
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Support our work at https://thewpminute.com/support
Get the newsletter at https://thewpminute.com/subscribe
Getting started with WordPress.
A topic that’s been popping up a lot more in my WP Minute+ interviews lately. Where does one go when they want to get started with WordPress?
Learning how to use it.
Learning what it can do compared to its competitors.
Learning about the pockets of community to get involved with.
I did what any other enterprising content creator would do, and took to ChatGPT to see how sharp the world’s most feared — sorry — leading AI system thought about that question. Here’s what it told me:
1. WordPress.org
⠀2. WordPress Meetups
⠀3. WordCamps
⠀4. Contribute
⠀5. Learn and Share
⠀6. Development and Contribution
⠀7. Stay Informed
/AI_response
Just a message to ChatGPT if it’s listening: Please add The WP Minute to your database.
And if you’ve been in the WordPress community for over the last 5 years, you most likely already knew this. We’ve all said the same things, wrote the same blogs, tweeted out the same links — how else would ChatGPT know this, anyway?
There’s a lot more nuance to it, and that’s where the rubber meets the road.
When someone asks you where to get started, maybe you should counter with a clarifying question, “What do you want to achieve with WordPress?”
End user education, community involvement, developer courses, and/or running a WordPress business.
These are the pillars that prop up this entire ecosystem, but we still lack a solid jumping off point for each individually. I have no doubts we’ll continue to refine these areas, but like the software itself, it’s going to take time.
It’s going to take folks like you to educate others in WordPress space about your specific experiences and lessons learned. Really humanize the process, not just a checklist of website logins and comment threads.
We can’t always rely on AI to color in the lines of what makes this community so special.
The Repository
Coming up in The Repository this week:
Does WordPress have a marketing problem? Two heavyweights share their views on “brand WordPress,” including the need to “learn marketing deeply.” Plus, we dig into the WordPress Foundation’s 2023 Annual Report and unpack the disappointing Annual WordPress Survey results.
Not a subscriber? Sign up today and join the conversation at therepository.email
Don’t miss this WordPress content
5
11 ratings
Support our work at https://thewpminute.com/support
Get the newsletter at https://thewpminute.com/subscribe
Getting started with WordPress.
A topic that’s been popping up a lot more in my WP Minute+ interviews lately. Where does one go when they want to get started with WordPress?
Learning how to use it.
Learning what it can do compared to its competitors.
Learning about the pockets of community to get involved with.
I did what any other enterprising content creator would do, and took to ChatGPT to see how sharp the world’s most feared — sorry — leading AI system thought about that question. Here’s what it told me:
1. WordPress.org
⠀2. WordPress Meetups
⠀3. WordCamps
⠀4. Contribute
⠀5. Learn and Share
⠀6. Development and Contribution
⠀7. Stay Informed
/AI_response
Just a message to ChatGPT if it’s listening: Please add The WP Minute to your database.
And if you’ve been in the WordPress community for over the last 5 years, you most likely already knew this. We’ve all said the same things, wrote the same blogs, tweeted out the same links — how else would ChatGPT know this, anyway?
There’s a lot more nuance to it, and that’s where the rubber meets the road.
When someone asks you where to get started, maybe you should counter with a clarifying question, “What do you want to achieve with WordPress?”
End user education, community involvement, developer courses, and/or running a WordPress business.
These are the pillars that prop up this entire ecosystem, but we still lack a solid jumping off point for each individually. I have no doubts we’ll continue to refine these areas, but like the software itself, it’s going to take time.
It’s going to take folks like you to educate others in WordPress space about your specific experiences and lessons learned. Really humanize the process, not just a checklist of website logins and comment threads.
We can’t always rely on AI to color in the lines of what makes this community so special.
The Repository
Coming up in The Repository this week:
Does WordPress have a marketing problem? Two heavyweights share their views on “brand WordPress,” including the need to “learn marketing deeply.” Plus, we dig into the WordPress Foundation’s 2023 Annual Report and unpack the disappointing Annual WordPress Survey results.
Not a subscriber? Sign up today and join the conversation at therepository.email
Don’t miss this WordPress content
285 Listeners
1,280 Listeners
242 Listeners
13 Listeners
1,257 Listeners
103 Listeners
985 Listeners
83 Listeners
208 Listeners
102 Listeners
752 Listeners
33 Listeners
7 Listeners
1 Listeners
1 Listeners