Check out the folks who attended WordCamp Boston 2017:
You can mark yourself as going to this camp in your account settings!
John Eckman
But Why? Use Cases for the REST API
Ro Pirog
Panel: Themes
A panel of WordPress themers will answer your questions around theming. Some examples you might hear about: Should I use a pre-made theme, theme framework, or go custom? What makes a good theme? What are some tips and tricks for developing good themes?
Jim Reevior
It’s never too soon to be fitted for a tinfoil hat
No matter the size of the site, getting hacked is a painful process to deal with. As a developer, it is important to know what you can do to prevent possible attack vectors. In this talk, Jim will show what you can do to harden your code and ensure your project will be secure.
Panel: Plugins
Using ready-made plugins can make your website more effective and efficient. But do you sometimes find it overwhelming to pick a plugin that is right for your situation?
The panelists will address issues about including new functionality in your project using various plugins.
Questions from the audience are encouraged during the plugin panel session.
Examples:
Additionally, if you have questions for the panelist you are invited email them to the panel moderator in advance. ([email protected] by 12:30pm July 22nd)
Chris Wurster
How to Manage Your Reputation in the Age of Fake News: Online and Legal Tools for the Post-Truth Era
In this talk, my attorney (Chris Wurster of Levine-Piro Law in Maynard, MA) and I will touch on brand management and reputation protection, how to avoid/handle fake news, protect yourself and clients against defamation. We will provide actionable take-aways, quick tips and basic guidelines as well as legal action to take, should things get out of hand.
We know that this could get boring in a hurry so we will be illustrating these ideas with real-life, entertaining stories and examples.
Moira Ashleigh
Panel: Themes
A panel of WordPress themers will answer your questions around theming. Some examples you might hear about: Should I use a pre-made theme, theme framework, or go custom? What makes a good theme? What are some tips and tricks for developing good themes?
Jen Ecker
Panel: Themes
A panel of WordPress themers will answer your questions around theming. Some examples you might hear about: Should I use a pre-made theme, theme framework, or go custom? What makes a good theme? What are some tips and tricks for developing good themes?
Christian Nolen
Panel: Plugins
Using ready-made plugins can make your website more effective and efficient. But do you sometimes find it overwhelming to pick a plugin that is right for your situation?
The panelists will address issues about including new functionality in your project using various plugins.
Questions from the audience are encouraged during the plugin panel session.
Examples:
Additionally, if you have questions for the panelist you are invited email them to the panel moderator in advance. ([email protected] by 12:30pm July 22nd)
Lisa B Snyder
Panel: Plugins
Using ready-made plugins can make your website more effective and efficient. But do you sometimes find it overwhelming to pick a plugin that is right for your situation?
The panelists will address issues about including new functionality in your project using various plugins.
Questions from the audience are encouraged during the plugin panel session.
Examples:
Additionally, if you have questions for the panelist you are invited email them to the panel moderator in advance. ([email protected] by 12:30pm July 22nd)
Jared Novack
Panel: Working in the Open (Source)
A panel discussion with leaders and contributors in the WordPress project, and other open source project owners. How do you get started contributing to open source software, like WordPress? How have your contributions to open source helped you?
Dwayne McDaniel
Panel: Working in the Open (Source)
A panel discussion with leaders and contributors in the WordPress project, and other open source project owners. How do you get started contributing to open source software, like WordPress? How have your contributions to open source helped you?
Jennifer Nickerson
Panel: Freelancing
An interactive panel of business owners answering your questions on freelancing. What are some tips for getting clients? How can you make sure everyone stays on track?
Kyle Maurer
Panel: Freelancing
An interactive panel of business owners answering your questions on freelancing. What are some tips for getting clients? How can you make sure everyone stays on track?
Erin M. Harris
Panel: Design
Mary Beth Amaral
Panel: Design
Marcus Ohanesian
Panel: Design
Mel Choyce
Panel: Working in the Open (Source)
A panel discussion with leaders and contributors in the WordPress project, and other open source project owners. How do you get started contributing to open source software, like WordPress? How have your contributions to open source helped you?
Panel: Design
Laura Willis
Creating Your Personal Brand: The Power of Connection & Communication for Success
Are you ready to take your next step, and want to have a competitive edge? Do you want to do more work that you love, and have more success while doing it? Do you want to thrive in your current job? Learn how uncovering your personal brand can have a direct impact on getting more of what you want – it’s a combination of art and science.
In this interactive session you’ll learn:
When you uncover your authentic personal brand, you get clearer about the vision you have for your life, how you want to live it and achieve it.
Guillaume Molter
Panel: WordPress in Higher Ed
WordPress High Performance Hosting Using AWS
A case study of how the Harvard Chan School is leveraging Amazon Web Services to power a high performance, elastic and scalable hosting environment for 1900+ websites, on one WordPress Multisite installation.
This session will introduce how the ever-growing panel of Amazon Web Services can be used to perform load balancing, auto-scaling, content delivery, caching, backups, continuous integration and monitoring for WordPress.
Greg Opperman
Building an App with WordPress’ REST API
Making an interactive app using WordPress can sometimes be a headache. WordPress was designed primarily for blogging, and WordPress themes don’t make a lot of assumptions about how you should write client-side code. There are many fantastic Javascript frameworks that help developers write solid, maintainable front-end code, and provide compelling, interactive experiences for users.
Using React.js, we’ll show how you can build a simple, stateful, single-page app using the WordPress REST API as a backend.
During this talk, we’ll explain:
– What the WordPress REST API is, and why you should use it.
– Examples of single-page apps built on top of WordPress (including one for higher-ed)
– A quick tutorial / demo of how to integrate React in your WordPress development environment to create a simple app
Gian Wild
Panel: WordPress in Higher Ed
Creating an accessible WordPress site
AccessibilityOz has just released the Rooted in Rights web site, a fully accessible WordPress site which won the Australian Web Award for Accessibility. Gian Wild talks about how to make a site accessible to people with disabilities and compliant with US regulations, including WCAG2. Incorporating accessibility into your web site build is important and can often mean the difference between an accessible and an inaccessible site at launch. Specific stages require accessibility intervention, including design, template, and final site launch. Suitable tasks and training is also covered.
David Israel
Multi-User (Network/Multisite ) in Higher Education
Does what you need to do fall outside of what an LMS (learning management system) can do to help your faculty or staff? Do you not need a whole-blow CMS (content management system) to solve all of your institution’s communication needs at this particular moment? This talk will show you how Bowdoin College has used WordPress to fill medium-scale needs in higher education – helping faculty quickly build nible sites for courses, photo-blogs for trips, image galleries for visual arts courses, student project microsites, faculty research projects, and student clubs sites, to name a few uses. Will get you started and show you some of the different ways we have used the tools – including plugins, themes, and user authentication.
Jon Heller
Bradley Jacobs
Time to Publish
Metrics are important for the digital publishing industry. One key metric that Boston.com, a major regional news media outlet, uses is ‘Time to Publish’. In a world of breaking news, time is of the essence. This talk will take a look at the past year and a half since launching on WordPress and how this metric came to the surface. Further, it will cover performance in the WordPress admin, tools for debugging, and investigating general slowness in the admin. Finally, we will review some of the ways in which we addressed these issues for the editorial staff. Join to learn why you want to reduce your Time to Publish and how to get it done.
Annie Smidt
Easy Design Tips for Non-Designers
Learn oodles of design tips and hacks to make your WordPress site:
Don’t know what colors go together? Don’t know the first thing about design? Don’t have any design software? No worries — this talk is for you. We’ll cover lots of easy ways to make your design better, and free tools that can help you even if you feel like you “don’t have a designy bone in your body”.
Dave Ross
Functional Programming for WordPress Developers
Learn the basics of functional programming and how to apply its principles & techniques to WordPress code. Referential Transparency, pure functions, first-class functions, currying, and partial application will be explained clearly, without unnecessary buzzwords. Examples in PHP code will show how small, well-tested units of code combine to make powerful functions.
Gary Thayer
Woo for You: Customizing WooCommerce
WooCommerce now powers over 30% of all online stores, both big and small. While the basic WooCommerce package covers a lot of needs, business use cases often require special attention.
This talk will look at the best practices for building and customizing themes and plugins for WooCommerce. We’ll talk about:
Christie Chirinos
The Ultra-Condensed Guide To Selling Anything Online Using WordPress
If you’re a self-starting entrepreneur with a potential product – whether it is a physical good, your expertise as a service, or the content you want to create for a blog – and you’re trying to figure out how to sell it but have no clue where to start, this talk is for you. In the shortest amount of time imaginable, we will cover how to sell anything – your crafts, products, services, content, digital downloads, and even request donations – using WordPress. This talk will take you through the major “tools of the trade” of ecommerce in the context of WordPress as 1) a portal for collecting payments or leads and 2) maximizing your marketing investment using third-party tools that work well with WordPress. In less than an hour, you will gain a high level understanding of the toolkit that is enabling people around the world to sell anything using WordPress.
Marc Gratch
Panel: Freelancing
An interactive panel of business owners answering your questions on freelancing. What are some tips for getting clients? How can you make sure everyone stays on track?
Playing ball with Plugins
Developers have spent countless hours working on a plugin that seems to be built just for you, just for this moment. If only it wouldn’t… This is a problem nearly every developer faces at some point during a project. Knowing how to safely customize functionality is key to building products that will stand the test of time (or major updates.)
This talk will cover the following topics:
Bill Gadless
Why “Focus” Might Be the Most Important Ingredient to Growing Your Agency
In HBO’s documentary “Becoming Warren Buffett”, there’s a scene where Buffett and Bill Gates were both asked to write down on a piece of paper the one thing that they each felt contributed most to their success. Surely enough, Buffett and Gates had written the same word down on their respective papers: Focus.
Now, when I talk about “focus”, I don’t claim to know how to avoid multitasking or how to ignore distractions like social media, news, politics and other noise that gets in the way of productivity. I could use a lot of help there.
But what I’ve done successfully and what I will discuss is how to focus your business.
As far as I know, they don’t teach a lot of this stuff in college. (I can’t be 100% certain, as I didn’t spend much time there before dropping out). I spent the first 10 years of emagine’s history kind of flailing – trying to be everything to everyone, anything to anyone. I managed and did fine, but only once I started to focus did the business take a significant turn for the better.
I will cover the importance of (and how to) focus on:
Sounds like a lot I know. And it is.
But it’s really not that hard. And once you can confidently say that you’re laser-focused on everything I’ve outlined here, trust me when I tell you that you’ll have dramatically improved your business, your earnings and your lifestyle.
Brian DeConinck
Mobilizing 300 Reluctant Content Creators
NC State’s central IT office employs almost 300 people, whose areas of expertise range from high-performance computing to video production to installing fiber optic cable. By tradition and budgetary necessity, every single one of them has content creation and editing privileges on our unit website, oit.ncsu.edu. After years of a content free-for-all, the result wasn’t pretty: 2,500 pages total, with lots of out-of-date information, duplication, broken navigation, and accessibility issues everywhere.
In this session, we discuss how we stepped back from the brink, took control of our content, and—with a few homegrown WordPress plugins and help from the higher ed community—taught our 300-person content team how to build and maintain a good website.
Andrew Taylor
Automating WordPress Updates With Visual Regression
Your WordPress site really loves to be updated! Be it core, plugins, or themes there is a LOT of code that you need to update for every site. However, even with tools like wp-cli, updating your site is hard work.
You need to apply updates, test updates, and deploy updates. And do it for every single site for which you are responsible every single time an update comes out. Enter “Automatic WordPress Updates” and making the robots do your updates.
This session will talk about how to use a Continous Integration and Visual Regression solution to automate WordPress updates with confidence and at scale.
Amy Kvistad
Website and UX Design – From a Designer’s Perspective
Website design and UX principles applied to WordPress websites – from a designer’s perspective. The process starts with discovering client objectives and the website audience. This informs decisions on colors, fonts, and layout. A mood board helps to communicate the design direction for the website and user research informs decisions on website navigation and content hierarchy. Tools of the trade include color, photos, icon and many other resources. Implementing these design discoveries into your WordPress website is not as hard as you think.
Tara Johnson
How to Manage Your Reputation in the Age of Fake News: Online and Legal Tools for the Post-Truth Era
In this talk, my attorney (Chris Wurster of Levine-Piro Law in Maynard, MA) and I will touch on brand management and reputation protection, how to avoid/handle fake news, protect yourself and clients against defamation. We will provide actionable take-aways, quick tips and basic guidelines as well as legal action to take, should things get out of hand.
We know that this could get boring in a hurry so we will be illustrating these ideas with real-life, entertaining stories and examples.
Aileen McDonough
Blog Like A Boss
You’re the boss of your company (even if it’s a company of one or two) and you need to blog. Your WordPress blog is all set up and ready, but…
Where do you start? How do you get ideas? And who has the time for all this?
Yes, you can produce content that will inspire and engage your audience, building your customer relationships and establishing yourself (and your company) as an expert in your field.
You’ll get the tech stuff everywhere else–in this talk, we break down the basics of blogging to make it efficient, effective, and fun. You will leave this talk with 5-10 solid ideas and the tips you need to blog like a boss!
John Maeda
Keynote: Design + Inclusion
Steven Word
Panel: Working in the Open (Source)
A panel discussion with leaders and contributors in the WordPress project, and other open source project owners. How do you get started contributing to open source software, like WordPress? How have your contributions to open source helped you?
Enterprise-Grade WordPress Development: Building Bulletproof Software that is Ready for the Masses
What distinguishes good WordPress development from great WordPress development? What tools can I use to improve my development process? How do I make my code extensible for future adopters? Why should I bother with following the coding standards and best practices? Will my software scale? How can I ensure my code will perform in the wild?
This crash course session will dive head-first into answering these questions as we explore the development practices of professional WordPress developers. Through exposure to tooling and popular development workflows, you will become familiar with the best practices from the industry. Geared towards creators of all skill levels, this session will help you build confidence when developing with the web’s most popular content management system.
Maura Webster
Content Creation: The Real Deal
Your WordPress site is up and running. It’s gorgeous. You love it… Now what?
Many business owners and bloggers get to this point…and then panic. What next? What do I do? Who wants to hear what I have to say? What do they want to know? Where do I even start???
In this session, you will learn 7 steps you need to take to successfully and EASILY create your awesome content that will live on and bring people to your beautiful WordPress site. We’ll talk through three key phases of content creation and strategy:
1. How to get started and set yourself up for some incredible writing,
2. How to share your content once it’s created, and
3. How you can work smarter not harder with that content to generate leads and therefore more business (traffic, sales, etc.).
At the end, you’ll take away a content map and actionable steps to start creating and sharing your fabulous content immediately!
Gregory Schoppe
Picking a Page Builder
There are many page builders to choose from these days, both as premium themes and dedicated plugins, but what really sets one apart from another? In this talk, we’ll discuss the benefits and drawbacks of various popular page builders, as well as touching briefly on non-page builder techniques for creating custom designs quickly.
Mike Kirby
Panel: WordPress in Higher Ed
Winning Hearts and Minds: Effective communication throughout a website redesign
In 2014, The University of Maine determined that umaine.edu needed to be taken to the next level. A year later, a robust new website was launched to coincide with the incoming class and our 150th year celebrations. This session details the journey between these two points, and how we avoided common pitfalls in website redesign projects affecting hundreds of content contributors and their individual websites.
Karalyn Thayer
Before Design: What steps to take before you start designing and developing your website
This topic will be an overview to the leg work to do before you jump into the design and development stage. I will give an introductory talk on site maps, user personas, content guides, and other things to think about how your website will function before you start designing or developing your site.
Amanda Giles
Panel: Freelancing
An interactive panel of business owners answering your questions on freelancing. What are some tips for getting clients? How can you make sure everyone stays on track?
Level Up! Taking your WordPress Code up a Notch
Take your WordPress development to the next level by learning some (not so difficult) techniques specific to WordPress. We’ll discuss and review (at a high level) techniques you can learn and features you can employ to build better and smarter themes or plugins which also provide a richer experience for your users. To get the full benefit from this session you should be familiar with PHP and already writing code in WordPress.
Yvonne Christian
Panel: Themes
A panel of WordPress themers will answer your questions around theming. Some examples you might hear about: Should I use a pre-made theme, theme framework, or go custom? What makes a good theme? What are some tips and tricks for developing good themes?
K.Adam White
Keynote: Democratizing Software
If you ask a WordPress contributor what the project’s goal is, chances are we’ll say “to democratize publishing.” However, for over a decade the community that has grown around WordPress has been doing something even more important: our community is democratizing software itself. By creating one of the only web communities to include everybody from writers and photographers to interaction designers and senior software architects, WordPress has done what often seems impossible in Open Source software: we have built a product not just for ourselves, but for everyone. The future of WordPress rests on our ability to recognize and celebrate the spectrum of our community.
Kori Ashton
Get Google to Love Your WordPress Website
There are many steps required to complete in order to have Google fall in love with you website and reward you with ranking. Learn the basics for Search Engine Optimization that can be done on each of your websites for maximum organic ranking.
Jon DiPietro
Track Everything With Google Tag Manager
Tracking codes. Facebook pixels. Conversion scripts. E-commerce tracking. How can you manage all of this stuff and stay sane?
My answer is, “Google Tag Manager.”
There are many platforms that require you to install code on your website in order to track user behavior and record conversion events. Some of the more common examples include Google Analytics, Google AdWords, Facebook, Twitter, marketing automation solutions, email service providers, call-tracking services, etc. Installing and maintaining all of this code on your WordPress site can quickly become a convoluted headache – especially if you’re not a web development guru.
In this talk, I’ll give an introduction to tracking and conversion codes, provide an overview of GTM’s functionality and its benefits, demonstrate how to install and configure GTM on your WordPress site, and show a few real-world examples. Attendees will also receive a link to download helpful resources.
Sam Brodie
How to Build a 7-Figure Productized Design Agency
Are you having trouble growing your freelancing business into a full-blown agency? I was too! The average web design business has 1.4 employees which means the vast majority are solo-preneurs. In other words, it’s hard to grow a web design business!
But in 2013, I made a few significant changes to my strategy that paid off big and allowed me to go from struggling freelancer to 7-figure acquisition in just 3 years – starting from scratch with a completely new brand.
In this presentation you’ll learn:
Jesse Friedman
Increase engagement and conversion with these 6 innovative personalized experiences
This session will motivate you to craft personalized experiences designed for WordPress, the Internet’s most popular CMS. Unlike most talks you’ll actually participate in this creative session and learn proven techniques to increase visitor engagement and conversion. These lessons are also practical, so you can implement them without huge investments of time and money. Join in and gain a new perspective on the power of WordPress so you can build personalized experiences your visitors want.
Mat Marquis
Performance Under Pressure
This talk walks through the highly performance-focused (and WordPress-based!) approach we took to Bocoup.com—from tinkering with the built-in responsive images functionality, to asynchronous font application, to fully automated CriticalCSS setup, and then some.
Josh Fialkoff
Turning Your WordPress Site into a Marketing Automation Engine
Hooray! You’ve got your WordPress Website up and running. Now that it looks great, see how you can use it to get more sign ups, contact inquiries and more for your nonprofit or business.
We’ll show you how to connect your WordPress Website with some of the leading customer relationship management (CRM) tools and marketing automation systems, so that you can develop long-term relationships with customers, donors, fans and brand advocates.
Tom Shapiro
Effective Conversion Optimization Techniques
Having a lot of traffic to your WordPress website is great. Unless, that is, your site visitors are not converting. In this session, learn how to turn more of your traffic into leads and customers. We’ll explore behavioral analysis that can be conducted from heat mapping, click mapping, scroll mapping, user session recordings, A/B testing of your website, and more. Whether you are looking to increase sales on your website, boost leads, build your email list, or drive another type of conversion event, you’ll walk away from this session with specific methods for increasing your website’s conversion rate.
Ryan Kanner
Take back the day with WP-CLI
WP-CLI can be one of the most powerful tools in a developer’s tool belt if used correctly. This tool can be used to automate the simplest or most complex tasks with ease. All from the comfort of your command line.
In this session, I’ll show you a few specific examples where WP-CLI can save you tons of time by performing tedious, or repetitive tasks, and getting you back to the things you want to be doing.
A/B Testing – Which Way Does Your Duck Face?
Do you know that if you have a picture of a duck having it face left or right can increase your conversions by 40%?
Think this sounds silly? It is but backed by research. Spend some time to learn about what A/B testing is, what things to test, testing methodology and the best tools to use for your site.
Everyone will get a handout of the very same checklist I use when A/B testing our client’s sites. One of our clients, an insurance company, increased leads by making just a small 2px change.
When you launch a website, you are guessing. Sure the guesses are educated based on experience and data, but you can maximize your ROI with good A/B testing.
Juan Pablo Gomez
CSS Grid is here!
CSS Grid is the new layout spec that will change the way we code websites. We can FINALLY! design a two-dimensional layout that looks more like what we want it to be rather than what the browser previously allowed us to work with.
Horizontal and Vertical control? yup!! Design and control for white space? yup!! A combination of fix and flexible rows that will make responsive design more awesome? yup!
Don’t just design and build a Death Star, maintain it too
So you have your WordPress site up and running and its awesome. But whats next? Don’t let those pesky Rebels destroy your new site come learn about what you can do to keep your WordPress site in good working order after it is completed.
Lauren Jeffcoat
Panel: Plugins
Using ready-made plugins can make your website more effective and efficient. But do you sometimes find it overwhelming to pick a plugin that is right for your situation?
The panelists will address issues about including new functionality in your project using various plugins.
Questions from the audience are encouraged during the plugin panel session.
Examples:
Additionally, if you have questions for the panelist you are invited email them to the panel moderator in advance. ([email protected] by 12:30pm July 22nd)
The Biggest WordPress Myths Uncovered
In this presentation I will be debunking the biggest myths about our beloved WordPress CMS. I will cover some of the most common misconceptions about WordPress that may have kept users from diving in to give it a try. Think WordPress isn’t strong enough, fast enough, secure enough, or powerful enough? Join me as I discuss these non-issues and give WordPress skeptics a reason to take another look at the most popular CMS.
Dealing with Problem Clients
Spend time talking with a group of freelancers and the conversation will inevitably include someone’s unfortunate experience with a terrible client. Most freelancers have a story or two (or eight). While bad clients can’t be completely avoided, there are strategic steps any freelancer can take to contain the impact of a bad client. In this session, Nathan will explain the how to create a system that preserves workflow and keeps problem clients in check.
Jonathan Perlman
Panel: WordPress in Higher Ed
The Dawson Way of Doing Things: A Study of Our Path Using WordPress
Dawson College, in Montreal, Quebec, Canada with 10,000+ students and 1,000+ faculty and staff has adopted WordPress as our primary web publishing platform. We’ve mostly had success, but we’ve also had our share of failures and growing pains. In this case study, I’m going to talk about how we started out with WordPress in 2010, migrated our main website a few years later to a multi-site install and how it all evolved to what we have today. Since then, we’ve adopted the “lean and mean” mantra to building sites, while making them easy to update. This case study will showcase the front and back-ends of our higher profile sites to show how we achieved our goals. We’ll also explain how we manage expectations, do our development, choose plugins and tools, and which themes we’ve come to rely on.
Ipstenu (Mika Epstein)
Why Can’t I Do X in my plugin?
Have you ever wondered WHY you can’t do some things in plugins? Why we don’t let you use your own jQuery or call wp-load or offload images? I’ll tell you the real reasons why your plugins get flagged for fixes beyond the obvious like….
This talk will be CODE LITE, so if you’re working on your first plugin or want to get started, this can be for you!
These are the people that make this event happen. They work tirelessly for weeks and months to plan, coordinate, and execute the best event possible. If you get a chance to thank them, please do!
Amy Kvistad (+ add me)
Mel Choyce (+ add me)
K.Adam White (+ add me)
Moira Ashleigh (+ add me)
Duane Mitchell (+ add me)
Jim Reevior (+ add me)
John Eckman (+ add me)
Kelly Dwan (+ add me)
Reiko Beach (+ add me)
Tom Beach (+ add me)
Details TBD.
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