As your site grows older, you have learned a lot of things (at least I hope you have.) In that time you should have played with ideas on what you would like to change in order to improve your website. However, I am sure that you probably think that if you change certain parts of
[Continue Reading...]30 Day Challenge With Sponsored Tweets PRO – Halfway Point
So, I am half way through my 30 day challenge with Sponsored Tweets PRO, and you know… no opportunities. As promised, I went through some of the messages being said in the Sponsored Tweets forum about this and no surprise- even users with over 80,000 followers on the PRO membership are not getting opportunities. Here
[Continue Reading...]Be Selective When Accepting Guest Blog Posts
Occasionally I receive guest post inquiries from previous guest bloggers that want to submit a post under another name, even a fake one. I normally do not accept these types. I am very selective when accepting guest blog posts and encourage others to do the same. Why? Well, I want my readers to read posts
[Continue Reading...]Trendy Web Design Is Not Always For You
The web has come a LONG way. I am pretty sure in that first sentence alone, all of you can agree and maybe you have heard something similar said from other people. The problem is that there are still a lot of trends floating around that people still want to stick to. However, for branding
[Continue Reading...]WordCamp St. Louis 2011: Matt Mullenweg’s Town Hall Q&A
WordCampers were delighted to see Matt Mullenweg attend WordCamp St. Louis 201. He took attendees through an informal Town Hall question and answer session. However, before sharing the questions and answers, here were a couple facts Matt shared about WordPress: 1, WordPress passed 50 million sites and 2, WordCamp San Francisco 2011 surpassed selling 1000+
[Continue Reading...]WordCamp St. Louis 2011: Core Q&A
At WordCamp St. Louis, WordPress Lead Developer Peter Westwood (@westi) opened the floor for a question and answer session. Here were some of the questions asked: What does a WordPress core developer do? WordPress core developers do triaging bugs and trac. How can you contribute to the Core Handbook? Contact Peter Westwood. How do you
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