Faces of WordPress: Bryan Belanger (2015 Speaker)

Bryan Belanger

How were you first introduced to WordPress?
I was first introduced to WordPress around 2007. I was just starting to get into web development and was using WordPress for my personal site and a couple of freelance projects. Instantly loved it and how the dashboard was set up compared to other CMS’s I had used.

What do you like about it?
The community first and foremost. It’s easily one of the most giving and nurturing communities around when it comes to web development. From helping out small business owners, or development discussions on the forums or at meetups, the community is incredibly helpful and accepting. I’ve worked in several other frameworks and communities where an elitist attitude can arise, but I have not experienced that in the WordPress world. Also WordPress has come so far in how you can extend it for large scale websites. It’s an incredible tool to have when building for the web.

What do you do with WP now?
I design and build custom themes for different clients at Snapshot Interactive. A large majority of our client’s websites are built and maintained on WordPress, so I’m in the code for it pretty much every day.

How as the WP community helped you?
I learned WordPress sort of in tandem with learning PHP. My general mentality is to dive in and break things and see how it all works, and so the WordPress community in a sense really helped me grow my development skill-set. Anytime I’ve had questions about how to approach different scenarios, WordPress community has been instrumental in helping me figure out how to tackle it, and grow as a developer in general.

Did learning WP lead to any significant changes in your life?
It’s helped me grow my development chops, as well as opened a lot of professional doors for me. WordPress is widely used, and being able to develop custom themes has helped me find incredible opportunities I wouldn’t have had before.

What would you tell a new user? A new developer?
Have fun with it and reach out to the community. Whether you’re a new user, or a new WordPress developer it never hurts to try new things with it to see what works and what doesn’t. If you’ve hit a roadblock, more than likely someone has encountered that as well and would be happy to give some feedback. Also if you’re a new developer, the documentation is some of the most organized out there, take time to search and read through it and see the example code. Don’t be afraid to dive right in to the deep end.

Anything else we should we know?
Snowboarding is one of my favorite things in the world. One day I would love to do a heli-drop in Alaska! Oh also I love the Green Bay Packers and they shall rise to glory again!

Faces of WordPress: Taylor Lovett (2015 Speaker)

Taylor Lovett

Taylor Lovett

How were you first introduced to WordPress?
An employer in 2007 asked me to build his website in WordPress. I resisted at first because I preferred to build things from scratch.

What do you like about it?
I like that WordPress has without a doubt (to me) the best publishing experience of any content management system, and that WordPress’s extensive APIs allow it to serve as an application framework.

What do you do with WP now?
I work for 10up where we build amazing web experiences for enterprise using WordPress.

How as the WP community helped you?
Local meetups and WordCamps have helped me learn more about the platform and introduced me to like minded people.

What would you tell a new user? A new developer?
WordPress is not just a blogging platform; be open-minded.

WordPress Users, Experts Gather in Nashville May 16

WordCamp conference targets all levels, plus site and business owners

About 300 people who use WordPress – ranging from true beginners to advanced developers – will gather May 16 for WordCamp Nashville 2015.

The daylong learning and networking event, the fourth annual conference here, celebrates WordPress itself and the large global support community around it. A team of volunteer community organizers curates sessions, and this year’s event has more local speakers and local sponsors than ever.

“The big increase in local WordPress presenters as well as business sponsors is great for the community,” says Randy Hicks, one of the conference organizers. “It’s more evidence of the growth and popularity of WordPress.”

WordPress is free and open-source publishing software admired by fans for its ease of use, flexibility and ability to customize. The platform drives websites of major companies such as Best Buy mobile, TechCrunch and BBC America; to celebrity sites, including Katie Perry and LL Cool J; to single-author blogs; and everything in between.

Chelsie Goodwin

WordCamp Nashville 2014 Photo by Chelsie Goodwin

WordCamp Nashville is part of a much bigger picture. WordPress powers more than 1 of every 5 websites worldwide, including 100s of those for Nashville businesses. Each year, volunteers in cities across the globe organize WordCamps to share best practices and their expertise.

The Music City event, at Nashville School of Law, features 18 sessions in three tracks based on skill level, though attendees are not locked into any track. A daylong Help Desk includes other volunteers offering one-on-one assistance.

Get Tickets

Expect a crowd that loves tech, problem solving, entrepreneurship and business. The event is entirely volunteer-run and speakers are not paid. WordCamps are run under the auspices of the WordPress Foundation, a 501(c) 3 non-profit organization.

Tickets are $20 and include lunch, a t-shirt and admission to a party at the Flying Saucer in downtown Nashville following the event. Lyft, the ride-sharing service, has agreed to provide a ride worth up to $20 to WordCamp participants who are not already clients. Attendees, including speakers and sponsors, will get the ride code at the event.

Faces of WordPress: Stanley Straughter

Stanley Straughter

Stanley Straughter

How were you first introduced to WordPress?
My wife has been a blogger for a few years and she used WordPress. She introduced me to WordPress when she first started, but I began paying attention last year.

What do you like about it?
I like the plugins and the community. I also like that it’s not difficult to get assistance if you have a particular issue.

What do you do with WP now?
I exclusively use WordPress to build all my websites. I also provide WordPress Site Maintenance and Security.

How as the WP community helped you?
Being friendly and anwering “NewBie” as well as “Difficult” questions.

Did learning WP lead to any significant changes in your life?
Learning WP allowed me to create more complex and dynamic web-sites at a fraction of the cost it used to, because I no longer have to hire programmers. I simply find a 5 Star Plugin that does what I need and put it to work.

What would you tell a new user? A new developer?
It may be difficult at first, but stick with it, there are plenty of people willing to assist you like myself to be successful with the software.

There are so many training classes and tutorials on YouTube and elsewhere to really get you going if you’re willing to invest the time.

Anything else we should know?
I love Music and the Internet, I mean, what else is there?

BECOME A FACE OF WORDPRESS

Faces of WordPress: Kristina Parish (2015 Speaker)

Kristina Parish

Kristina Parish

How were you first introduced to WordPress?
I started creating websites for friends and bands in the mid 2000’s. WordPress became my preferred platform after a friend introduced me to it.

What do you like about it?
Wordpress allows me to create something fully customized, from design through development, that also empowers/enables my clients to control and manage their content effectively. WordPress is a flexible tool, meaning you can make it as loose or as buttoned up as you desire. The more I continue to work with WordPress, the more I am able to abstract it and make it work for my purposes in a lean and intuitive way. It seems to grow with you, which is great.

What do you do with WP now?
Nearly every project I design and/or build is run on WordPress. My essential tool for fully customizing the experience (both from a front-end and admin perspective) is Advanced Custom Fields. At this point, this plugin goes hand-in-hand with every install.

How as the WP community helped you?
The internet community is obviously essential — I can’t even begin to imagine how many times a thread or forum on wordpress.org has helped me solve a problem. Furthermore, the local Nashville WP meetup group proved to be the launchpad into my current role with Athletics. Had I not attended the meetup last September. I would not have met these fine folks who happened to be speaking that day. Now I work with all of the tools they presented during that meetup and it’s great.

Did learning WP lead to any significant changes in your life?
Yes — it’s made me 100% self-sufficient through various stages of my career, either working as a freelancer or as a member of a team in an agency environment. It allows me to build what I design in a clean way, and it’s fun to collaborate with others who are also passionate about WordPress.

What would you tell a new user? A new developer?
Dip your toes in and don’t be afraid to break things…many things. It will get better with practice and experience, just like everything else in life.

Anything else we should know?
I once broke my leg in two places when I was 4 because I believed I was Wonder Woman.

BECOME A FACE OF WORDPRESS

Faces of WordPress: Corey Maass (2015 Speaker)

Corey Maass

Corey Maass

  • Corey Maass
  • Full-time WordPress developer, part-time entrepreneur
  • gelform
  • @gelform

How were you first introduced to WordPress?
I maintained dozens of websites for friends who were starving artists and musicians, so like all good developers I built my own CMS. When none of my starving artist and musician friends wanted to pay for it, I switched them all to WordPress so they could maintain their sites themselves.

What do you like about it?
It’s so prevalent. It’s becoming a web standard, so it’s easier to suggest, develop for and contribute to.

What do you do with WP now?
Full-time development.

How as the WP community helped you?
There’s so much discussed and written about WordPress online now, I rarely have a question that hasn’t been answered.

Did learning WP lead to any significant changes in your life?
Yes! I was a full-time PHP developer, and got my first full-time WordPress job about 4 years ago. Suddenly I was dropped into the deep end, and had to *really* learn the patterns and best practices. Which lead me to an awesome community, a lot more work, and a new revenue stream.

What would you tell a new user? A new developer?
For users – have a clear intent for your site, and hire someone to set it up for you.

For developers – setup a site you don’t care about, and break things. Most people start because they need a website that matters, so they’re afraid of it.

Anything else we should know?
I also build non-WordPress web apps like WhatWeDid.Today, cronForWP.com and TimerDoro.com.

BECOME A FACE OF WORDPRESS

Faces of WordPress: Cindy Cullen (2015 Speaker)

Cindy Cullen

Cindy Cullen

How were you first introduced to WordPress?
I had a blog when WordPress came out in 2003. I thought it was cool, but continued using HTML (and a little bit of Frontpage occasionally since I’m not a designer). I paid attention to WordPress through the years and watched it ‘grow up.’ More and more clients started asking me to help them with their WP sites and more and more designers hired me to fix or modify plugins and/or themes since I’m a programmer first and foremost. Once I saw how awesome WordPress can be for the whole site (sometime around 2012), I began using it exclusively to build new websites.

What do you like about it?
I like that it can be customized to do anything we can dream up. I love that it’s open source. I love the community surrounding WordPress. I love that it’s easy enough for my kids to use and yet sophisticated enough for most any website or web application. I love that there are practically a billion themes out there that are easily accessible and available so that my clients, regardless of budget, can get a website.

What do you do with WP now?
I mostly build web applications with WP or customize plugins and themes for my clients. In addition, I host and protect WP sites for my clients who don’t want to worry about their sites getting hacked. Unfortunately, I also fix a lot of WP sites who didn’t have any protection and therefore, have been broken into. It definitely pays to have protection.

How as the WP community helped you?
The WP community has helped me to learn about new plugins, themes, services and tools available to the WP community that I might not otherwise know about. I meet with other developers and discuss how we have solved certain problems using WP. I’ve also called upon other WP developers, and been called upon, to help out with business logic, tools or solutions.

Did learning WP lead to any significant changes in your life?
WordPress has increased my bottom line substantially through my security and protection services. It’s also made development much faster. I’ve met many Designers, whom I wouldn’t have met otherwise, because they’ve needed help customizing or extending WordPress. WordPress is a wonderful tool that anyone can use to build a website and seems to be very popular with designers because it doesn’t require them to learn much about coding and development. But, when they do need help, they often call me.

What would you tell a new user? A new developer?
I would tell a brand new user to make sure they have good hosting, good backups, good security, and update, update, update! WordPress is open source, meaning that everyone, including those who aren’t so friendly, can find the security holes in themes, plugins and the core code. When those security holes are patched, they are announced to the world, which gives hackers the specifics they need to break into WP sites more easily unless the sites are updated almost immediately. Update and backup everything often.

I would tell new developers, you made the right choice! Get involved with the community and never stop learning!

Anything else we should know?
I love teaching and training and often have about 5 to 10 interns and/or junior programmers working with me in my business. It helps them get the experience they need to get a job (unless I keep them 😉 ) and helps my clients get more affordable help with their sites. I think it works well for all of us.

Faces of WordPress: John Housholder

john housholder

John Housholder

How were you first introduced to WordPress?
Seven years ago, I needed a website built fast and my sister-in-law, who lived in Birmingham, invited me to a WordCamp. I learned a lot fast and next thing you know, I started making a living using WordPress.

What do you like about it?
I like that there is a small barrier to entry to use the platform. If you don’t know a lot or any code, you can still use it. This creates a large worldwide user base.

What do you do with WP now?
I run Ah So Designs, a local WordPress development company. I no longer develop websites for our company. I focus on business development within WordPress and UI/UX design.

How as the WP community helped you?
Five or so years ago, I saw Randy (Hicks) at a local coffee shop and we started WP Nashville. The community has been great! I’ve learned a lot through others and have made most of my employee hires from people I’ve met within the community.

Did learning WP lead to any significant changes in your life?
I quit my corporate job, married a beautiful woman, got a dog named Dunn, and now help run a WordPress company. None, well besides the dog, would have been possible without WordPress. I’d like to say my wife married my because I am incredibly good looking, but let’s be realistic, she really likes to watch me make websites because she likes dorks 🙂

What would you tell a new user? A new developer?
Play with WordPress and have fun! When it stops being fun, hire a professional who is fun.

Anything else we should know?
I’ve got friends in low places…

BECOME A FACE OF WORDPRESS

Faces of WordPress: Randy Hicks

Randy Hicks Nashville

Randy Hicks

How were you first introduced to WordPress?
A friend in 2007 mentioned WordPress and that I could build websites with it. I jumped on board and haven’t looked back since.

What do you like about it?
I like that it has a vibrant community that continues to stay on top of web standards. I also like that it’s an open source project. WordPress has helped more people publish to the web than probably any software out there.

What do you do with WP now?
I develop custom sites and applications.

How as the WP community helped you?
The local community has pulled me out of the home office! I now have a over a dozen developer friends I could contact at any point to ask questions. I’m convinced that I could move to any city that has a WordPress meetup and run a successful business. The WordPress community is such an all inclusive group that I feel included everywhere!

Did learning WP lead to any significant changes in your life?
Learning to code php changed my day job, but using WP as the engine behind my php boosted me out of manual labor.

What would you tell a new user? A new developer?
Take the plunge! Start simple, join the meetup group and come out to all the meetings. Building a site whether it’s a blog or a professional product is very rewarding and WordPress makes it easy and forward compatible!

BECOME A FACE OF WORDPRESS

Hotels options now available!

We have secured two hotel options for all attendees who are coming in from out of town, and we are working on some others. We will announce them here and on the @WordCampNash twitter feed when we get more information.

We hope you find Nashville to be a comfortable stay and look forward to meeting you at WordCamp!

Courtyard Nashville Brentwood
103 East Park Drive, Brentwood, TN 37027

  • Rate: $115.00
  • Rate Reference: WordCamp Room Block
  • Available dates: May 15th and/ or 16th
  • Cutoff Date: Friday, April 24, 2015
  • Call Marriott Reservations at 800-321-2211 or 615-371-9200

Extended Stay America – Brentwood South
9020 Church St. E. Brentwood, TN 37207

  • Rate: Single: $66.49 + Tax, Double: $80.74 + Tax, King: $71.24 + Tax
  • Rate Reference: WordCamp Room Block
  • Available dates: May 15th and/ or 16th
  • Cutoff Date: Friday, May 1, 2015
  • Call Reservations at 615-377-7847