venerdì 26 giugno 2015

Argent: A Free Portfolio Theme for WordPress

Argent is a bold new portfolio theme that was launched on WordPress.com last week. The theme is centered around showcasing the work of visual artists such as designers, photographers, craft makers, painters, etc., with portfolio items featured prominently on the homepage template.

Argent was designed by Mel Choyce, co-author of the popular Flounder and Aventurine themes. Her designs are generally very focused and Argent is no exception. While the theme is well-suited to a wide range of creative professionals, it wasn’t designed to be an agency/business/blogging theme all in one. Argent is clearly a portfolio theme right out of the gate.

argent-screenshot

Artists won’t need to fight with this theme to simplify it down to something that’s easy to personalize. The theme’s customizer options allow you to display 3, 6, or 9 portfolio projects on the homepage template. It also includes controls for changing the header and background images and text colors.

All of the content on posts and pages is centered. There is no sidebar, but Argent includes support for three footer widget areas.

When used on a self-hosted WordPress site in combination with Jetpack and its Custom Content Types module, you can add portfolio projects. Each portfolio item includes support for a full-width image carousel. This is automatically generated from the first gallery included in the portfolio post.

argent-portfolio-gallery

One thing to appreciate about the blog section is that you don’t have to worry about having excessively large, oddly-shaped featured images to make it look like the demo. Argent’s blog archives template is simple with short, one-sentence excerpts and small rectangular featured images.

Typography is never an afterthought in Choyce’s designs, and Argent places a strong emphasis on readability. The theme features the contrasting “Alegreya” font for headers and quotes and “Cabin” for paragraph text. It also includes styling for right and left pullquotes to emphasize text.

If you’re on the hunt for a new portfolio theme, check out a live demo of Argent. Given the small number of design options to configure, artists will have an easy time getting their works online.

The theme hasn’t yet hit WordPress.org but should land there soon. In the meantime, self-hosted WordPress blog owners can download it from the sidebar of the theme’s description page on WordPress.com.

giovedì 25 giugno 2015

WP TogetherJS Plugin Adds Real Time Collaboration to WordPress

If you’re collaborating with colleagues on a design or trying to show a client a few changes you’ve been adding to their website, the easiest way to get on the same page is with some form of screen sharing software. However, many of these tools are a pain to hook up and sometimes they require both parties to have accounts with the service.

WP TogetherJS is quite possibly the most simple real time collaboration plugin I’ve ever tried with WordPress. It seamlessly integrates Mozilla’s free, open source TogetherJS library to add real time collaboration tools to any website.

togetherjs-enable

TogetherJS’ basic features include:

  • Collaborative browsing
  • Shared cursors
  • Text chat
  • Audio chat via WebRTC
  • Real Time Content Sync

WP TogetherJS has no options to configure. After installing it, you can be collaborating with a visitor in under a minute. TogetherJS can be enabled with one click from the WordPress admin bar. The person invited to the collaboration session simply visits the unique TogetherJS URL – there are no accounts to sign up for or hoops to jump through.

start-togetherjs

Once the other person opens the link, you’ll be able to see each other’s mouse/cursor position and clicks while tracking each other’s browsing. You can even invite multiple visitors to participate in the session.

togetherjs-example

Please note that this plugin is not useful for collaborative content creation. You’re still going to run into WordPress’ post locking feature, implemented in 3.6 using the Heartbeat API, if you attempt to edit a post together. WordPress’ publishing tools cater to single author publishing workflows, and the WP TogetherJS wasn’t designed to overcome this.

post-locking

The plugin is more useful for quick training sessions, live support, client meetings, and any situation where you need a quick way to share screens during a conversation. If you want to get a better idea of how it works, the TogetherJS website has a number of live demos you can launch near the bottom of the page.

WP TogetherJS was created by software developer Ryan Nielson and is a super lightweight plugin – it simply enqueues the Together.js script from Mozilla. If you need a quick way to collaborate with a visitor, download WP TogetherJS from the WordPress.org plugin directory.

WPWeekly Episode 196 – Interview with Joshua Millage and Mark Nelson of LifterLMS

In this week’s episode, Marcus Couch and I are joined by Joshua Millage, host of the Infusioncast and LMScast podcasts and Mark Nelson, lead developer of codeBOX and LifterLMS.

In the first half of the show, Millage explains the versatility and power of Infusionsoft, especially when it’s integrated with WordPress. He shares what motivated him to create the Infusioncast podcast, a show dedicated to covering the Infusionsoft community.

During the second half of the show, we learn what LifterLMS is capable of and discuss course management software in general.

Plugins Picked By Marcus:

Quick Save lets you update posts and pages using the ALT key in addition to clicking the Publish and Update button.

WP Revealer is a WordPress content display plugin that hides content and displays it at a precise time.

WPWeekly Meta:

Next Episode: Wednesday, July 1st 9:30 P.M. Eastern

Subscribe To WPWeekly Via Itunes: Click here to subscribe

Subscribe To WPWeekly Via RSS: Click here to subscribe

Subscribe To WPWeekly Via Stitcher Radio: Click here to subscribe

Listen To Episode #196:

How to Properly Use the More Tag in WordPress

Do you want to a show a summary of your article on your homepage with a read more link? WordPress comes with two built-in methods that allows you to do that. One of these methods is known as the More Tag. In this article, we will show you how to properly use the More Tag in WordPress.

Adding the More Tag in WordPress

Adding the More Tag in your posts is quite simple. Simply start by writing a new post or edit an existing one.

Once you’re done writing, you will need to click on a line where you would like to end the summary and show a read more link. Next, click on the More Tag button from the toolbar.

Adding the more tag in a WordPress post using the visual editor

You will notice that a dashed line with ‘More’ in the center will appear in your blog post. You can insert the more tag anywhere in the post, like in the mid sentence, in the middle of a paragraph, or after the first paragraph.

If you are using the text editor, then you can use the ‘more’ button in the toolbar or manually enter the more tag like this:

<!--more-->

What’s the Advantage of using More Tag vs Excerpts

Remember earlier we mentioned that WordPress comes with two built-in methods for showing the post summary with read more link. Those methods are More Tag and Excerpts.

You can add an excerpt for any post using the Excerpt box in your post editor screen. If you do not see that box, then click on the screen options tab on the top right hand corner and check the excerpt option.

This will display an excerpt meta box below your post editor.

Excerpt meta box below post editor in WordPress

While excerpts may sound like an easier option, there are two downsides to using an excerpt.

The first is that excerpts are completely theme dependent. If your theme does not use the_excerpt tag, then no matter what you type in the excerpt box, your theme will show the full content of your post on your homepage and archive pages.

The second downside to using excerpts is that they do not show images or any other formatting for that matter. They’re displayed as plain text.

Whereas the More Tag is completely theme independent meaning it will work on all well-coded WordPress themes. Second, it allows you to display images and all post formatting such as links, quotes, bold/italics, etc in your post summary.

What’s the Downside of using More Tag

The biggest downside of using the WordPress More Tag is that it is something you have to manually enter in all of your posts whereas excerpts are automated.

While WordPress allows you to enter a custom excerpts in the excerpt box, it can also auto-generate an excerpt based on your character count.

Depending on your preference, this may be a downside.

The other downside of using a More Tag is if you use a theme that uses excerpts, then it will override the More Tag and provide an excerpt with the length defined by your theme.

Whether you use More Tag or excerpts, it’s important that you show a summary on your homepage and archive pages rather than showing full content. See our article on the topic, full Text vs summary (excerpt) in your WordPress archive pages.

Common WordPress More Tag Problems

The biggest issue we hear with WordPress More Tag not working is when it comes to pages.

By default, you cannot use the More Tag in WordPress pages. However, there is a quick fix that allows you to add read more tag in WordPress pages.

Another common issue is more tag not working on homepage. If you are using a static page as your custom homepage, then the link above should fix the issue.

The only other reason why more tag won’t work on the homepage is if your theme is designed to show excerpts on the front page in which case your more tag is being overridden, and you should use excerpts instead.

We hope this article helped you learn how to properly use the more tag in WordPress. You may also want to check out our CSS Hero, a WordPress plugin that helps make design customization easy – see our full CSS Hero review.

If you liked this article, then please subscribe to our YouTube Channel for WordPress video tutorials. You can also find us on Twitter and Facebook.

To leave a comment please visit How to Properly Use the More Tag in WordPress on WPBeginner.

martedì 23 giugno 2015

How to Better Manage WordPress Pages with Nested Pages

Do you use pages in WordPress? If so, then you probably understand how frustrating it is to manage a site with a lot of WordPress pages. The default WordPress interface doesn’t allow you to easily reorder your pages, build relationships between them, sort them, etc. In this article, we will show you how to better manage your WordPress pages with Nested Pages.

Why use Nested Pages?

Nested Pages WordPress Plugin

Nested Pages is the best plugin for managing WordPress pages, and it is completely FREE.

It comes with an intuitive drag-and-drop interface for managing your page structure and page ordering. Nested Pages enhances the quick-edit functionality to make it easy for managing a lot of pages at once.

The sortable tree view of your site’s page structure is a dream come true for folks who’re using WordPress as a CMS.

Aside from these key features, it also automatically generate a native WordPress menu that matches your page structure and allows you to create multiple pages at once which will surely save a lot of time. Not to mention, you can use Nested Pages on any custom post type.

Anyone who runs a WordPress site with a lot of pages will fall in love with Nested Pages immediately.

It’s still shocking that a plugin of this caliber is completely free because the problem it’s solving is totally worth paying for.

If you are just starting out with WordPress, then you might want to read more about the difference between WordPress posts and pages.

How to Use Nested Pages to Manage WordPress Pages

First thing you need to do is install and activate the Nested Pages plugin. Once activated, it works out of the box. You can simply go to the pages screen in your WordPress admin area to see it in action.

Nested Pages

You can simply drag and drop to reorder pages. You can also create child pages by simply moving them below a parent page and then moving them slightly to the right. You can also create new child pages by clicking on the child page button next to any page.

Toolbar next to pages for quick actions

Unlike other page management plugin in WordPress, Nested Pages allows you to keep the coveted quick edit button. The quick edit interface in Nested Pages is cleaner and easy on eyes.

Nested Pages Quick Edit

Creating Navigation Menus Using Nested Pages

Many WordPress sites use pages as their main site structure and add it in their navigation menus. Up until now, this process required multiple steps because you would have to first create the pages, then create a menu, and then add all the pages to it along with reordering them.

Nested Pages plugin makes it super simple. After you have arranged your pages, you can simply check the Sync Menu checkbox. This will replicate your page structure into your navigation menus.

Sync your pages layout with your WordPress navigation menu

You can control how each page appears in the navigation menus without leaving the pages screen. Simply click on the link icon next to a page or click on the Add link button at the top.

This will bring up a popup where you can add a navigation label and URL for the link. You can choose to hide the link in the nested pages or hide it in the menus.

Add link to menu from nested pages screen

Adding Multiple Pages At Once Using Nested Pages

Another great feature of Nested Pages is the ability to quickly create multiple new pages at once. This feature is particularly useful if you already know what your page structure would look like.

You can start adding multiple WordPress pages by simply clicking on the Add multiple button at the top.

Add multiple pages quickly

This will bring up a new popup window where you can provide a page title, select status, author, and template. Click on the plus icon button to add another page. Repeat the process for all the pages you want to create and then click on the add button.

Adding multiple pages in nested pages

Note that the pages you create will be empty, and you will have to edit them individually. Also you cannot set parent or child pages from multiple pages popup. You will have to set them as child or parent when you are done adding them.

Enabling Nested Pages for Other Post Types

You can enable nested pages for any default or custom post types in WordPress. Simply visit Settings » Nested Pages in the WordPress admin and click on the post types tab. Next, select the post types where you want to enable nested pages functionality and then save changes.

Enabling Nested Pages for other post types in WordPress

We hope this article helped you learn how to better manage your WordPress pages with Nested Pages. You may also want to see our guide on how to display a list of child pages for a parent page in WordPress.

If you liked this article, then please subscribe to our YouTube Channel for WordPress video tutorials. You can also find us on Twitter and Facebook.

To leave a comment please visit How to Better Manage WordPress Pages with Nested Pages on WPBeginner.

11 Ways to Optimize Your LinkedIn Profile for More Exposure

Are you getting the most out of your LinkedIn personal profile? Interested in ways to drive traffic to your website? LinkedIn offers many overlooked ways to optimize your profile, helping more people discover you and promote your business. In this article you’ll discover 11 tips you might not be using on your LinkedIn profile, but […]

This post 11 Ways to Optimize Your LinkedIn Profile for More Exposure first appeared on Social Media Examiner.
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Conditionally Hide BuddyPress Profile Field Groups Based on User Role

buddypress-conditional-field-groups-featured

For many BuddyPress-powered social networks, profile field groups do not work as a one-size-fits-all container. This is especially true for sites with a more complex and varied user base.

By default, BuddyPress displays all profile field groups to all users, whether they are applicable or not. The new BuddyPress Conditional Field Groups plugin is one way to address this problem and provide more flexibility for administrators in field group creation.

The plugin, created by WordPress developer Tanner Moushey, allows administrators to hide a field group based on user roles. This makes it possible to collect and display different sets of information based on selections assigned in the plugin’s settings panel.

buddypress-conditional-field-groups-settings

As all field groups default to visible to all users, the field groups that are checked in the settings will not be shown for the corresponding user role on the front end. For example, for users with author or contributor roles, the site can feature additional profile fields related to their specific roles in the community while hiding that field group for all other roles. Here’s a quick demo:

bp-conditional-profile-field-groups-demo

Combine it with the Conditional Profile Fields plugin and you have a great deal of flexibility.

Of course, this plugin only applies on sites where members have been neatly divided into user roles by an administrator. Since these roles are generally assigned based on publishing capabilities, this plugin is likely useful for sites that are running an active blog.

If Moushey were to further extend BuddyPress Conditional Field Groups plugin, it would be useful to be able to hide field groups based on member type, as defined by any plugin utilizing the new Member Type API added in BuddyPress 2.2. This would greatly expand the usefulness of the plugin for more communities.

The plugin in its current form is a valuable tool for BuddyPress-powered communities that rely heavily on WordPress user roles to define capabilities for a diverse user base. BuddyPress Conditional Field Groups is available for free on WordPress.org.

How to Launch Your Product Using Facebook

Are you launching a new product or service? Want to create buzz and get the word out to the right people? Facebook is a great way to promote the launch of a product or service and generate excitement. To be successful, you need to plan your content, write your posts and make good use of […]

This post How to Launch Your Product Using Facebook first appeared on Social Media Examiner.
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sabato 20 giugno 2015

Facebook Growth: How to Create Huge Facebook Communities Without Advertising

Wondering how to grow your Facebook following without resorting to paid advertising? Want to discover the secrets to getting more fans and driving them to your blog? To learn how one marketer has built several massive Facebook communities, all through organic growth, I interview Collin Cottrell. More About This Show The Social Media Marketing podcast […]

This post Facebook Growth: How to Create Huge Facebook Communities Without Advertising first appeared on Social Media Examiner.
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WordPress for Android Version 4.1 Says Goodbye to the Hamburger Button

4.1-readerWordPress for Android version 4.1 is sporting some major design changes. Navigation in the app has been redesigned to remove the the hamburger button in favor of four simplified tabs spanning the top of the screen.

The ubiquitous hamburger icon, used on apps and websites for years, is slowly falling out of fashion on the web. While the side navigation drawer does a good job of keeping nav items out of sight, it comes at the cost of user engagement. Hamburger menus are also inconvenient for one-handed device operation.

Version 4.1 of WordPress for Android has been redesigned to display a tabbed action bar with quick access to your sites, the reader, user account settings, and notifications. The sites menu will allow you to manage any of your connected sites and includes a short menu for publishing, stats, theme customization, and access to the full dashboard.

tag-autocompletionAnother new feature in 4.1 is tag auto-completion. When adding a tag on the post settings screen, users will now receive suggestions (based on existing tags) while typing.

Stats have also been improved to provide a noticeably faster viewing experience. The app now takes just a fraction of the time it previously required to load stats data. Interacting with this feature no longer feels like visiting a foreign land.

Overall the 4.1 release is a big leap forward for WordPress’ usability on Android. The navigation redesign is more intuitive and smaller features are continuing to be refined with each release. The 4.1 update should have already hit devices, so Android users can open up the app to check out everything that’s new.

venerdì 19 giugno 2015

Rijeka Will Host the First WordCamp Croatia in September

photo credit: WordCamp Croatia 2015
photo credit: WordCamp Croatia 2015

The very first WordCamp Croatia will be held in Rijeka the weekend of September 4-6. The WordPress community and the tech industry in general are growing in the Balkans. A large contingency of Croatian WordPress enthusiasts were present at neighboring Serbia’s first WordCamp in Belgrade earlier this year. The Croatian WP community has now grown large enough to host its own event.

WordPress didn’t start gaining popularity in Croatia until 2013, but the country is now home to four thriving WordPress meetups in Zagreb, Split, Pula, and Rijeka. Local organizers decided to band together to apply for a country-wide WordCamp, instead of dividing it into smaller ones. They plan to rotate the location every year.

Rijeka, the first host for WordCamp Croatia, is a multicultural city nestled on the Adriatic coast near Slovenia and Italy. It is well connected to nearby European capitals by air and train. Organizers are hoping to cultivate a “cozy and family–like atmosphere” for the event. HKD Sušak, the venue selected, has a capacity for up to 300 attendees.

WordCamp Croatia will be a three-day event that will include educational workshops and tracks on Friday, the full conference on Saturday, and a Contributor Day on Sunday. The call for speakers is open as of today and the deadline for proposals is July 5. Organizers will be accepting presentations in both English and Croatian. If you’re in the area and want to be part of the very first WordCamp Croatia, make sure to follow WP Croatia on Twitter for all the latest updates.

giovedì 18 giugno 2015

How to Get Results From Facebook Ads on a Budget

Are you using Facebook ads effectively for your business? Do you want to get results without spending a lot of money? By selecting a well-targeted audience with your Facebook ads, you can reach your goals without breaking the bank. In this article I’ll show you how to set up your Facebook ads to generate big […]

This post How to Get Results From Facebook Ads on a Budget first appeared on Social Media Examiner.
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New WP Live Search Plugin Utilizes the WP REST API

Yesterday Nick Haskins, creator of Aesop Story Engine, released a new search plugin for WordPress. WP Live Search utilizes the new WP REST API, in combination with Backbone.js and Underscore.js, to deliver live search results as the user types in a search query. The result is instantaneous searching that doesn’t require pressing enter or refreshing the page.

WP Live Search is very much a working prototype but also provides a practical example of the WP REST API in action. I tested the plugin and the short clip below shows an example of searching through thousands of articles. Each result is displayed neatly with its corresponding featured image.

wp-live-search

Haskins created the client-side search plugin to power the new search feature inside Lasso, his frontend editing plugin. He released the prototype on WordPress.org in order to get usability testing and feedback from a larger group of users. He’s also building the plugin as part of his day job, so it’s being developed with several different audiences in mind.

“Using the REST API was super important because we’re searching on ‘keyup’ and if that went through admin-ajax.php then shared hosts would likely melt down,” Haskins said. “So because it’s all client-side, it’s super lightweight and anything can run it.”

The feature is already built into Lasso but will not be released until Haskins has the chance to gather more feedback.

“I’m interested to see HOW users search, is the search too fast, is it too slow, etc.,” he said. “All of this will lead to a perfect search feature inside of Lasso.”

Haskins was previously hesitant to utilize the WP REST API before it has landed in WordPress core but the recent progress and momentum on the project inspired him to go for it.

“I was avoiding the REST API, but with a tentative merge this fall, and V2 going out, I think the time is ripe,” he said. “In using the REST API, I’ve learned that it’s very use case dependent and is really just another tool. There’s a time and place for it.”

WP Live Search is still under active development and may not be suitable for use in production just yet, but is functional and ready for testing. Here’s how to take it for a spin:

  1. Install WP Live Search.
  2. Install the official WP REST API plugin.
  3. Add the shortcode [wp_live_search] to a page.

The shortcode accepts a few attributes, including type, placeholder, results, and target. More details are available on the plugin’s description page.

Haskins plans to add support for custom post types in the next major update to the plugin. If you’re interested in contributing, you can find WP Live Search on GitHub.

How to Republish, Repurpose and Reinvent Your Content Using LinkedIn Publisher

Want to give existing content new life and greater visibility? Looking for a way to publish more often without much extra work? Use LinkedIn Publisher to consistently provide useful content for your audience, gain visibility and build your professional identity without writing anything new! In this article you’ll discover three ways to give existing content […]

This post How to Republish, Repurpose and Reinvent Your Content Using LinkedIn Publisher first appeared on Social Media Examiner.
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martedì 16 giugno 2015

How to Add Social Media Icons to WordPress Menus

Do you want to add social media icons in your WordPress site? While WordPress does not come with a social media profiles section, you can easily use WordPress navigation menus to add and display social media media icons. In this article, we will show you how to add social media icons to WordPress menus.

The biggest advantage of adding social media icons using WordPress menus instead of another plugin is that you have the ability to change the order they appear with a simple drag-and-drop interface. You can also display them just about anywhere such as your sidebar or another menu location.

Adding Social Media Icons to WordPress Menus Using a Plugin

This method was suggested to us by our founder, Syed Balkhi, who has a simple custom menu showing social media icons.

Social media icons in a menu displayed in WordPress sidebar

First thing you need to do is install and activate the Menu Social Icons plugin. After activation, you need to visit Appearance » Menus in your WordPress dashboard area to start adding social icons.

Before you start adding links, you will need to create a new menu by clicking on the create new menu link. You can give your menu an appropriate title such as Social Menu.

Creating a new navigation menu in WordPress

Next, click on the custom links tab on the left side, and you will see the social media icons below the link text and URL fields. All you need to do is click on a social media icon and enter your social profile URL. When you’re done, click on add to menu button. Repeat this process for all social media profiles that you want to add.

Adding social media icons to a WordPress menu

Once you have added your social media profile icons to the menu, you need to choose a menu location. Depending on your theme, you may have multiple menu locations where you can display your social icons menu.

If you do not have menu locations, then you can always show the social media icons in your WordPress sidebar.

Adding Social Media Icons Menu in Sidebar

You can display your social icons menu in any WordPress sidebar or widget-ready area by going to Appearance » Widgets in your WordPress admin area. Once there, simply drag-and-drop a custom menu widget to your sidebar.

Adding social media icons to WordPress sidebar

In the widget settings, select the social menu you just created and then click on save button. You can now preview your site to see the social icons menu in action.

If your WordPress theme has multiple widget areas on different locations, then you can add social menu icons in those locations such as WordPress footer, header, below the post, etc.

Using FontAwesome Icons in WordPress Menus

The best part about Menu Social Icons plugin is that uses the beautiful FontAwesome library to add social media icons. While the plugin comes with the entire FontAwesome library, it only loads selected social media icons in your WordPress menus.

If you would like to use any other icon from FontAwesome, then you can do that as well.

First visit the FontAwesome library and select the icon that you want to use. For this example, we will add a RSS icon to social icons. Once you have selected your icon, you would need to add this code in your theme’s functions.php file or a site-specific plugin:

add_filter( 'storm_social_icons_networks', 'storm_social_icons_networks');
function storm_social_icons_networks( $networks ) {

    $extra_icons = array (
        '/feed' => array(                  // Enable this icon for any URL containing this text
            'name' => 'RSS',               // Default menu item label
            'class' => 'rss',              // Custom class
            'icon' => 'icon-rss',          // FontAwesome class
            'icon-sign' => 'icon-rss-sign' // May not be available. Check FontAwesome.
        ),
    );

    $extra_icons = array_merge( $networks, $extra_icons );
    return $extra_icons;

}

For adding other icons, you need to replace /feed with the URL of social network you are trying to add. Also replace rss with the name of the icon you want to add.

If you want to use FontAwesome in your WordPress posts, then check out our tutorial on how to use icon fonts in WordPress post editor.

Adding Your Own Social Media Icons in WordPress Menus

Menu social icons plugin uses FontAwesome icons in WordPress menus, but what if you wanted to use your own icon images? It’s definitely possible. Here is how you can add any custom image icons to WordPress menus.

First you need to install and activate the Menu Image plugin. Upon activation, you need to visit Appearances » Menus page where you will notice the menu image buttons under each menu item. Simply upload your icon image there.

Upload custom social media icons to WordPress menus

See our article on how to add image icons with navigation menus in WordPress for more detailed instructions.

We hope this article helped you learn how to add social media icons to WordPress menus. You may also want to take a look at our tutorial on how to style WordPress navigation menus.

If you liked this article, then please subscribe to our YouTube Channel for WordPress video tutorials. You can also find us on Twitter and Facebook.

To leave a comment please visit How to Add Social Media Icons to WordPress Menus on WPBeginner.

domenica 14 giugno 2015

Facebook Place Tips: This Week in Social Media

Welcome to our weekly edition of what’s hot in social media news. To help you stay up to date with social media, here are some of the news items that caught our attention. What’s New This Week Facebook Introduces Place Tips for Business Pages: “Place Tips gather useful information about a business or landmark (like […]

This post Facebook Place Tips: This Week in Social Media first appeared on Social Media Examiner.
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venerdì 12 giugno 2015

WP Featherlight: A New Lightbox Plugin for WordPress Images and Galleries

photo credit: neverland... - (license)
photo credit: neverland…(license)

WP Site Care recently launched its new WP Featherlight plugin on WordPress.org. While there are already hundreds of lightbox plugins available for WordPress, this one may prove to be the “lightest” of them all.

The plugin is essentially a wrapper for the Featherlight jQuery lightbox script created by Noel Bossart. Featherlight.js was designed to be very lightweight and is just 400 lines of JavaScript, 100 of CSS, and less than 6kB combined. It works on IE8+, all modern browsers, and on mobile platforms. The script is responsive and supports images, ajax, and iframes out of the box.

WP Featherlight solves a number of problems that WordPress users often encounter with lightbox plugins, many of which contain a load of heavy-handed styling that is difficult to override.

“We were having a really hard time finding a lightbox plugin that was simple to customize, but that was also lightweight, flexible, and didn’t add a bunch of bloat to our website,” WP Site Care founder Ryan Sullivan said in his post introducing the plugin.

The WP Site Care team opted to build their own solution on top of Featherlight.js. The resulting plugin provides a fast, minimalist style popup for images and galleries.

wp-featherlight-screenshot

The plugin includes built-in support for native WordPress galleries and Jetpack galleries. When you install it, there are no options to configure. It will automatically display all images and galleries in a lightbox. If you add some extra data attributes to your content, it’s also possible to display videos, iframes, and ajax content with WP Featherlight.

The demo video below shows how the plugin works with galleries to click from one image to the next while in the lightbox.

One common problem with WordPress lightbox plugins is that they usually load their scripts and styles on every page, whether you need the lightbox there or not. WP Featherlight gives you the option in the post editor to disable the lightbox. It’s a handy option to have in case you don’t want to load a larger version of your images on that particular post/page, but I’m not sure why you wouldn’t just conditionally load the scripts on pages that have images.

I tested WP Featherlight on a demo site and found that it works as advertised. You would be hard pressed to find a leaner lightbox plugin for WordPress. The style is super minimal and the fact that there are no options to configure makes it a pleasure to use. Many thanks to Robert Neu and the folks at WP Site Care for making it freely available on WordPress.org.

Meerkat and Periscope: How Businesses Are Using Live Mobile Broadcasting

Are you interested in live mobile broadcasting? Have you tried Meerkat or Periscope? To learn about mobile broadcasting apps, I interview Brian Fanzo. More About This Show The Social Media Marketing podcast is an on-demand talk radio show from Social Media Examiner. It’s designed to help busy marketers and business owners discover what works with […]

This post Meerkat and Periscope: How Businesses Are Using Live Mobile Broadcasting first appeared on Social Media Examiner.
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mercoledì 10 giugno 2015

How to Use Video Storytelling in Your Social Media Marketing

Do you use video on your social channels? Looking for ways to connect with your audience? Telling stories with video increases engagement, triggers social sharing and gives people a reason to talk about you online and offline. In this article I’ll highlight eight ways to combine storytelling, video and social media. #1: Post Stories From […]

This post How to Use Video Storytelling in Your Social Media Marketing first appeared on Social Media Examiner.
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How to Recover From a Negative Social Media Update

Has a team member ever posted something inappropriate from your social media account? Are you ready with a recovery plan? If someone wreaks havoc on your account, you need to be prepared for a worst-case scenario. In this article you’ll discover how to recover from a bad post to your social media account. #1: Determine Whether to Delete the […]

This post How to Recover From a Negative Social Media Update first appeared on Social Media Examiner.
Social Media Examiner - Your Guide to the Social Media Jungle

sabato 6 giugno 2015

How a Blog Launched a Movement: The Vani Hari Story

Do you have a blog? Want to use your blog to inspire change? This episode explores how a blogger followed her passion and grew a mega following in a few short years. More About This Show The Social Media Marketing podcast is an on-demand talk radio show from Social Media Examiner. It’s designed to help […]

This post How a Blog Launched a Movement: The Vani Hari Story first appeared on Social Media Examiner.
Social Media Examiner - Your Guide to the Social Media Jungle

venerdì 5 giugno 2015

Beginner’s Guide: How to Back Date Your WordPress Posts

Recently, one of our users asked if it was possible to back date their WordPress posts. The answer is YES. WordPress allows you to change dates on any posts that you write. You can publish a post with current date and time, back date it to a past date and time, or you can even schedule posts to be published in the future. In this article, we will show you how to back date your WordPress posts.

Back Date your WordPress Blog Posts

Start by editing the post that you want to back date in your WordPress admin area.

On the post editor screen, under the Publish meta box you will see the option to publish the post immediately. Right next to it, there is an edit link. Clicking on the edit link will display the post’s time and date settings.

Edit a post's date and time in WordPress

Using the date and time settings, you can choose any date and time in the past as well as in the future. Choosing a future date and time will allow you to schedule the post to be published on that time.

Scheduling a post in WordPress

On the other hand, choosing a date and time in the past will update the date and change the post’s position in your site’s archive pages. For example if you change the month of a post from June to January, then it will appear on the January’s monthly archive page even if you just published that post. The post will also appear accordingly on the all posts list page in the admin area.

A newly added back dated post appearing at the bottom

This is particularly useful when you want to publish an article, but don’t want it to appear on the front page of your site. You can just back date it to a date earlier than the last post on your site’s front-page.

How to Show Last Updated Date

Some users believe that they should remove dates altogether from their blogs to trick search engines into believing that their content is not time-sensitive and is always fresh.

We disagree with that opinion entirely. It does not help with your site’s SEO, and it’s terrible for user experience. See our article on why you should not remove dates from your WordPress blog posts for more information on this topic.

At WPBeginner, we show the last updated date of an article instead of the publish date. Last updated dates are particularly useful for sites where content is regularly updated. Here is how to show last updated date on your WordPress blog posts.

Sowing last updated date in WordPress

Locate the code that shows the post’s date and time in your theme files (usually in loop.php or single.php). Next replace it with this code:

Last updated on <time datetime="<?php the_modified_time('Y-m-d'); ?>"><?php the_modified_time('F jS, Y'); ?></time>

We hope this article helped you learn how to back date WordPress posts. You may also want to see our guide on how to display relative dates in WordPress.

If you liked this article, then please subscribe to our YouTube Channel for WordPress video tutorials. You can also find us on Twitter and Facebook.

To leave a comment please visit Beginner’s Guide: How to Back Date Your WordPress Posts on WPBeginner.

All Official Easy Digital Downloads Themes are Now 100% Free

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Easy Digital Downloads announced a major change to its themes marketplace today. All official EDD themes (those that are built by the EDD core team) are now 100% free. This includes half a dozen themes that are guaranteed to be fully compatible with EDD, including the new Vendd theme launching today.

EDD support manager Sean Davis clarified how the free themes will be supported:

Official EDD themes are available to you at absolutely no cost. They will still be licensed so that you can receive theme updates directly from your WordPress dashboard and we will also provide support. The only thing changing is the price.

Responding to criticism on Twitter saying that the change contributes to the undervaluation of WordPress themes, EDD founder Pippin Williamson said, “For us it’s not about the themes. It’s about the entire package. By making it easy for users to have a good shop up and running in minutes, we significantly increase the potential value to that customer and of that customer. We also dramatically reduce the cost of support by having more users on more reliable themes that are built for EDD.”

Making half a dozen themes free might seem like it would significantly increase EDD’s support burden, but Williamson expects that the move will pay off in other ways. Like many other WordPress business owners who have made some of their best work free, Williamson has a strategy for how it will work.

“The change lowers the barrier to entry,” Williamson said. “When the barrier is lowered, the user base grows. When the user base grows, the customer base grows. From a business side, we will have far more success converting free users to paid customers after they’ve already been given a great experience with a theme.”

This major change is in line with EDD’s basic freemium business model, which has been in place from the start. The core product(s) are free and satisfied users go on to make purchases from the add-ons marketplace.

“By setting them up with a good theme from the get go, the likelihood that they become a paying customer is substantially higher,” Williamson said.

So far, the freemium model has worked well for the company and making six theme products free makes sense when the business primarily revolves around plugins. After just three years in business, EDD pulled in roughly half a million dollars in revenue in 2014. As themes were not a significant portion of the revenue, Williamson is re-assigning them to be free products in order to continue to build a customer base for his plugins.

WordCamp US 2015 Now Accepting Applications for Host City

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WordCamp San Francisco has traditionally been one of the most important WordPress events of the year where Matt Mullenweg delivers his annual State of the Word address. Last year, he announced that the the event had outgrown the Mission Bay venue and that it would be expanding to become WordCamp US in 2015.

The decision to seek a new venue in a new city was partly based on the need to make room for more attendees and presentations. Another benefit of moving the event out of San Francisco, one of the most expensive cities in the world, is that it will likely become more accessible to a greater number of people.

WordCamp US will follow a format similar to WordCamp Europe in that it will be held in a rotating city. The city has not yet been selected, which is surprising given that the year is nearly halfway finished.

Mullenweg put out a call for host city applications on his blog and linked to a survey where candidates can apply.

There are a lot of cities out there that might be an excellent fit for WordCamp US, but many are lacking a vibrant local WordPress community to help support the event. While this is not stated as an explicit requirement, it would be difficult to pull off such a large event without an army of local volunteers.

WordPress is aiming big for its first ever WordCamp US. The survey states that host city applicants must secure a venue with hotels within three miles that can support 1,500 – 2,000 attendees. Potential organizers must supply average hotel costs for a range of budgets and average flight costs from the West Coast, East Coast, Midwest, Mexico, and Canada.

Hosting the event will be a massive undertaking that will require an organization team capable of putting everything together in a very short amount of time. Events of this size normally have the benefit of longer planning periods. For example, applications to host WordCamp Europe 2016 closed two months ago and the team is already training volunteers for next year’s event.

If your team is up to the challenge of hosting WordCamp US, you’ll need to be prepared to submit venue information with room capacities, a detailed event budget, potential dates, and contributor day options. So far, Mullenweg has received in-person pitches for Phoenix but the application process is open to teams from any city. When WP Tavern readers were surveyed seven months ago, commenters favored Chicago, Las Vegas, Kansas City, Houston, and Dallas.

lunedì 1 giugno 2015

WordPress.com Launches Insights: Better Stats for Visualizing Publishing Trends

WordPress.com announced major improvements to its Stats feature today. The new Insights tab gives users a bird’s eye view of posting activity and visitor trends. The Stats panel now displays all-time numbers for posts, views, visitors, and the day the site received the most number of views.

Insights also calculates the most popular day of the week and the most popular hour based on when the site gets the most views on average.

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Posting Activity is another new addition that provides a way to visualize how often you are publishing. The feature is reminiscent of GitHub’s Contributions calendar, which makes it easy to view contributions from specific times. Insights allows you to mouse over a specific date with a color marker to see how many posts were published that day.

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If, for some reason, you’re missing the old version of WordPress.com’s stats, it is available for a limited time under wordpress.com/my-stats/.

Insights is not yet available on WordPress mobile apps but will likely be added soon. When asked when Insights will be available to self-hosted users, WordPress.com representative Jonathan Sadowski replied, “If you install Jetpack and enable the Stats module, you’ll be able to view these stats on WordPress.com for your .org blog.”

Stats is arguably one of the most popular features in Jetpack and a major factor for many in the decision to connect with WordPress.com. However, the view from inside the self-hosted Jetpack stats panel is starting to look a little dated when compared to the mobile apps or WordPress.com. Adding Insights to Jetpack’s stats panel would save users a trip over to WordPress.com to discover this information.

Most people don’t have the time or motivation to log into Google Analytics and create a meaningful interpretation of that data to improve their publishing habits. The new and improved stats with Insights offers a better understanding of when you’re posting and even interprets your traffic to provide actionable data, such as what hour might be the best for scheduling a post, what months lend you the most time to commit to blogging, etc.

The all-time stats also make it easier to track your blogging progress and set milestones for increasing posts, views, and visitors, and ultimately beating your best traffic day on record. The new feature is live on WordPress.com today and we’ll be watching for it in future updates to the mobile apps.

Sergej Müller, Creator of Antispam Bee, Says Goodbye to WordPress

Sergej-MüllerSergej Müller is saying goodbye to WordPress after nine years and nearly three million downloads of his free plugins. Antispam Bee, his most popular contribution, is currently in use on more than 200,000 WordPress sites.

Müller penned a farewell Gist on GitHub in his native German, which Caspar Hübinger was kind enough to translate into English.

For me, a chapter of my life is coming to an end. A chapter that has brought an abundance of experience, learning, and fun. A chapter that, on the other hand, demanded a lot of time, nerves, and motivation. But where there’s a will, there’s a way, and I deeply hope my software and my commitment may have made the WordPress community a bit better in terms of quality.

Müller is discontinuing his WordPress contributions due to health reasons, but he plans to find a suitable successor who will be able to deliver the level of quality and support that his users have come to expect. His plugins, most notably Antispam Bee, Cachify, Statify, wpSEO and Optimus, are used widely around the world, particularly throughout Germany, Austria, and the germanophone parts of Switzerland.

Hübinger, who is active in the German and European WordPress communities, has been using Müller’s plugins for the past six years.

“Just as valuable for me personally were his blog posts and tutorials,” he said. “I pretty much learned WordPress development from his blog, and Frank Bueltge‘s.

“There are a lot of comments expressing great surprise. No one saw him quitting, obviously. Sergej has been a key figure of the German-speaking WordPress community for the last nine years. While not quite so popular beyond the Germanophone context, I think his note that almost every WordPress user over here has heard of or uses at least one of his plugins is no exaggeration.”

While Müller does have a couple commercial plugins available, he has never made a living from them. For the past nine years he has been working as a software engineer outside of WordPress. Anyone aspiring to adopt his plugins will need to meet the high standards that he has set in terms of quality and support, especially in regards to supporting the German community.

“Monika Thon-Soun, a WordPress veteran from Austria, mentions she doesn’t remember a single instance where one of Sergej’s plugins would have been hacked,” Hübinger said. “Given the popularity of his plugins, that’s truly worth mentioning, as it underlines a character feature that everyone loves him for: reliability.”

Müller’s plugin contributions have always been a hobby for him but he is no longer able to sustain their development and support. He is currently in conversations with parties who are interested in his projects and will announce the new maintainers once it has been finalized.

Sergej Müller’s contributions signify the importance of having WordPress extensions and tutorials available for users to learn WordPress in their own language. His role in cultivating the German development community and supporting its many users will not be easily filled.

“As a friend, I understand and support his decision completely,” Hübinger said. “As a WordPress user, it’s…a catastrophe.

“Whoever follows him on G+ will have seen occasional moments of disappointment. In those moments, you could see all his passion. Because it really wasn’t about money for him. Acknowledgement and paying it forward is his favorite currency.”

How to Hide a Post From Home Page in WordPress

Have you ever wanted to hide a post from your WordPress home page? While you can make WordPress posts password protected or private, in some cases you may simply want to hide the post from your homepage while still allowing others to view it if they have the URL. In this article, we will show you how to hide posts from selected pages in WordPress such as homepage, category archives, feed, search results, and more.

First thing you need to do is install and activate the WP Hide Post plugin. The plugin works out of the box, and there are no settings for you to configure.

All you need to do is create a new post or edit an existing post that you want to hide. On the post edit screen, you will find a new meta box labeled ‘Post Visibility’.

Select post visibility options

Using the checkboxes under post visibility, you can hide a post on home page, archive pages, category, and tag pages. Simply check the boxes where you want to hide the post and click on Update or Publish button.

You can now visit your website, and you will notice that post will be hidden on your selected pages.

However if a user has the URL, they can still view the post on its own page.

To find out the URL of a hidden post, visit Posts » All Posts. Next, locate the post you are looking for and take the mouse over to the post title. You will see a link to view the post.

Finding the URL of a single post in WordPress

The plugin also works for WordPress pages. For pages it will show you visibility options allowing you to hide a page from appearing in page lists.

Hide a WordPress page from appearing into menus or page lists

We hope this article helped you hide posts from WordPress homepage, archives, and category pages. You may also want to checkout our guide on how to make your WordPress blog completely private.

If you liked this article, then please subscribe to our YouTube Channel for WordPress video tutorials. You can also find us on Twitter and Facebook.

To leave a comment please visit How to Hide a Post From Home Page in WordPress on WPBeginner.