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Weekly Watch

WordPress Weekly Watch

In the latest instalment of the WordPress Weekly Watch series, I take a look at some of the posts I’ve published elsewhere, as well as some of the posts I didn’t write, but wish I did, or simply enjoyed reading from the last week.

April 6th to April 12th 2015

If you want to grow the audience for your website and build your email list, then the free email optin forms, social sharing, and visitor analytics tools from SumoMe are just what you need. Find out how they can help you in this article I wrote for the HostingKingdom blog.

Another way to promote your content is to install the free Advanced Random Posts widget which does as its name suggests. Also on the Pagely blog, I wrote about the Seriously Simple Podcasting plugin. If you are publishing your own podcast, this free tool certainly is easy to use and allows you to export your feed to iTunes.

If you want more ways to promote your order content, this list of 10 plugins for breathing life back into your published content on the WPMU Dev blog is worth checking out.

I think that was about it for last week from me. Now for some other interesting WordPress-related posts from elsewhere on the internet:

Find out how to post an animated GIF to Twitter with Buffer, by Brian Jackson.

WP Matter covers how to track outbound links on a WordPress website with Google Analytics.

Kim Doyal, the WP Chick interviews Matt Medeiros about his journey from car salesman to WordPress entrepreneur.

The WP Tavern team look at Give, a free plugin for accepting online donations through your WP site.

On the WP Curve blog you can find 14 surprising morning routines of entrepreneurs and creative types. If you haven’t read the Morning Miracle book yet, I recommend that too.

If you are a blogger who struggles for post topics and ideas, this list of 40 of them from Chris Lema is just for you.

Remember, if you need a steady stream of posts for your blog, check out my freelancer writer for hire page.

 

 

Categories
Weekly Watch

WordPress Weekly Watch

In the latest instalment of the WordPress Weekly Watch series, I take a look at some of the posts I’ve published elsewhere, as well as some of the posts I didn’t write, but wish I did.

March 30th to April 5th 2015

If you are looking for a way to promote your most popular posts more effectively, the WordPress Popular Posts Widget plugin that I reviewed on the Pagely blog, might be something you want to check out. Over at Pagely, I also took the Code Snippets plugin for a test-drive. Its a great way to safely add code to your theme’s functions.php file, without editing the file directly yourself.

As part of the series for new WordPress users I’m writing on the Theme-Fusion blog, I added a post on creating the essential pages that all WordPress websites should probably have.

From elsewhere from the World of WordPress, Kim Doyal, the WP Chick, interviews Dan Norris to find out what it takes to build a 7-figure business in 18 months (WP Curve).

The WP Beginner team highlight the 7 things you must do when starting a WordPress business. I’ve only done two of the seven so far, you?

If you want to reduce the bounce rate of your home page, Brenda tells you all you need to know, over at the WPMU Dev blog.

Need help managing those $5k to $15k web design projects? Matt spills the beans over at the Matt Report. Also, don’t forget to check out their handy Conductor plugin while you’re there.

Did you know these 15 big brands use WordPress for their website? View the list at WP Kube.

That’s it for this week, don’t forget to join the mailing list, or follow us on Twitter to get more WordPress goodness throughout the week.

 

 

Categories
Weekly Watch

WordPress Weekly Watch

The WordPress Weekly Watch highlights all the posts I’ve written about WordPress for other sites in my role as freelance blogger for hire, in the past week. Its part shameless self-promotion and part spreading the word about some plugins, themes, and other aspects of WordPress you might find useful.

February 9th to 15th 2015

First up the review I wrote of the mega-theme Avada went live over at WinningWP. This is one of the best selling themes on ThemeForest so it was great to get my hands on it and take it for a test drive. Avada is fully multi-purpose theme and includes truck loads of features. Purists won’t have much love for this theme, but anyone else looking for a versatile tool that can be used to build pretty much any type of website will find Avada a great buy.

What with the recent comments about Jetpack being the reason for the success of WordPress, I thought it was time to take another look at what this plugin has to offer; so I wrote a post to establish what are the best modules of Jetpack. After writing that post I activated Jetpack on a number of my sites and am now using a few of its modules.

Over at the WPMU Dev blog, my post on plugins that let you do more with WordPress categories went live. There are some good options there for anyone that wants to get more out of this feature of WordPress.

On the Pagely managed hosting blog I wrote about the Post Type Requirements Checklist plugin which forces bloggers to complete certain steps before their posts can go live. This can include making sure a featured image had been set, choosing a category, and other options of your choice.

The other plugin I looked at was wpDiscuz which aims to overhaul the WordPress comments system and does a pretty good job.

I also activated the Monarch social sharing plugin from Elegant Themes on this site. Its a great plugin which I reviewed a while back for BeginWP.

Don’t forget to check back next week – or subscribe – for the next instalment.