harder to do that [00:38:00] internet psychosis, where it's not real people that you're shooting at, you know, just venting on or something.

And, and it makes kindness more the common ground. Well, that's a lot covered a lot. Oh yeah. We . We always do. Yeah. Well, that's. Maybe maybe next time we'll do do some more, um, techy, newsy stuff, but, um, yeah. Got a really good, a good question from someone who is outside the community and kind of, you know, wants to, to get in senior developer, wasn't done a lot of WordPress.

What would you advise that I do to get in? We've had a bunch of answers come and, um, yeah, it'd be interested in your take on some stuff like that. I'll probably write about it soon.

Nyasha Green: Yeah, let's get into that next. all right.

Dan Knauss: Cool. Sweet. Thank you. You're

Nyasha Green: so welcome. Yeah.

Dan Knauss: I'm glad you look like a hundred percent back.

Rested, healthy post COVID.

Nyasha Green: I looked that bad last week. Dang Dan. No, I [00:39:00] haven't said that

Dan Knauss: smiling. Yeah. All take care. All you too. Best everyone on your, on your team.

Nyasha Green: Yeah, I'll let 'em know. . Bye.

Dan Knauss: Bye.

Post StatusPost Status - The Community for WordPress Professionals

by Dan Knauss at August 12, 2022 04:30 PM under XAMP

Do The Woo Community: That First WordCamp for WooCommerce and WordPress Builders

Today I share a Twitter thread, a post and a few of my own thoughts on that first WordCamp experience as well as tips for the all attendees.

>> The post That First WordCamp for WooCommerce and WordPress Builders appeared first on Do the Woo - a WooCommerce Builder Community .

by BobWP at August 12, 2022 09:04 AM under WordCamp

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