Potential WCN15 Speakers – Don’t Be Shy!

Calling all WordPress fans – especially those from Tennessee (we count Southern Kentucky and Northern Alabama in that) – we want your session proposals.

If you’ve thought about presenting before but hesitated this is the year to try. WordCamp Nashville is soliciting proposals for three tracks – loosely defined below – and we need your help to make 2015 kick some butt.

Following WordCamp Central Guidelines, the Nashville organizing team aims to have 80 percent of presenters from this region. We’d love to see new topics and likely won’t select a speaker and session presented at another WordCamp in the last six months.

Ideas to get you thinking

WordCamp Nashville friends

WordCamp Nashville speakers have eager, friendly audiences wanting to learn.

At past Nashville WordCamps, some of the most popular sessions have been on using a specific tool (like Gravity Forms) with WordPress or scaling a product into a WordPress-focused business (Ninja Forms). Security concerns haven’t gone away. Our WP devs are all chatting about Jetty and the REST API. Subscription sites are a big deal these days, as is WordPress and marketing integration. And WP users who aren’t developers always want to know what plugins they should use and how to figure out what is going on when stuff stops working.

We know you have ideas – so do it! Feel free to submit more than one proposal. Submission deadline is Friday, April 3, because we want the schedule set well before we ring the bell to start WordCamp Nashville. Okay, we don’t really ring a bell, the WordCamp Nashville is May 16.

People as well as topics will fall along a spectrum so don’t worry too much about where your proposed track might fit. We help with that. To get some ideas, check out sessions from prior Nashville WordCamps:
WordCamp Nashville 2014
WordCamp  Nashville 2013

And here’s a look at upcoming sessions in St. Louis, which is this weekend, and Atlanta, which is later this month:

WordCamp St. Louis
WordCamp Atlanta

Submit already. You know you want to.

I’m ready. Let’s do this. 

How we loosely define user levels

WCN15 Venue

Nashville School of Law is the WordCamp Nashville venue again this year.

Generally, we want users to define their own level of knowledge by reading into the text for themselves.The definitions for the terms User, Super User & Developer should imply an area of interest rather than a level of required knowledge. All WordCamp attendees are invited to attend any session, regardless of skill level, and can switch back and forth between tracks at any time. Still, we put together these guidelines to help both attendees and speakers pinpoint where they’ll get the most out of their WordCamp experience.

User (Beginner)
A user can input text and upload media to construct a post. The user probably does not yet feel comfortable modifying code (CSS, HTML, etc.) yet to customize the available settings of a theme or a plugin. Is comfortable or getting comfortable within the admin and publishing content. Interested in learning how to use WordPress on a functional level. Functional level is defined as the following:

  • Publishing content: pages and posts
  • Adding a widget, a theme, a plugin
  • Uploading images
  • Adding a user
  • Other

Super User (Intermediate)
A super user is very comfortable with the wp-admin. They probably ‘knows just enough to be dangerous’ – that is they are comfortable enough with WordPress to make modifications to their project, but also to troubleshoot when things may go awry through experimenting. Has installed plugins and themes. Has an understanding of the pitfalls surrounding plugin and theme compatibility. Interested in learning complex uses of WordPress:

  • Utilizing specific combinations of plugins and theme for a target use.
  • In-depth understanding of large plugins: caching, ecommerce, galleries, SEO, forms, etc.
  • WordPress as an application.
  • Other

Developer (Advanced)
A developer is comfortable with all of the skills of a ‘super user’ and is interested in or currently is utilizing WordPress to build themes, plugins, and entire projects from scratch. Has an interest in learning about following, on any level, as they directly apply to WordPress:

  • Scripting languages: HTML, CSS, PHP and/ or JavaScript
  • Theme and/or plugin development
  • Third party integrations
  • WordPress as an application
  • Other

WordPress users at all levels want to learn new skills. So step up!

Submit a session.

Faces of WordPress: Brett Shumaker

Brett Shumaker

Brett Shumaker

How were you first introduced to WordPress?
I first got into WordPress in 2008 just after I graduated from Austin Peay State University. I had a B.F.A. in graphic design and no design job. I was connected with a local freelance designer who wanted to start building websites for her clients. We looked at Joomla, Drupal, and even (I think) a very early iteration of LightCMS before landing on WordPress.

What do you like about it?
I love the community aspect of WordPress. I’m a self-taught developer so it was very helpful early on that there was a place I could go to ask questions and get feedback. It really helped me understand what was going on with my code so I could start to move beyond just copy/pasting code into my projects.

What do you do with WP now?
I’m currently the lead developer with Ah So Designs here in town. I’m responsible for building all custom functionality our clients need. This can be anything from integrating with third party services like Instagram or Placester to setting up e-commerce and custom post types. In my freelance work, I’ve been focusing on custom plugin projects.

How as the WP community helped you?
Locally, it’s allowed me to meet and work with other developers. Being self-taught and working for small companies, I was always the only dev in the building so I never had anyone to bounce ideas off of to know if I was “doing it right.” I’ve also gotten connected with clients, and I got my current job through the local community.

Did learning WP lead to any significant changes in your life?
Definitely. WordPress has opened up a ton of career opportunities for me. Having a design background along with the ability to code some fairly complex functionality allowed me to go full-time freelance for a time. Knowing that I can fulfill both design and development tasks for a web project made that transition a *little* less scary.

What would you tell a new developer?
Use the codex, be ready to level-up your Google skills, and GO TO YOUR LOCAL MEETUP. And when you get to that meetup, don’t be afraid to ask questions. Anybody who knows more about development than you has been at your level before, so they know how it feels.

Anything else we should know?
Love dogs and have three: Lyla (Cavalier King Charles Spaniel), Ellie (English Bulldog), Molly (Italian Greyhound, Lab, Pit mix). From Ohio but have lived in Tennessee since 2003. Huge Ohio State fan…deal with it.

BECOME A FACE OF WORDPRESS

More Faces of WordPress

As a publishing platform, WordPress technology rocks. But what also makes WordPress amazing is the vast community of users, designers, coders, plugin developers and those many others who don’t fit neatly into any single category.

We started Faces of WordPress last year to highlight members of this global community who are based in Middle Tennessee. You can see the 2014 profiles here.

As WordCamp Nashville 2015 approaches, we continue this tradition – a second year makes it a tradition, right? This year, we ask you to take a few minutes to fill out our Faces of WordPress form, which will allow us to put together and publish more of them.

This is a great opportunity to show the diversity of our WordPress community and showcase how you use WordPress. The post will include a link to your primary site, your Twitter handle published and even a photograph showing your smiling or growling face – if you follow the directions within the form!

Please keep in mind the purpose here: Faces of WordPress highlights people and the platform and what it has allowed them to do. These are not advertorials, and the information you submit will be reviewed, edited if necessary and published by a person. Humor is acceptable; off-color language is not. A modest boast will be tolerated; overt promotional language will not be.

If you are reading this, you already are a face of WordPress. Why not make it official?

Take me to the Faces of WordPress form immediately!

It’s official: WordCamp Nashville 2015 is May 16

Book it! WordCamp Nashville 2015 is set for Saturday, May 16, at Nashville School of Law.

We believe WordCamp Nashville 2015 will be the best one yet. This one-day event, organized by members of the Nashville WordPress MeetUp, will have something for everybody. As past years, we will have three “tracks” to accommodate new users, intermediate users and developers. We also plan an expanded Help Desk, where people can receive one-on-one assistance, and small hands-on classes that require advance sign-up.

You may attend any session, regardless of experience level, but we will break sessions into three general categories.

Tickets, $20 each, are scheduled to go on sale March 25 and will include lunch and a t-shirt. Subscribe to our mailing list to stay in the loop ticket sales and other announcements, including lodging options, speaker submission deadlines, speaker selection and schedule updates.

WordCamp is all about community-building, and it takes a community to build a WordCamp. Submit an application to Become a Speaker or sign up to help. It is not too early to volunteer.

This is the third year we will hold the event at Nashville School of Law, 4013 Armory Oaks Drive, Nashville, TN, 37204. The venue has awesome rooms, ample parking and easy access from both Interstates 65 and 24.

So mark the date. May 16, 2015. Nashville WordCamp returns.

BECOME A SPEAKER

Wanted: WordCamp speakers who understand what WordPress users and developers want and need and can communicate it clearly. Because we want to showcase the depth of talent in Greater Nashville, preference will be given to local speakers who have not presented at other WordCamps.

Submit a speaker application.

BECOME A VOLUNTEER

Without volunteers we are nothing!

Months of planning and preparation come down to 8 hours on a Saturday in May, and a cadre of awesome volunteers makes the event run smoothly. WIth enough volunteers, we can make sure they also can attend some sessions. The day of the event we’ll need help with registration, room monitoring, coffee set-up, lunch distribution and clean-up.

We can’t comp volunteer tickets but we will show our appreciation in other ways.

Sign me up to volunteer!

BECOME PART OF IT

Stay informed about ticket sales, deadlines, session lineups and other great stuff.
Subscribe to the email list
Join WordPress Nashville on Facebook
Follow @wordcampnash & @wpnashville on Twitter

Nashville WordCamp 2015

Spread the Word(Press). WordCamp Nashville is Saturday, May 16