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Top 10 Things to Know About Using WordPress

Here are 10 things I wish I knew about using WordPress when I first started.

1. WordPress is like a chest of drawers: you just have to learn where everything goes

Using WordPress navigation is a labyrinth with fly-out menus everywhere. You simply have to remember where everything belongs so you can enter things in the proper place.

Familiarize yourself with the three main sections: Dashboard, Posts, and Appearance, followed by Plugins. If you have to, make notes of where you put things until you learn your way around.

2. Posts are to Pages as apples are to oranges

Or, Pages are static, Posts are social.

Pages change when updated and can be arranged in a hierarchy structure as Parent and Child.

Posts are updates published in reverse chronological order. They are driven by Categories and Tag options, allowing you to segment them in index pages. They can also be syndicated via RSS feeds and subscribed to with email alerts.

Both Posts and Pages allow comments and can be shared.
A WordPress site can be all Posts or all Pages, or both.

 

3. All themes are created differently, endowed by their developer with peculiar features

Some of the best themes in life are free.

 

4. A friend indeed is a theme developer you need

WordPress has its own support forum for general questions, but when you have a problem with a specific theme, the best thing to do is ask the theme developer.

Even with a free theme, it is possible to get help and advice from the developer. They will sometimes even send you code snippets to customize your theme.

Read more about Theme Developers

5. Plugins are like best friends: look for quality over quantity

When considering installing a new plugin, choose wisely because the last thing you want is a badly coded plugin screwing up your site.

Remember, Plugins are for Pages, Widgets are for Sidebars, but they both get installed as Plugins.

Read more about Plugins.

6. Code may be poetry, but who understands poems?

When working with code, always use caution.

 

7. The computer gods gave us keyboard shortcuts and they should be used

Read more Editing Tips 

8. A picture is worth a thousand pixals

Sites must be free from the ball and chain of outsized pictures, which slow down the loading time of your site.

 

9. Keywords are useless. Long live keywords

Google no longer takes Meta Keywords into consideration for ranking and began favoring unique, high-quality content over keywords. They are using-ever changing algorithms to outsmart Black Hats.

At this time there are about 8 fields in which to enter keywords:

Article Title, Heading, Subheading, Page URL (or permalink), Content, Meta Description, Photo/Video Alt Text, Photo/Video Description.

Use them all! Read more about Keywords.

10. Don’t Panic! The theme may have broken bad, but the data is safe

If you make a change in your code and are faced with the white screen of death with a error code, don’t freak out. Your content is safely stored in a wp_content folder and you have simply broken your connection to it. This is called breaking a theme.

Remember when using WordPress

By keeping these things in mind, I hope you will have a calm and productive experience when you are using WordPress.

Happy blogging and welcome to WordCamp Vancouver!

 

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