Mid-project Update and Request for Feedback

The Media Corps experimental project already reached its halfway point, so I thought I’d share a mid-project update and start an open discussion to share learnings and feedback.

Goal & current status

As a quick refresher, the Media Corps experimental project aims to enable independent WordPress marketers and media members to produce excellent quality content with less time and effort.

We are currently in Phase 2 (Implementation) and Phase 3 (Monitoring & Measurement) of the roadmap. Since the project began, it has made substantial progress:

Participation

Here are some stats from the Media Corps’ efforts so far:

Observations and challenges

  • Engagement: Around 60% of the media folks who expressed interest in the self-assessment form have shown active participation through briefings, feedback forms, Slack interactions, etc.
  • “WP media” label: While the team has not been classifying self-assessment responses/outlets, I’ve heard concerns that tagging or grouping all folks as media partners or “WP media” can feel unfair, unbalanced, and not entirely accurate for different reasons, including 1) the different levels of engagement, 2) their different focuses and content interests, and 3) the difference in resources (e.g., some corporate outlets may have more resources/funds that other indie outlets don’t).
  • Briefings: As an observation, attendance has declined throughout briefings. Beyond time zone and language challenges, and considering the diverse media folks’ needs and focuses, the overall impact that these sessions are having on supporting their content efforts is still a bit unclear.

Request for feedback

To better understand whether the experimental project is delivering value as is or might need future iterations or changes, here are a few questions I’d love to hear your thoughts on:

  • How helpful have the briefing sessions been in supporting your news or content production efforts so far?
  • Have you found other support resources, such as Slack updates or interactions, shareable assets, or briefing recaps, useful for your work?
  • Has the Media Corps helped improve your ability to stay informed and report news or produce content? If so, how?
  • What do you believe is the most significant impact the Media Corps has had on your work (if any)?
  • What improvements or changes would you suggest for the Media Corps to support or engage the different types of outlets?

Please share your feedback in the comments below by October 5, 2024. Thanks!

Recap of the Briefing on Mid-term Goals for WordPress

On September 10, 2024, WordPress Executive Director Josepha Haden Chomphosy joined a Media Corps briefing to discuss the mid-term goals for the WordPress open sourceOpen Source Open Source denotes software for which the original source code is made freely available and may be redistributed and modified. Open Source **must be** delivered via a licensing model, see GPL. project and answer questions from participants.

The session was recorded and published on the WordPress.org YouTube channel. Below is a summary with relevant links and the full transcript.

Recording

Participants

Bernard Meyer (@bernard0omnisend), Chloé Bringmann (@cbringmann), Javier Casares (@javiercasares), Josepha Haden Chomphosy (@chanthaboune), Nahuai Badiola (@nahuai), Nathan Wrigley (@njwrigley), and Reyes Martínez (@rmartinezduque).

Summary

Make WordPress updates

Reyes Martínez started the briefing by calling out some Make updates, including:

  • The recently published experimental dashboards, which offer a snapshot of Make teams’ metrics and key ongoing projects.
  • The post on Advancing the WordPress Design System emphasized the importance of the design system we move into Phase 3 and the admin redesign. It’s a valuable resource for anyone looking to contribute and extend the platform, including pluginPlugin A plugin is a piece of software containing a group of functions that can be added to a WordPress website. They can extend functionality or add new features to your WordPress websites. WordPress plugins are written in the PHP programming language and integrate seamlessly with WordPress. These can be free in the WordPress.org Plugin Directory https://wordpress.org/plugins/ or can be cost-based plugin from a third-party and theme authors.
  • The State of the Word site went live last month. Participants were encouraged to forward anyone interested in attending to the community interest form.

Mid-term goals for WordPress discussion

Josepha Haden Chomphosy introduced the discussion on mid-term goals by referencing Matt’s 11 points shared at WordCampWordCamp WordCamps are casual, locally-organized conferences covering everything related to WordPress. They're one of the places where the WordPress community comes together to teach one another what they’ve learned throughout the year and share the joy. Learn more. Europe 2024 and the 2024 big-picture goals, which cover three main focuses—CMS, community, and ecosystem.

The work around the CMS was mentioned as the biggest change earlier in the year, noting less active involvement in Phase 3’s real-time collaboration efforts to prioritize the admin experience, modernize its look, and address pressing items from user feedback. Part of this focus area has included foundational work, major backend elements, and APIs. The design system update was also noted as a positive step towards a consistent design language for WordPress.

“The hope is that we can improve the user experience by having a more consistent look and feel across our admin, and then also having the dashboard and admin areas just be more modern and more in line with what the software actually is capable of doing now.” – Executive Director Josepha Haden Chomphosy.

In community initiatives, Josepha mentioned the shift to bring in new users to events. Current efforts include getting better, standardized feedback from event attendees and making online learning as clear and valuable as in-person meetups and WordCamps.

Upcoming plans involve forgoing the WordPress annual survey. Instead, the WordPress project will leverage Stack Overflow survey results to identify growth opportunities and insights from people outside of the WordPress space. Additionally, ad hoc polls from various platforms are being considered to gather timely feedback on new features and ideas.

The third major goal in the ecosystem space focuses on Data Liberation, powered by WordPress Playground, to simplify migrations between non-WordPress and WordPress sites. A viable concept for easier migrations was explored around WordCamp Europe and work is now gearing up for an adoption phase of both Data Liberation and Playground tools.

Josepha expressed being closer to having a “Try out WordPress” button on the homepage for users to test what their site, theme, and plugins could look like in a Playground instance. Also, a Playground-driven wiki experience for documentation is being prototyped and efforts to revitalize the forums are underway.

Throughout the discussion, Josepha elaborated on how Matt’s points support the direction of the outlined goals. She also underscored the importance of user testing and feedback loops to ensure that the current contributions and software meet users’ needs. “It doesn’t help us to be moving forward with speed,” she said, “if the direction that we’re moving forward in is not something that our users need or want from us.”

A list of completed and upcoming projects related to the 11 points and tactics is expected to be published before WordCamp US to align everyone on the progress.

Questions & Answers

The Q&A covered numerous topics, including thoughts on making WordPress fun, the Feature Notifications project, GatherPress testing efforts, and the importance of aligning demo themes and content with the onboarding experience when installing a blockBlock Block is the abstract term used to describe units of markup that, composed together, form the content or layout of a webpage using the WordPress editor. The idea combines concepts of what in the past may have achieved with shortcodes, custom HTML, and embed discovery into a single consistent API and user experience. theme.

On Phase 3 work, Josepha reiterated that while real-time collaboration is open for contribution and active development, the current top priority is improving and modernizing the admin experience.

She further explained that the initial concept for a “Try out WordPress” button would be to provide a generic WordPress installation, allowing users to experience WordPress as close to its out-of-the-box state as possible. Setting up additional plugins with enough example data to showcase different types of sites (like an eCommerce site) has proved challenging, but the Playground team is working on ways to better display sample data and make different setups easily exportable.

In response to specific initiatives that could benefit from increased awareness and amplification from media folks, three major areas were outlined:

  • Data Liberation and Playground for content migrationMigration Moving the code, database and media files for a website site from one server to another. Most typically done when changing hosting companies. and for addressing users’ needs by offering a more interactive and realistic preview of WordPress. Both projects have involved the development of a complex set of tools, but they are nearing readiness. The project hopes for community support in spreading the word about them.
  • WordPress events: Josepha mentioned the need to demystify WordCamps to enhance their appeal, particularly for newcomers. The goal is to improve understanding of event offerings and ensure first-time attendees feel welcomed and informed.
  • New admin prototype: Lastly, she underscored the importance of gathering feedback on the new admin prototype to ensure a smooth transition and avoid disruptions for users. 

Towards the end, the discussion turned to the impact of the Cyber Resilience Act (CRA) on open source software. Josepha noted that, after revisions to the carve-out, WordPress currently does not face immediate issues but is closely monitoring the situation. Major open source CMSs are planning to collaborate to assess the impact of other related legislation to ensure that future changes do not negatively affect their communities and software.

Questions with timestamps
  • [00:19:31] Nathan Wrigley (WP Tavern):  How do we keep things fun? Have you got any ideas around what we could do to make it [WordPress] more fun?
  • [00:23:40] Javier Casares (WPpodcast): Is there a roadmap to integrate the feature notification in Phase 3? How is the real-time collaboration doing?
  • [00:27:08] Javier Casares: About that “Test WordPress now” button. Will it be a general WordPress installation or will there be different options like “create an eCommerce,””create a blog,” or “create a company page”?
  • [00:30:50] Javier Casares: Is there a roadmap for migrating from MeetupMeetup All local/regional gatherings that are officially a part of the WordPress world but are not WordCamps are organized through https://www.meetup.com/. A meetup is typically a chance for local WordPress users to get together and share new ideas and seek help from one another. Searching for ‘WordPress’ on meetup.com will help you find options in your area. to GatherPress?
  • [00:34:58] Nahuai Badiola (Freelandev): I’ve been playing with Playground and importing a theme and demo content, which is great. But as a WordPress theme maker, I can’t offer that nice experience to users who install our block theme. Are there any plans to add an onboarding experience for themes?
  • [00:41:46] Reyes Martínez: Could you share your thoughts on any specific initiatives or audiences that you think could benefit from increased awareness and support from media folks?
  • [00:48:22] Javier Casares: What about the CRA (Cyber Resilience Act) and how WordPress is going to comply with the parts that everybody needs to comply with?
  • [00:52:08] Nathan Wrigley: I’m curious about the Playground on the homepage button. Is there a point person who might be able to give me some intel about that or an interview?

Most of the resources mentioned during the briefing have been added to the summary above, but here are some other relevant links:

Transcript

The following transcript was AI-generated and may contain some errors despite being reviewed.

Full transcript

[00:00:00] Okay, I’m just ensuring that I have all the, yeah, permissions settings. Okay, perfect. Strong amount of silence. I feel like that’s not a, that’s not always a given with us. Usually happens every, every meeting starts the same. Honestly, wind me up. I’ll fill all that silence.

[00:00:29] Yeah, but it’s true. Until we wait for some other folks to join, there’s usually kind of silence, like awkward silence. But yeah, I think we can officially start. So, hello everyone. And, and welcome. I’m very, very excited to have Executive Director Josepha Haden Chomphosy with us today to discuss our midterm goals for WordPress.

[00:00:55] I’m Reyes, and as you all know, I’ll be facilitating today’s session and just before diving into our discussion, I thought I would share. briefly a few updates that just for extra visibility. The first one is about some new experimental make dashboards. Some contributors are working to offer like a snapshot of some make teams key metrics and ongoing projects I think there’s an upcoming announcement soon.

[00:01:27] Probably we can expect that by the end of the week, but I think that’s a pretty exciting update. So, yeah, keep an eye out for that. And next on my list is a post on advancing the WordPress design system. The goal of this initiative is to consolidate all the existing tools into a unified design system reference site, so that anyone looking to contribute, contribute back to WordPress or extend the platform can do it in line with, like, a shared design language and approach.

[00:02:08] I think this effort is especially important as we look into phase 3 of the roadmap and as we look at the admin redesign efforts, so I recommend giving that post a read if you haven’t done so and keeping an eye out for the biweekly design share updates. Let me share, one second, all the links in the chat, so you know what I’m talking about and

[00:02:41] all right. Here you go and, yeah, last but not least just as a reminder the State of the WordState of the Word This is the annual report given by Matt Mullenweg, founder of WordPress at WordCamp US. It looks at what we’ve done, what we’re doing, and the future of WordPress. https://wordpress.tv/tag/state-of-the-word/. site went live last month, and everyone is welcome to attend this annual event and request a seat. So, if you know of someone who wants or is interested in attending, please direct them to the community interest form.

[00:03:06] I’m going to share the link as well in the chat.

[00:03:15] All right, here we go. And that’s what I got in my list for updates and reminders. I don’t know if you have any questions or thoughts so far. Is the the the advancing the WordPress design system. I read that. And is that, is that intended for anybody touching .Org? So plugin and theme developers as well, or is it, is it specific?

[00:03:41] Well, I, yeah, that’s my question really. Is it just designed for everybody or is it for plugin and theme developers? Specifically. I think it’s for plugin like authors as well. I mean, if they are looking to extend the platform, I think those tools will come handy and useful. Yeah. Okay. But I can make a note and get back to you on that later.

[00:04:01] I mean, and I can also ask we can also ask Joen who I’m sure he might be helpful help. He might be happy to share any other information. Having read it, I couldn’t as who was the intended audience for it, but that would be helpful. Yes, please. Thank you. Yeah, of course, I’ll make a note and I can follow up with you on that after the briefing.

[00:04:24] All right. For if there are no more questions for now, I mean, if you have any thoughts, questions during the session later, just a reminder that you can share them in the chat. I would encourage you to indicate the media outlet and the channel you represent, because that help us first of all, have, to help us to have some context, but also it’s usually helpful for the recap and transcription purposes, but you’re also welcome to raise your hand if that’s easier.

[00:04:54] Okay. So, I think we can get started with our main discussion. Over to you, Josepha. It’s me. I’m Josepha and I’m here with WordPress. Yeah, so I wanted to talk a little bit about our midterm goals. So WordCamp Europe, obviously, Matt showed up with his 11 opinions about, about what WordPress needs to do, what it needs to be.

[00:05:18] And after that, I ended up having quite a few conversations with folks about like, how does this fit with the overall big pictures that we put out there? Big, the big picture post that we, that I put out. And fortunately everything, almost everything that showed up in those 11 points are still absolutely relevant to the big picture post that I put out.

[00:05:40] Now the biggest change obviously this year is on is around the CMS. So we had hoped to get phase 3 kind of prototyped and built out and put out in front of the community. But early on in the year, it became pretty clear that one of the more pressing items for user facing, I don’t know, user satisfaction of WordPress is to maybe make our admin a little bit more modern looking and probably get all of our, you know, five different interfaces kind of looking the same, which I think is actually part of what that design system that Joen published is about.

[00:06:21] And so the work on phase 3, the active, like, everybody focused diligently on phase 3 work sort of paused early in the year. While we took a look at the admin and what we wanted to be in the future, how blocks will work in there. And then ended up doing a bunch of foundational work, which is not user facing a lot of major back end elements and APIs to make sure that we can get that done.

[00:06:44] And so I’ve been really excited to see that design system get out because I think that one, it does kind of pull together some visual elements of what we are aiming for, and then also gives a common design language to WordPress. That is the hope, is that we can improve the user experience by having a more consistent look and feel across our admin, and then also having the dashboard and admin areas

[00:07:09] just be more modern and more in line with what the software actually is capable of doing now. So that is probably the biggest shift from that big picture post, but it happened a long time ago. And so there are, however, four things in those 11 points that Matt brought up at WordCamp. Europe that I think really commit to that and and support that change in direction.

[00:07:38] Obviously, the first one being that simple things should be easy and intuitive and complex things should be possible. The admin area, along with just kind of having a massive influx of notifications, has gotten more and more complex as we have gotten through WordPress as a whole. And so, getting that into a state that’s a little bit easier to kind of fall into and understand is going to be really important.

[00:08:04] And then there were three other things in there as well. One, that WordPress should be more opinionated and quirky that people who are building WordPress should be using WordPress and a bunch of the GutenbergGutenberg The Gutenberg project is the new Editor Interface for WordPress. The editor improves the process and experience of creating new content, making writing rich content much simpler. It uses ‘blocks’ to add richness rather than shortcodes, custom HTML etc. https://wordpress.org/gutenberg/ engineers recently did a ton of user user, what is this called? Sorry for the recording.

[00:08:25] I am sick. And so I can’t get my words sometimes. User testing. That’s it. A bunch of user testing. Not only to check flows for onboarding, which I know have been an ongoing concern for the project or for the software, but then also for like any basic activity that you want to accomplish so that you can feel successful and have the desire to learn those bigger concepts.

[00:08:51] Just trying to make those a lot easier, a lot clearer, and a lot quicker. And so, that goes into that. And then, if we get all of those things kind of back into an easy, comfortable state, then the, the part that Matt shared about blogging and commenting and pingbacks being more fun and allowing websites to be more dynamic again, I think that that shows up over time in it.

[00:09:17] The second element from the second goal from our big picture post was around the community, continuing to support our community as a whole through learning events and mentorship, and that would be for courage and future contributors. Early on this year as well, the community facing teams, the event folks.

[00:09:36] Had a big shift toward less focus on bringing in new contributors, which has been our lifelong focus and more focus on bringing in new users with the belief that everything that we’ve done to enable contribution will still function as, as it always has. So the work that is going in now is to get better feedback from

[00:10:01] people who are attending our workshops and our events and making the online learning as clear and important and valuable as all of the business stuff and networking that you can do at meetups and WordCamps and then also all of our flagship events. We have the dashboards coming, which Reyes mentioned,

[00:10:22] and that’s part of the reason that we’re doing that. Like, we’re working to standardize the questions that we ask new and returning attendees to our events so that our organizers can have some clearer and better information to make decisions that are helpful for them and impactful for them. We also are foregoing the giant annual survey this year.

[00:10:41] We’re gonna take advantage of the giant annual survey that Stack Exchange does. We’re included in it again this year and so we’re going to take advantage of that information because they get more people from outside of the WordPress space to give us some better information, more accurate information about future users of WordPress as opposed to current users of WordPress so that we can kind of get some, some indications of what our opportunities are for future growth, but then also making space for those kind of ad hoc polls that we see popping up on LinkedIn and Twitter and anywhere else where people can just say like, hey, do you use it for this or this?

[00:11:21] If you were doing this activity today, would you choose this or this? And get kind of more timely feedback for the features that we’re trying to experiment and build toward that way. And so the things from Matt’s 11 points that fit in with that are that we should have better feedback loops in general.

[00:11:40] Agreed. Hard agree. It doesn’t help us to be moving forward with speed if the direction that we’re moving forward in is not something that our users need or want from us. And then also one of his callouts was to be a supporter by going to meetups, events and other things that help us stay close to users.

[00:11:58] Because we are the people who are building WordPress. And so, if we are building it, we should be using it. And that includes if we’re building it, we should be talking to the people who are using it. In ways that we expect and ways that we don’t expect. And the best ways to do that is to get to those events, either as organizers or just regular old attendees.

[00:12:16] I’m headed to WordCamp US and I’m going to do my best to be a regular old attendee, sitting in some sessions, seeing what’s happening and not. And that’ll be a change of pace for me as well. So that’s a, that’s a kind of one of those changes that occurred on our second big goal. And then our third one actually has not changed too much.

[00:12:35] The third big goal that we had was around the ecosystem, and especially focusing on the Data Liberation project to make the process of getting from one non WordPress space to a WordPress space easier, and then WordPress to WordPress as required. That has been ongoing all year. We had a few prototypes at the start of the year that we’re kind of okay, but not quite what we were looking for.

[00:13:00] And it was around WordCamp Europe that we had gotten a pretty viable concept of what could work and what will work, I think for easier migrations and the hardest parts of that, the, the parts that require, you know, you to be as brilliant as Adam Zieliński are almost done. We’re ready to start to, to start hooking into it and extending it like we do any other WordPress thing.

[00:13:26] And so for that, actually we’re kind of get gearing up for an adoption phase of it of all of the, like, top 100 plugins that exist in the WordPress repo, I think only 12 of them use blueprints so that when you are testing a plugin inside Playground, it gives you some information, some, some fake data so that it’s clear what it’s trying to do versus what you are hoping it will do.

[00:13:57] And also so that it functions correctly in there. And so that’s going to be our next phase for that is to get the hardest parts built so that, so that every In the WordPress ecosystem can make a blueprint and put it in there. And so their users know, is this solution something that’s going to solve my problem?

[00:14:19] As we have been gearing up for that, we also are really nearing, I believe it, I feel it in my bones nearing the time when we can just put a try out WordPress now button on the homepage that takes you to a playground instance that has a valuable, not valuable. A useful theme, a theme that looks like what we want a good first timer site to look like, and a couple of plugins, so you get a sense for like, what a theme is, how it works, what plugins are, and how they work, and really can, can test drive your site before you get into it.

[00:14:56] We’re really close to that, I’m pretty sure. And so the things that Matt had brought up this summer, if you’re in the northern hemisphere, about that in his 11 points were wikis for documentation. We are actually prototyping a Playground-driven wiki experience for our documentation. And, that looks like it’s going well.

[00:15:18] I don’t understand it, but there is a post out that we can get a link for and share with you all. Getting forums back into kind of a front and center space so that people can have not only conversations but but also like see who else around them is having the same issues or the same excitements, the same extending opportunities that they are having and a lot of work is going into that.

[00:15:44] We have a bug smashing event for it at WordCamp US coming up, which should be pretty fun. And the call to having plugins and themes having mirror infrastructure to the WordPress project is still ongoing. Better theme previews, obviously, Playground is going to drive that. And the work with that Data Liberation is Playground driven at the moment.

[00:16:09] And so as we are building out all of these things for the Data Liberation project powered by Playground I’m pretty sure the rest of these holes that we have in the new user experience when they’re trying to just decide whether WordPress works for them or not, we’ll also get a few bridges over those gaps.

[00:16:28] And at that point can only be made better by our plugin authors and our theme authors really embracing that new tool and making sure that their tools work inside it. And so a little bit, Matt’s 11 points show up almost as like tactical elements that live inside the goals that we have for the WordPress project this year.

[00:16:50] We pulled together a whole list of projects that we either have shipped or are about to ship that specifically relate to all of those 11 tactics that go along with the three goals that we have. And I’m going to try to get it published before WordCamp US so that we all kind of have the same sort of thing that we’re looking at.

[00:17:12] And I, I think maybe Reyes can get you all an early, an early copy of it before, before it gets out there, so that if you have questions around that, we can get those answered. Or if there are anything that doesn’t really make sense to you all, you can let us know about that too. But that’s kind of the, that’s kind of the long and short of how those all fit together.

[00:17:32] And in the post that we pulled together about the work that’s been done just kind of in the last quarter around those tactical elements for our goals. I was tired looking at it. It was like four pages long. And so we’re going to try to make it a little shorter. But it’s just a continuing testament to the work that the community does toward the things that we think are going to make WordPress be able to grow in the future.

[00:17:57] And so I’m really excited to be able to get that post out for you all. Like I said, depending on how fast my brain continues to work while I’m sick, I’ll get that out before WordCamp US. I believe that we can do it. And so yeah, that’s kind of the lightning tour of where we are with that, and I’ll pause for questions on that or anything else, I guess.

[00:18:22] Can I just raise my hand? Is that alright? Yes. Do I need to do it virtually or can I just actually do it like that? Nathan Wrigley from the Tavern, I guess, probably easiest. I’m looking at Matt’s post, the 21. And the points 2 and point 9. He uses the words quirky in point 9 and fun in point 2. And that was what I, I was in the room when that happened.

[00:18:50] And that was what I, that was the impression that I got when I left is that basically the whole thing should just be more fun, it was that word fun. And I’m just wondering if you’ve got any intuitions. As to how we do that, what, what, what could we do to make WordPress more fun? I mean, Matt says here, you know, static websites are better than normal ones.

[00:19:11] And he says. No, he says dynamic wesbites. Dynamic. That’s right. Yeah. Sorry. CoreCore Core is the set of software required to run WordPress. The Core Development Team builds WordPress. should be opinionated and quirky, Easter eggs, languages with personality. It’s difficult to translate, jazzy. I I’m all for having fun. I think I, but I’m just wondering what you’re, how do we. I don’t know, because it’s easy to go from fun to just silly, isn’t it?

[00:19:32] How do we, how do we keep things fun? Have you got any ideas around what we could do to make it more fun? I love how this question kind of is like, Josepha, how fun are you? And how much fun can you make WordPress have? No, I’m joking. I’m joking. Yeah. So there are a few things. So for one, there are, as we get the admin into a more modern space, I think one of the things that.

[00:20:00] It’s just kind of a small delight that we see around software at the moment. Places like Discord have this. I think Facebook had it for a while, but like minor animations on your icons, which you can turn on, turn off, depending on, on your motion needs. I think things like that are going to be available to us once we get the admin in a better space.

[00:20:21] There are, there were a number of like core eggs, Easter eggs that were there for a long time that we took out. That existed in comments, it existed in tracTrac Trac is the place where contributors create issues for bugs or feature requests much like GitHub.https://core.trac.wordpress.org/., it was just like weird nerdy things for people who are digging for weird things, like there was a specific set of words that you could say in trac that caused

[00:20:44] like an eagle to flash up on the screen for some reason. I only did it once and it scared me to death, but I obviously things like that in our own spaces, in our own work are possible and, and welcomed. But I think that one of the things that the community can do is like, excuse me, like when we were doing the next gen events for WordCamps and kind of trying to figure out like what new and interesting versions of getting people together to talk about WordPress, can we still kind of do, I think that’s a lot of the spaces where we have some opportunity.

[00:21:24] So some, some cute and surprising design things. It’s probably not cute and surprising code things like you want that to be pretty predictable, but you know, cute and surprising design elements, some unusual and enriching events, probably is where we can do that. And then, of course, Matt is kind of

[00:21:44] sponsoring art across the entire WordPress ecosystem. And I think that that probably has a bit to do with wanting to bring some fun back into the space as well. Like when we had those cute little spam bots at WordCamp US last year. And and I think that there’s going to be some art around WordCamp US this year as well.

[00:22:08] Thank you. Josepha, we have some questions from Javier in the chat as well. Great. I, I, I can read them. Perfect. Yeah. Go ahead, Javier. So the, I have four. The first the first is is there a roadmap to integrate the feature notification in phase 3? Because that’s a project that has been around and a lot of people is messing with the messages and everything.

[00:22:38] So is there, is there an idea to integrate that now, or is a project that is going to be around until somebody adds it into the core?

[00:22:52] So I think that we should tackle your first and second question together around real time collaboration in phase 3. Because I think that that is going to, is going to impact this. So, on the one hand, at the moment, I don’t, I don’t think that we have a strong sense for notifications specifically being in the, in the phase 3 roadmap.

[00:23:15] But, I do have a roadmap that we’re pulling together for the next couple of releases, so I can take a look and see if, if we can more confidently target it for either one of those. So there’s that. As far as, like, to get it into phase 3, because we as a community have shifted our attention toward the admin and dashboard experience rather than phase 3, real time collaboration is moving forward and and we would like it to continue to move forward.

[00:23:50] I think it’s important, but probably less important than getting the overall software looking a bit more modern. And so real time collaboration still open to contribution, but I’ve asked everybody to focus more on the admin so that the software looks modern. Great workflows are good and important, but like, If we, if we’re trying to get out to a bunch of new users, we also need to absolutely make sure that we don’t look like we’re a software from 2000.

[00:24:17] 2000. That was 24 years ago, quarter of a century ago. I hate it. That notwithstanding 2000 and, and when was, when was Crazy Horse? 2008. So, I think that that’s probably the most important part of what we’re looking at in the, in the near term. And I realize that that’s not like, what’s the plan for phase 3 and how’s real time collaboration going?

[00:24:41] But I do think that that pause that we’ve taken there is really key. Notifications and how to handle them obviously are a real problem and on the minds of a lot of folks in the community. We used to have some pretty clear understandings of like what notifications should be and how they should be managed.

[00:25:03] And I think that at some point we loosened those expectations and those guidelines when we kind of loosened some of the guidelines around a plugin review. I think that that’s primarily when, when that really started to be taken over. And so there is some systemic work to do. There are some, some like

[00:25:23] contributor program types of rehabilitation things that we’ve got to do in there. But then also obviously a mechanism that makes notifications a little bit more corralled and easy to find when users need it. And so I’ll take a look at those roadmaps for the next couple of releases and see what we can fit in there.

[00:25:40] But that’s a great question. Okay. The next one about the, the, test WordPress now, or whatever it will be it’s going to be only clean installation of WordPress, or there is an idea to have like more working with blueprints, like, okay. I want to test something like an ecommerce so we can show an ecommerce and or I want a blog and we can show a blog is it’s going to be that way or a generic WordPress or.

[00:26:14] Yeah, at the moment the plan is just for generic WordPress for a couple of reasons. One, because we want them to see what it looks like as close to out of the box as possible. That. That way they understand, like, this is what the basic interaction looks like, the basic interface looks like, so that they are not surprised when they get a basic installation running.

[00:26:38] And then they’re like, I thought there was a ecommerce site in here. Like, we don’t want it to be too far away from what their initial experience will be. And so that’s part of the reason. The other part of it is that it’s actually very difficult to get additional plugins set up with enough data and a false data coming in.

[00:26:56] Not false. Example, test data coming in that it looks right so that you understand what’s in there. There are a couple of prototypes that we’ve been that that the folks who work on Playground have been working on that are bringing in a bit of sample data so that you can see how something would look.

[00:27:15] But for ecommerce in particular, that is very difficult to do. It’s actually one of the primary hurdles that we’re having also with Data Liberation. Figuring out what is in the front of a site and what is available, like, in an admin area is pretty easy. But having the functional parts that go along with it so it still works is actually kind of hard at the moment.

[00:27:39] So you can see that there’s a shopping cart. You can put like a shopping cart block into the playground instance, but that doesn’t mean that it works or that you know what you would need in order to make that work on the other side of it. And so we’re trying to figure out how to get more complex initial sites

[00:27:57] shown and then also exportable, instantly publishable to your individual host that you’re hoping to work with, that you’re hoping to get hosted on. But we’re just finding that to be a little more complicated than we had hoped. We’re, so the MVPMinimum Viable Product "A minimum viable product (MVP) is a product with just enough features to satisfy early customers, and to provide feedback for future product development." - WikiPedia of it is plain vanilla WordPress, and then we’ll figure out some alternatives for how to get to the other things.

[00:28:20] But I think that we found a similar problem with frontenberg when we first put that on WordPress.orgWordPress.org The community site where WordPress code is created and shared by the users. This is where you can download the source code for WordPress core, plugins and themes as well as the central location for community conversations and organization. https://wordpress.org/ WordPress. org slash Gutenberg is is the back end of a WordPress site basically and when we first put it up there it had just the block editor and that was it. And so that was kind of helpful for folks when they figured out where the, where it lived.

[00:28:43] But when they just went into plain WordPress, they do just get dumped into the dashboard and sometimes couldn’t figure out how to get to where the, the block editor was. And so trying to, to make that experience a bit better this time around is an important part of that. Okay, the last for now in the community, in the community, yeah, no, I think it’s my mind always ask questions.

[00:29:08] Is there a roadmap on migrating from meetup.com to GatherPress?

[00:29:17] I know right now is there are a lot of testing, but basically I’m hosting the testing website now. So I know how it’s going, but I know they are working on, on starting to integrate things with WordPress.org and everything, but I don’t know if there is, there is some idea on when that will be a reality or if, for example, if some new meetup group or some new community wants to start, it will be on, on GatherPress and not in meetup or something like that, or?

[00:29:59] Yeah, there’s not a, there’s not a roadmap for that at the moment. I think that we’re considering this like a testing period for GatherPress, which is fine. And. The reason for that is because we’re having a little bit of difficulty getting people back up and running in their in person events. And so we want to make sure, I want to make sure, that the tools that they can use are tools that feel as comfortable as possible for them.

[00:30:27] So that it’s not this additional lift. Like, I want to put together a WordPress event. I can use Eventbrite or Meetup, or I can use this custom tool. And so I think that the future for getting on gather press still is there. I think it makes sense for us to have something that is more aligned with our open source thoughts and opinions.

[00:30:49] But at the moment, I just want to make sure that there’s not any extra hurdles for folks that are trying to either return to the habit of having in person events happen or join us for the first time. And so great question. And it’s, I think the work that’s being done with GatherPress is good. I think the testing with groups that are getting on there right now is also good.

[00:31:11] It’ll help us figure out like how to get those connections better into profiles and also into the ecosystem of sites as a whole. But right now there’s not a roadmap to get everybody over there. Okay, thank you. Just a quick note that they’re actually seeking feedback from organizers. So, yeah, I’ll share the latest update in the chat.

[00:31:37] Nahuai I think you have another question. Yeah, I will start with the one I didn’t mention in the chat, if I can, it’s not a mention it, but it’s very related with the GatherPress and Meetup. I’m going to host the meetup in, yeah, in one hour or something. And I’ve been having problems with the email

[00:32:00] deliverability or the deliver of the emails in Meetup, which is quite sad because returning from the summer that we did that two months break, it’s less easy to tell the other people that come back in September. We will talk about this and that. Yeah. And I’ve been sending, I usually just send one mail because I’m very mindful of the inbox of the people, but several people told me that they didn’t get it.

[00:32:29] So I sent a second one and some of them got them, but some not. So this is just one thing I will Did they just never arrive? Or did they go into spam? No, never arrived. Never arrived. The spam check in is always the second question. Did you check the spam mailbox? Yeah. In this case, not. So I just wanted to share in case it’s happening to more people.

[00:32:53] And maybe it’s just It’s been years since we had that problem with Meetup, but we can reach out to them, our person over there, and see what’s happening. That would be great because if not, one of the upsides of using meetup is really less an upside because you cannot reach to those people. You can’t get to anybody.

[00:33:12] The question that I wanted to do is more with the extender hat. So I’ve been playing with the blueprints, playground blueprints. I love how you can set up a theme and import demo content and you can really do a one click. Like, look how cool this looks, but I cannot do the same if I’m putting a block theme in the repo because they will activate it and it’s going to be quite sad.

[00:33:44] They will see a nice home homepage, but they will not have any onboarding experience. So specifically for block themes, that’s true. Yeah. Yeah. So my question is, if there is anything thought about that because I think that this diminished quite a lot the experience of the a newcomer that is maybe seen a very cool demo in Playground and then they install, they activate and they say, why is there is this difference between the cool demo I just saw and this thing that I just installed?

[00:34:20] So yeah, the second point is that there are some, I can program something to make that but I cannot put it in the repo and more importantly, I don’t want to reinvent the wheel. I really want to have an extent and a standard to adhere and then use it. So, yeah, my question is, is if there is any idea or anything planned and if there is not, if you would consider it, because I’ve been talking with some Automatticians, just asking, is there anybody working on this?

[00:34:52] My feeling or my sense is that not right now, and I feel that this a bit more important that may looks for user experience. Yeah, I think you’re right. Like, I, I understand that the majority of, of the decisions that we’re trying to make on behalf of users is like, did what they do in one spot. Also look like what they expected it to do when they get on the outside of it.

[00:35:24] And I think that that it counts for this as well. Like we never want to say to someone, this is what you’re getting. And then when they confirm that they want it, they hit publish or hit export or whatever, it doesn’t look like what it looked like on the inside, same problem that we’re having with like putting an ecommerce test me on the homepage, like getting that to look the same as vanilla WordPress will never happen.

[00:35:47] And so I think that that. It’s the same sort of answer to a different kind of question, which is that, yeah, we obviously absolutely need to make sure that the test area is as close to the reality area as we possibly can make it. It is true that no one is currently working on that for block themes inside Automattic, but I don’t think that means that no one could work on it.

[00:36:08] If you’ve got a solution that you would work across the board for block themes and classic themes. Oh, no, I’ll finish the thought. Then I think that you should build a prototype and put it up as a, as a feature proposal and see if we can get other people to work on it. I think that’s a great idea. And then here’s the other thought that I had.

[00:36:31] Okay. I have been wondering if, like, we could at Contributor Days have these, these contributor drives, contribution drives where people take the classic themes and rebuild them as block themes and just republish them in that way because we got so many classic themes that are so great. My favorite theme of all time is 2012 and I know that that means that I just like old design things, but I just write.

[00:37:01] I don’t have a lot of visual stuff on my, on my blog and so like. Of course, I like old, old word based things. But if I had that one in a block way, I probably would try to use it again in a couple of spaces. But yeah, I’ve been wondering if that would be a fun thing to do or a not fun thing to do. But right now, the, the theme tables at Contributor Days are doing, like, everybody show up and we’re going to build a block theme together.

[00:37:23] And then we’ll publish it by the end of the thing. And so like, if we’re going to do that, why not do it with some beloved classic themes that probably could get a new life as a, as a block theme. So yeah, I didn’t ask that question, but no, no, but I think it makes sense. But responding to the previous thing, I don’t have really the time and bandwidth to do a proper, something that I would like to have in core.

[00:37:50] So, the closest thing I’ve been seen is a proposal that Mike McAlister did in some point, I don’t know if you heard about OllieWP, it was a theme that it was an onboarding and it, the onboarding part was stripped out because it was not meeting the the repo guidelines, which makes sense. But I think something like that, I indeed it was built with ReactReact React is a JavaScript library that makes it easy to reason about, construct, and maintain stateless and stateful user interfaces. https://reactjs.org/. and everything, something like that would be really, really nice to have as a foundation.

[00:38:20] And it would be great if someone that could put more time on it or a small group working on that. And I really think, sorry for being a bit like going in the same direction. I really think that themes. are the entry point of a lot of people. And if they are not engaged by the first install and activation, we will lose them.

[00:38:46] So that’s why I think that this part is important. And with that, I close my, my point. I agree with you. I agree with you. We have seen for years that whatever the theme is, is what people assume their WordPress is. And so if they didn’t like the theme, if the theme didn’t work for them, then they didn’t like WordPress and WordPress didn’t work for them.

[00:39:06] So I agree with you on that.

[00:39:12] What else we got?

[00:39:20] I was just saying that in the comments that we should get Jamie Marsland to do a speed build where he gets, where he gets two people to rebuild. two classic themes in 30 minutes. I love it. Yeah, that’d be good. I thought he would do it. Yeah.

[00:39:38] I have one question. Yeah, I was wondering, Josepha, if you could also share any your thoughts on any, like, initiatives, that you think could benefit from increased awareness and, like, support from media folks, any initiatives, yeah, like, specific audiences, I think I know some folks are, you know, like, or are interested in knowing more about, you know, like, priorities, like, for amplification.

[00:40:19] So I think it, if you could share your thoughts on that or any specific initiatives that you think would welcome more, more help and support. Yeah. So there are two that I will, that I have been saying all year, and I’ll say again, cause I mean it then, I mean it now. The first one is, Is around Data Liberation.

[00:40:43] And specifically because it’s powered by Playground. So Data Liberation, obviously, is helping people migrate from one site to another. The more people that we enable to be able to use our tools and our our CMS the better for them, obviously, and for the open web as a whole. But then also for us, because we’re always trying to figure out how to make sure that we can still grow but all of the work, because Data Liberation is such a complex problem

[00:41:12] every bit of work that we do there enables the filling of those gaps that I mentioned before in the user experience. Any time that you have a new user, like, it used to be the case that the first stop on your WordPress learning journey was probably WordPress.org and so you got to the homepage and from there you could get to the showcase.

[00:41:34] You could download. You could learn about the code and and and the people building it. You can learn about the community and the people building it. Those are kind of the four big things that we wanted people to do on the website. And I don’t think that’s the case anymore. I don’t think that people get to WordPress.org as their first experience of WordPress anymore. I think that what they do have is a bunch of content that’s around us saying either, like, these are the things that could be better, or these are the things that I do love and, and, you know. Everybody should look at and so once they get to WordPress, they’re pretty knowledgeable about what they are worried

[00:42:09] the problems are for them and they want to look at something really specific. And so getting some way for them to see the back end as quickly as possible I think matters. Getting them to see themes that look pretty close to what they’re going to get when they unbox it for themselves so that they know whether it’s too complicated, too simple, missing functionality, like the decision making once they get to the pages that we have

[00:42:36] that are really prominent are so different now. And I think that, that what we can enable or hands on experience of it through the work on Playground solves a lot of those problems for us. And so we’ve got to figure out how to get Playground able to do it and then figure out how to get everybody to really adopt it and embrace it.

[00:42:55] And that will help themes and plugins be easier to sell, easier to get into the hands of WordPress users. And then of course, like if someone’s wanting to use your product and your product works with WordPress, then we want to make sure they understand what WordPress looks like too. We don’t want to be a hindrance in anyone’s sales process as it goes with their products.

[00:43:17] And so that’s, that’s a really big thing. It has been, like I said, very hard to work on because it’s a really complex kind of set of tools, but we are really, really close to having it be ready for the community to get in and get their hands on. And so once that happens, I hope that everybody helps us get the word out that it’s available for you to get in and extend and make work with your stuff so that we can teach people how to work with our stuff and your stuff together.

[00:43:46] So that’s a big one. And then the other thing is we have this big shift in our events that is coming. So, like I said, for all the whole year, we have been from an events and community perspective, focusing more on our new users and their experience with us and part of the problem that we often hear from sponsors and organizers, is that like, they’re getting a lot of the same people that come and talk to them.

[00:44:14] And I know that we keep getting stats that are like 40 percent, 50 percent first time attendees at various events that we are hosting, but it’s not translating into, and then they go see sponsors, and then they go see the other things that are available in it. And so, I think that WordCamps have become kind of a black box.

[00:44:37] It’s not easy to tell what’s coming in them, it’s not easy to tell whether it’s for you or not, and then once you get there there’s just so much happening, and it looks like there are a bunch of people who already know everything. And so I would, I would love to demystify our events a little bit, and as we are demystifying, help people to understand that, like, if you truly are brand new to this and you feel a little anxious, we also have all of these online things where you can

[00:45:03] learn about the community, learn about contribution, whatever it is just so that you have a sense for what you’re getting into. And so I think that those are the two things, big initiatives that I really, I really would love a lot more chatter about in the space. And then, as soon as we get a

[00:45:23] prototype for our new admin, like we’re going to need a lot of feedback on that to get it right because millions of people are looking at that every day. And if we suddenly break it for millions of people because we couldn’t figure out how to be loud enough about the fact that that was changing, we’re going to.

[00:45:40] We’re going to have a surprise. We’re going to have a Drupal 8 moment where they were like, object oriented programming forever. And then they lost half of everyone and we don’t want that. We have worked really hard all throughout Gutenberg to not lose half of everyone. And so we don’t necessarily want to break it with an admin change, but yeah, it’s going to be, those are the three big things that I think really are going to need a lot of attention and focus.

[00:46:08] I go again something we’ve been talking for some time, but a few months ago, the, the Cyber Resilience Act was approved. It’s not yet on calendar, but I think in 2025, maybe. Yeah. So, how is WordPress going to comply with the CRA? Yeah,

[00:46:36] so the CRA initially had a really bad carve out for open source that made it, as far as I am concerned, impossible for all of our extended community to function because they were going to have to have this incredibly high burden of proof to prove that like, They weren’t, I don’t know. Also the definitions of the digital assets, I think were not very good.

[00:46:58] So we did really get involved with that and and the carve out for open source is substantially different at this point and is much more in line with what we can and need to be able to do. So at the moment, there’s not a lot that WordPress is going to necessarily need to do, but we are keeping an eye on it and just making sure that we understand how it is moving and changing over time.

[00:47:20] All of the major open source CMSs are planning to try to get together to talk through like what the immediate future impacts are of this now that it looks a little bit different. And also, if there are other pieces of legislation, because I think that there are like four additional pieces of legislation that we have general concerns about the impact on on our communities and our software.

[00:47:46] Yeah. Because they, they, they got out the developer involvement with the security part and everything. So that’s, that’s great for everybody, but there are a lot of things like information forcing updates, security updates, and that those kinds of things that everybody is going to comply open source or not.

[00:48:09] So. We need to start thinking because that’s a lot of work for MetaMeta Meta is a term that refers to the inside workings of a group. For us, this is the team that works on internal WordPress sites like WordCamp Central and Make WordPress. and Meta is not a team that has a lot of time to do a lot of things. So that’s, that’s more, more my concern because I know everything is, is on air, but there are some things that are not going to change. And we need to look on, on that.

[00:48:36] It sounds like you have put a lot of thought into it. So why don’t you send me your list of things you’re concerned about and we will make sure that we have covered all of them. I have a project about that. So, yeah, I’ve been working on that for two years because I knew that that was going to come in and we need to include that on.

[00:48:55] I was in last year at WorldCamp US. I talked with Otto and he told me that there are some tools, internal tools that allow to do some of the things, but those are manual right now, but they need some work to, to open and not be abused for everybody. So I think we have some road made, but there are some things to, to, to do.

[00:49:29] Agreed. Agreed. Yep. I will look forward to your list and project then. Okay.

[00:49:40] May I ask one more thing, please? To, to anybody really. I thank you Chloé. She just gave me the name of Alex Kirk in terms of the Data Liberation project. But I’m curious about the Playground on the homepage button. Is there a point person who, who might be able to give me some, I don’t know, intel about that or an interview?

[00:50:01] That’ll be Adam Zieliński, but also Adam Adam and Alex work together. So that’s great. Thank you. They’re doing a lot of really complicated R and D, but most of the time I understand as long as all you want is like. the surface level information. If you want really complex explanations of what is happening they will be, they will be your people.

[00:50:29] So I just describe it as a voodoo. That’s just, but thank you. Yeah, exactly. Press the button. It’s amazing. Yeah. Thank you. That’s perfect.

[00:50:46] Looks like we have about five minutes left. Yep. I was actually going to share that I want to be mindful of everyone’s time. So I don’t know if there are any other questions

[00:51:07] Good because I can’t answer any questions in five minutes.

[00:51:12] We all know this about me. We’ve learned it over time

[00:51:23] Well, I really appreciate everyone showing up and inviting me along for this. This was great I love talking to you all and answering your question. Yeah, this was yeah, this was really enjoyable Thank you, Josepha, for your time and for sharing your insights. Nathan, I see your hand. I don’t know if that’s a question or, oh, okay.

[00:51:48] Yeah, thank you everyone for contributing to today’s discussion and for sharing your questions as well. And just as a reminder you know, that as, you know, the recap and the recording will be published in the coming days. And if you have any other questions just feel free to reach out on SlackSlack Slack is a Collaborative Group Chat Platform https://slack.com/. The WordPress community has its own Slack Channel at https://make.wordpress.org/chat/..

[00:52:06] All right, bye everyone. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Bye.


Thank you to @cbringmann and @chanthaboune for the peer review.

#media-corps-briefing #summary

Upcoming Media Corps Briefing on Mid-term Goals for WordPress

Join us for the next Media Corps briefing, where we’ll learn about the mid-term goals for WordPress with Executive Director Josepha Haden Chomphosy (@chanthaboune). This topic was a popular choice in the feedback we collected in July and was confirmed as the preferred option for September’s session on Slack.

Session details

  • Date: September 10, 2024
  • Time: 15:00 UTC
  • Location: Zoom (a link will be provided in the Media Corps SlackSlack Slack is a Collaborative Group Chat Platform https://slack.com/. The WordPress community has its own Slack Channel at https://make.wordpress.org/chat/. channel before the session).

What to expect

During this briefing, media folks can gain insights into the mid-term focus areas and priorities for the WordPress open sourceOpen Source Open Source denotes software for which the original source code is made freely available and may be redistributed and modified. Open Source **must be** delivered via a licensing model, see GPL. project, including initiatives that may benefit from increased visibility and support. @chanthaboune will lead the discussion and address participants’ questions.

As usual, the briefing will be recorded and uploaded to the WordPress YouTube channel in the days following the session. Media partners unable to attend live can submit their questions in advance as comments to this post (by September 8).

A few friendly reminders:

  • Briefings are intended for media partners but are open to the public to avoid restricting information. This means anyone can join as a viewer or listener. We will prioritize questions from media partners as much as possible.
  • Due to time constraints, we may be unable to cover all questions live.

Do you have any questions about the session? Please share them in the comments below or on the Media Corps Slack channel.

Thank you to @jenblogs4u for editing and reviewing.

#media-corps-briefing

Summary of August 2024 Media Corps Briefing

On August 7, 2024, the second Media Corps briefing provided media partners with an update on some of the latest developments in the WordPress project. A key highlight was the relaunch of Learn WordPress, with insights from Training contributors Kathryn Presner (@zoonini), Cynthia Norman (@cnormandigital), and Jonathan Bossenger (@psykro).

The briefing was recorded and published on the WordPress.org YouTube channel. Below is a summary with relevant links and resources and the full transcript.

Recording

Participants

Birgit Pauli-Haack (@bph), Bob WP (@bobdunn-trainer), Cynthia Norman (@cnormandigital), Javier Casares (@javiercasares), Jen Miller (@jenblogs4u), Jonathan Bossenger (@psykro), Kathryn Presner (@zoonini), Patricia BT (@patricia70), Peter Ingersoll (@peteringersoll), Rae Morey (@raewrites), Reyes Martínez (@rmartinezduque).

Summary

WordPress updates

Reyes Martínez began the session by sharing updates on recent WordPress releases, including WordPress 6.6.1 and Gutenberg 18.9. Media partners were reminded of the upcoming Hallway Hangout on August 15 to learn more about the ongoing developments in the GutenbergGutenberg The Gutenberg project is the new Editor Interface for WordPress. The editor improves the process and experience of creating new content, making writing rich content much simpler. It uses ‘blocks’ to add richness rather than shortcodes, custom HTML etc. https://wordpress.org/gutenberg/ pluginPlugin A plugin is a piece of software containing a group of functions that can be added to a WordPress website. They can extend functionality or add new features to your WordPress websites. WordPress plugins are written in the PHP programming language and integrate seamlessly with WordPress. These can be free in the WordPress.org Plugin Directory https://wordpress.org/plugins/ or can be cost-based plugin from a third-party.

The briefing continued with references to the WordPress 6.7 release cycle, the introduction of offline mode and Progressive Web App support in WordPress Playground, and the current GitHub discussion on CoreCore Core is the set of software required to run WordPress. The Core Development Team builds WordPress. blockBlock Block is the abstract term used to describe units of markup that, composed together, form the content or layout of a webpage using the WordPress editor. The idea combines concepts of what in the past may have achieved with shortcodes, custom HTML, and embed discovery into a single consistent API and user experience. extensibility.

Shifting to community programs and events, Reyes mentioned the latest updates from the WordPress Mentorship Program and the WordPress Meetup Trends analysis. She invited participants to encourage people to get tickets for the upcoming WordCamp US in Portland, Oregon, and inform them of the annual State of the Word address scheduled for December 16, 2024, in Tokyo, Japan.

Learn WordPress discussion

The briefing discussed the recent Learn WordPress overhaul, highlighting the importance of Learning Pathways and the vision behind the new experience.

Jonathan Bossenger explained the need for a more structured approach to learning WordPress tailored to different user types and how the new pathways were developed based on research and community feedback that began around late 2022. Reflecting on the first launch of Learn WordPress in 2020, he noted:

There was no specific path if you were brand new to WordPress—where to start, where to go from there. Once you’ve then gotten used to WordPress, what’s the next step? Do you want to build with WordPress? Do you want to develop themes? Do you want to develop plugins? And so we realized that this was something the community wanted.

The new Learn WordPress has launched with four Learning Pathways—two for WordPress users and two for developers—and more on the roadmap, including for designers and contributors. One of the following priorities is the Intermediate Plugin Developer course, now calling for contributors.

On the platform’s redesign, Kathryn Presner illustrated the improvements over the former site and the transition from a text-heavy layout to a visually cohesive look that aligns with other WordPress.orgWordPress.org The community site where WordPress code is created and shared by the users. This is where you can download the source code for WordPress core, plugins and themes as well as the central location for community conversations and organization. https://wordpress.org/ sections. She emphasized how the community collaborated in creating the new thumbnail graphics and the ability to preview courses without a WordPress.org login or account—allowing a broader audience to benefit from the educational resources.

Cynthia Norman shared her experience developing content for the Intermediate Theme Developer course and touched on the importance of allowing learners to assess their comprehension through hands-on activities and quizzes. On that note, the integration of WordPress Playground for practical learning and the overall efforts to make the experience interactive and fun were highlighted as important enhancements.

Learn WordPress Q&A

During the Q&A, participants discussed various topics, including the visibility of completed courses and lessons on WordPress.org profiles, certifications, and Learn multilingual capabilities.

Training contributors shared this GitHub issue and the ongoing conversations with the MetaMeta Meta is a term that refers to the inside workings of a group. For us, this is the team that works on internal WordPress sites like WordCamp Central and Make WordPress. team about giving more visible recognition of learners’ achievements on WordPress.org profiles. 

Regarding official certifications, Kathryn emphasized the priority of launching the new Learn WordPress site and referred to past discussions on the pros and cons of a certification program. Jonathan added his perspective, stressing the importance of establishing and agreeing on high-quality content the community supports before considering certifications. The work on Learning Pathways is seen as a foundational step in this direction.

The discussion also addressed the localization of Learn content and the need for more translators and a better system. Kathryn mentioned the testing efforts with TranslatePress and expressed hope of implementing a multilingual solution soon.

Lastly, they provided insight into the number of contributors involved in content creation. In July, for example, the team had six content creators (working on videos, scripts, voiceovers, editing, etc.) and three people who created localized content.

Questions submitted in the chat (with timestamps)
  • [00:27:00] Javier Casares (WPpodcast): When you finish a lesson/something, is there any idea of showing that somewhere in “your profile”? Like a new tab (prefer) or in the activity?
  • [00:30:03] Javier Casares: Is there any idea of having an “official” certification from the Community in some way? (Maybe related to the question before in your profile)
  • [00:36:17] Javier Casares: Another big thing around Learn… is multilingual. Something new about it?
  • [00:39:40] Rae (The Repository): How many contributors are working on creating courses/lessons?

Showcase entries

After the Learn WordPress discussion, Reyes provided an update on the latest entries added to the WordPress.org Showcase:

She also reminded participants about the State of Enterprise WordPress Survey 2024, which is currently open for feedback from enterprise organizations using WordPress.

Open floor

During the open floor, a question was raised about the progress of the Media Corps experiment. Reyes noted that the project is still in an early learning phase and aims to evaluate progress by the end of the year. She also provided her perspective on the Media Corps and Anne McCarthy’s (@annezazu) efforts in uniting WordPress YouTubers, explaining the different goals and how they can work together.

As the session concluded, the conversation shifted to recent criticism and discussions of WordPress and Gutenberg in YouTube videos. Reyes mentioned that she had no leadership feedback on the matter but acknowledged the challenge for contributors of tracking and responding to all the feedback shared regularly across different platforms.

Most resources shared during the briefing have been added as inline links to the summary above, but here are some additional links that were referenced:

Transcript

The following transcript was AI-generated. Note that it may contain some errors despite being reviewed.

Full transcript

00:00:12 – Reyes Martínez
All right, I think we are ready. Hello, everyone, and welcome to this Media Corps briefing. Thank you for taking the time to join us today. I’m Reyes and I’ll be facilitating today’s session. Before we dive into today’s agenda, I would like to remind everyone that this session is being recorded. And I also thought I would share what you can expect from the session. So first of all, I’ll start by giving an overview of some of the latest WordPress releases, community updates, and events. And then we’ll move on to discuss the new Learn WordPress experience. We have some training contributors with us today who will share more information about this launch and address any questions you might have. Kathryn, Cynthia and Jonathan, would you like to introduce yourselves?

00:01:15 – Kathryn Presner
Sure, I guess we’ll go in the order you just said. I’m Kathryn Presner and I’m based in Montreal, Canada. And I’ve been working with WordPress since 2008, first as a WordPress designer developer, and then as a happiness engineer with WordPress.comWordPress.com An online implementation of WordPress code that lets you immediately access a new WordPress environment to publish your content. WordPress.com is a private company owned by Automattic that hosts the largest multisite in the world. This is arguably the best place to start blogging if you have never touched WordPress before. https://wordpress.com/. And now I am a sponsored contributor working with the training team. And so I’ve helped with the remake of learn.wordpress.org. And I help do other things in the community, like helping out with a guide program that the training team has to mentor new contributors and a whole bunch of other things involving the training team. So it’s great to be here.

00:01:53 – Reyes Martínez
Thanks, Kathryn. Cynthia, did I pronounce your name correctly?

00:02:01 – Cynthia Norman
Yeah. Perfect. Hi, thanks for having me here. I am a new contributor with the training team. My background is a freelance WordPress developer for the past four years. I’ve been exclusively working with WordPress. And previous to freelancing, I was actually a C-sharp programmer for a SaaS company.

00:02:29 – Reyes Martínez
Nice. Thank you for joining us. Jonathan.

00:02:34 – Jonathan Bossenger
Hey, everybody. I’m Jonathan. I’m from Cape Town, South Africa. It’s nice to see some of you for the first time. I’ve definitely had some communication and conversations with some of you over the past years, but it’s nice to actually see some faces that are folks that I recognize. And I, like Kathryn, I’m a sponsored contributor to the training team. And I work with folks like Cynthia to create all the educational content, the lessons, the online workshops that we have on Learn WordPress.

00:03:05 – Reyes Martínez
Thank you so much, Jonathan, and thank you everyone again for joining us. Okay, after discussing the new learn WordPress updates. If time permits, I will also try to share a quick rundown of the latest showcase entries.

And finally, we will open the floor for other discussion topics and questions about the Media Corps project. We have Jen as well, who has been helping with the Media Corps project, so I’m sure she’ll also be helping addressing any questions or discussion topics we might have. As a reminder, you are welcome to share any questions during the session in the chat. So when first submitting a question, just please remember to indicate indicate the media outlet or channel that you represent, so we can have more context. And I think that’s pretty much all.

00:04:01 – Reyes Martínez
Do you have any questions so far? All good. Okay. Let’s dive right into our first agenda topic then. On WordPress releases and community program updates. One second, let me first share. Okay, some relevant links in the chat that I’ll be, one second, that I’ll be mentioning for reference. There are a bunch of links, so don’t worry. I’ll be just mentioning the different updates. But there you go, so you can have them for reference.

All right. WordPress 6.6.1 released on July 23rd. This maintenance release featured seven bug fixes in core and nine for the block editor. In episode 84 of the WordPress Briefing Podcast, Josepha Haden Chomphosy and Meher Bala, 6.6 release coordinator, discussed WordPress 6.6 and Meher’s journey from contributing to marketing to leading their release. If you haven’t, give that a listen, I highly recommend it. And numerous media partners covered and helped amplify the 6.6 release. So I just wanted to note and express a big thank you for all those contributions.

And we are right now in the WordPress 6.7 release cycle with BetaBeta A pre-release of software that is given out to a large group of users to trial under real conditions. Beta versions have gone through alpha testing in-house and are generally fairly close in look, feel and function to the final product; however, design changes often occur as part of the process. 1 scheduled for October 1. And we should expect an update on the 6.6, sorry, 6.7 release squad very soon. As you might know, Gutenberg 18.9 was released on July 31 and introduced new updates to data views, some consistent design tool support across more blocks and improved usability when editing and applying font size presets in global styles, among other highlights. And if you’re interested in learning more about what’s being worked on in the Gutenberg plugin, I recommend you check out the next hallway hangout, which is scheduled for August 15th.

00:06:33 – Reyes Martínez
Okay, moving on to WordPress Playground. The team recently announced that it supports offline mode and that it can be installed as a progressive web app. These features allow folks to explore and experiment with WordPress without needing an active internet connection. Which makes it easier to develop and test their ideas on the go. So this is a very cool update actually. And lastly, WordPress developers with experience or interest in extending core blocks are encouraged to share their insights in a GitHubGitHub GitHub is a website that offers online implementation of git repositories that can easily be shared, copied and modified by other developers. Public repositories are free to host, private repositories require a paid subscription. GitHub introduced the concept of the ‘pull request’ where code changes done in branches by contributors can be reviewed and discussed before being merged be the repository owner. https://github.com/ discussion on core block extensibility. You can also find that link in the chat.

00:07:14 – Reyes Martínez
Any questions so far? All good? Okay, let’s move on then to… Well, let me check the… Okay, yeah, perfect. Okay, moving on to other community news and upcoming events. The next cohort of the WordPress Mentorship Program is scheduled for October-November of this year. The call for interest, which closed in mid July, attracted 54 mentee applications and 30 from prospective mentors.

The community team also published an analysis of global trends in WordPress meetups and a working group has been formed to analyze regional trends. WordCampWordCamp WordCamps are casual, locally-organized conferences covering everything related to WordPress. They're one of the places where the WordPress community comes together to teach one another what they’ve learned throughout the year and share the joy. Learn more. US 2024 is approaching fast. It’s taking place from September 17th to 20th in Portland, Oregon. The organizing team recently reopened the call for volunteers until tomorrow, August 8, and published the details and location of the social event, just in case you haven’t seen those posts. And the schedule will be published in the coming weeks, if I’m not mistaken. But in the meantime, any help amplifying and encouraging people to get tickets will be highly appreciated. 

And the last item on upcoming events that I have on my list is the State of the WordState of the Word This is the annual report given by Matt Mullenweg, founder of WordPress at WordCamp US. It looks at what we’ve done, what we’re doing, and the future of WordPress. https://wordpress.tv/tag/state-of-the-word/.. As you might know, State of the Word is the annual keynote addressed by WordPress leadership and will take place this year on December 16th in Tokyo, Japan. The event will highlight this year’s achievements of the open sourceOpen Source Open Source denotes software for which the original source code is made freely available and may be redistributed and modified. Open Source **must be** delivered via a licensing model, see GPL. project and outline its future direction and vision. And I just wanted to share that we should get some updates out later this month, so stay tuned. But yeah, I’ll keep you all posted on that. Okay, I think that’s all on the first agenda items. Do you have any questions before we move on to discuss the learn WordPress experience?

00:09:34 – Reyes Martínez
Okay, I don’t see any questions in the chat. Feel free also to unmute if you.

00:09:40 – Jen Miller
Did you have a date for the block extensibility meeting? Is that the hallway hangout? Or is that a separate event?

00:09:55 – Reyes Martínez
No, the discussion on GitHub is still open. There are no dates, I believe. There’s a current discussion and that’s still open for developers to share feedback and insights on that.

00:10:06 – Jen Miller
Okay, good. Just wanted to make sure.

00:10:09 – Reyes Martínez
Thank you, Jen.

00:10:13 – Reyes Martínez
All right, I believe there are no further questions so next on our agenda is the announcement of the new Learn WordPress experience, which went live a few days ago. Just as a brief introduction for context, since 2020 Learn WordPress has been a hub for consistent, high-quality educational resources that users can trust to learn WordPress.

And the platform has recently undergone a significant transformation, with a new modern interface and the introduction of learning pathways. This improves the overall user experience with a learner-centric approach. And I know this has been a collaborative project which has involved multiple contributors and teams, including training, meta, work, marketing, sorry, and design folks. Kathryn or Jonathan, would you like to explain a little bit more about the learning pathways, why they matter, and the vision behind the new Learn experience?

00:11:33 – Jonathan Bossenger
Shall I’ll take that one, Kathryn. Sure. So with this sort of official launch of the, you know, the Learn WordPress we knew before the relaunch that happened, the training team did a bit of research with our individual learners survey at around about the end of 2022, beginning of 2023.

And we wanted to find out from learners what was working, what wasn’t working, what would they like to see. And the big item that we saw a lot, a lot of people were saying was a more structured, more defined approach to learning WordPress. So those of you who remember Learn WordPress, when it sort of kicked off in 2020, there were some courses, there were some tutorials, but it was kind of very random, very scattershot. There was no specific path if you were brand new to WordPress, where to start, where to go from there. Once you’ve then gotten used to WordPress, what’s the next step? Do you want to build with WordPress? Do you want to develop themes? Do you want to develop plugins? And so we realized that this was something the community wanted. And so we spent about a year or so kind of defining what that might look like. And that’s how we came up with this idea of structured learning pathways.

So the learning pathways that we’ve currently launched with, we’ve got at the moment we’re on three different user types, focusing specifically on WordPress users, so those that are brand new to WordPress or getting used to WordPress. We also want to create content for designers, for those that are building sites with WordPress, designing with WordPress, and then also developers. A big reason why Cynthia and I are involved is that it’s a big ask from the community for high-quality developer-focused content. So we’ve launched with four learning pathways, two user pathways, two developer pathways. We have a whole bunch more coming that we’re working on. And that’s kind of the history behind all of that and how we got there. Kathryn, I don’t know if you want to chat maybe a little bit about the design and how we ended up there.

00:13:42 – Kathryn Presner
Sure. Actually, I’m going to just share my screen. I want to just show what the site looked like before for those who might not remember. This is what it looked like before. So the focus was on tutorials, which were sort of one-off videos about a specific topic, and lesson plans, which were geared to people teaching WordPress to others. And then as Jonathan said, there were some courses, but no real and then tutorials here. These little graphics did not used to be here. And so this is what it looked like before. And when it was relaunched, this is what it looks like now. So it was the design was overhauled to better match the rest of the .org site, at least the parts of the .org site that have been revamped and refreshed. So it’s a much more coherent look now.

And also before it was very text heavy. You know, apart from these sort of trapezoids or whatever that shape is called, it was really text heavy. So these graphics were created to represent the different user types. So this is for developers. And this is for users. And as Jonathan mentioned, there will be learning pathways for designers coming and also there’ll be learning pathways for contributors coming further down the road. And then, these little thumbnail graphics were created. So the design team created this incredible tool in Figma called the thumbnail generator. And we created a set of instructions and even a video on how to create these thumbnails because we have these hundreds of courses and lessons.

So courses are composed of multiple lessons. So you’ll see here, beginner developer has 59 lessons. Beginner user has 24. And each of these courses and lessons needed a little thumbnail graphic to add visual interest to the site and variety and make it a lot more interesting to look at than it used to be. So the community actually rallied around and created hundreds of thumbnail graphics for all these pieces of content. So you can see now if you go to see all courses, There are all these little graphics. And this is a community that did these. So we had sessions online. We had sessions. I did a little session at WordCamp Canada. We had a meetupMeetup All local/regional gatherings that are officially a part of the WordPress world but are not WordCamps are organized through https://www.meetup.com/. A meetup is typically a chance for local WordPress users to get together and share new ideas and seek help from one another. Searching for ‘WordPress’ on meetup.com will help you find options in your area.. We had an impromptu contributor hour. So there were all sorts of activities to get people helping to create these graphics and then helping upload them.

So I think that’s a cool example of how the community really pulled together to make the site look great. So yeah, that’s a little bit about the site. And just as Jonathan said, if we go into one of these, learning pathway areas, you can see that for now there are two courses on developing with WordPress, one for beginner developers. And if you click on it, you’ll see that it consists of modules, chunks of lessons. And within each module, there are lessons. And many of these lessons were set to be previewable, which means that without even needing a .org account, without even needing to click take this course, you don’t even have to be logged in, you can actually see the whole lesson. So the only thing you won’t be able to do is take a quiz if there’s a quiz with the course.

So I think this is really cool because it means people can dive in, appreciate the content and think, oh, hey, you know what, I actually want to sign in, take this course. And then create a dot org account and then sort of, you know, get enveloped in the community and hopefully participate further. So, and the other thing I don’t know what Jonathan if you want to talk a little about this practice on a demo site or

00:17:32 – Jonathan Bossenger 
Sure. So this ties back into what Reyes was saying earlier about WordPress Playground and the fact that Playground exists. So there are direct links from the course landing page to be able to spin up a WordPress Playground instance. So as you’re working through the course, you can have the instance in your browser, so you don’t need a local WordPress install. You can just go through and you can can test out the things that you’re learning.

We’re also busy working on being able to, there’s a WordPress playground block that we’re embedding in the lessons themselves. So for specific lessons, you’ll just be able to, in the lesson itself, when you finish the lesson, have a little practical running in WordPress playground that you’ll be able to test your knowledge right then and there. And because it’s running on Playground, you can just export that to your local machine. If you’re doing the developer side of things and you’re writing code, you can see the code making changes live in that Playground block and then download that code locally if it’s a theme or it’s a plugin. So we’re still busy experimenting with the best ways to use all of that. There’s been some accessibilityAccessibility Accessibility (commonly shortened to a11y) refers to the design of products, devices, services, or environments for people with disabilities. The concept of accessible design ensures both “direct access” (i.e. unassisted) and “indirect access” meaning compatibility with a person’s assistive technology (for example, computer screen readers). (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Accessibility) issues that we’ve been fixing in the Playground block to get that working.

But we’re really hoping to make Learn at WordPress.org, the place where you come to not only learn WordPress, but also practice WordPress, and practice what you’ve learned without needing to go anywhere else, without needing to install anything else, and really make it this interactive, fun experience. We all know that learning is important, but it’s often very slow and boring and tedious, and so we’re trying to make it as interactive and as fun as possible as we possibly can.

The other thing I want to mention, and it’s difficult to see this because of the resolution on Kathryn’s screen, but one of the biggest bugbears that I had about the old site was that we had this very narrow content area. I think it was set at like 800 pixels or something from, you know, back in 2020. Now it’s a lot wider, so it takes up more of the screen real estate. So if you’re on a bigger screen, you won’t have all these white areas on the side. You can see it’s kind of stretched on Kathryn’s screen. So it just means we can present more content to you. So we’ve really tried to modernize the entire experience and just make it a fun place to be.

00:19:38 – Reyes Martínez
Nice. Looks very, very exciting. The site actually looks great. So I’m really excited about it. And Cynthia, I believe, well first of all, congrats on receiving the Kim Parsell Memorial Scholarship. I know you have had a key role in developing the content of the Intermediate Theme Developer course, which is one of the courses that are already out and available. Would you like to tell us briefly about your experience and how do you believe the developer learning pathways will also benefit developers in the community?

00:20:20 – Cynthia Norman
Love to share my experience. So I am an unsponsored contributor, which means that I would wake up in the morning, do my content creation, and then switch over to doing my day job. So it was it was very time consuming, but it was a lot of fun. I fell into the training team quite easily. I do have A background in education as well, and computer training. And so this felt natural for me.

I was fortunate, however, when I jumped in, all that research that Jonathan talked about, that was done for me. So I have experience in developing curriculum, and I know how choosing the topics and creating the outline creating that content is very time consuming. So that was all done for me. I actually based all of my lessons on the theme handbook that’s available in docs. So that made it, you know, that I could quickly get into the creative portion, which was creating the script and the video. So then I edited the video and then I used Camtasia for that. And then I created the lessons that were just shown to you. So I would go in and add my video and the text.

So now we get to focus on the fun stuff that Jonathan is talking about, and that’s making sure that people that are going through can feel that they have an opportunity to assess their comprehension, so they can do some hands-on activities and some quizzes. So, go beyond that visual experience and play around either within Playground or their local development environment. I don’t see myself leaving the training team anytime soon. There’s so much fun work ahead of us.

00:22:53 – Reyes Martínez
Well, that’s great to hear. Jonathan, please go ahead.

00:22:58 – Jonathan Bossenger 
I just wanted to add to what Cynthia said. She reminded me about the fact that the foundation of our lessons are the documentation. So almost every lesson that exists in these courses has a link back to some piece of documentation somewhere. And the great thing about this is that as we’re busy creating this content, if we see documentation that needs a little bit of a tweak, or it needs a bit of an update, then we can go and we can, you know, chat to the Docs team and we can say, hey, we need to fix this, we need to fix that. It got to a point over the course of the last sort of six months to a year that we were working on these learning pathways but the Docs team just basically said to me, just fine, just go and fix it. And I got full admin rights to go and make the changes. But it just means we’re helping to make the documentation better in the process.

We’re seeing as we’re exploring these things, and this is what was great about having Cynthia on board. Cynthia is a much more experienced theme developer than I am. So she was coming up with, okay, how are we going to teach this? How are we going to teach that? Bouncing ideas off me, and then we would discover, oh, maybe this documentation needs to be moved around, needs to be changed slightly to make more sense to somebody learning about theme development.

So the great thing about, you know, there’s that old saying of, the only way you really can understand something is if you have to teach it, because then you really have to understand it. In this process, we’re learning so much about how WordPress works and how you develop with WordPress, and helping to bring that information and that learning back to docs and through other folks in the community. It’s this really cool cycle of improvement, which has been, I think, for Cynthia and myself, really, really rewarding.

00:24:36 – Reyes Martínez 
That’s indeed a great point. And I believe there’s an open call for contributors. Is that correct?

00:24:44 – Jonathan Bossenger
That is correct.

00:24:44 – Reyes Martínez
For the Intermediate Plugin Developer learning pathway.

00:24:48 – Jonathan Bossenger
Yes, so the Intermediate Plugin Developer is essentially the next learning pathway we want to work on. The way we laid out, and if you want, I can talk about development and development courses for the rest of time, so stop me if this gets boring, but with the developer learning pathways, we sort of laid out beginner developer foundational work, and then we thought about, okay, the next sort of logical step once you start developing in WordPress is you kind of make a choice between theme or plugin, depending on your use case or requirements, you know, where your interest lies.

So that’s why we split it off to intermediate theme, intermediate plugin. So theme is now done because we figured that was the most important one to do first. Plugin is next. And plugin is quite few more lessons, because there’s almost quite a lot more that you could do with plugins, a lot more interactions and implementations and things like that. And I worked out that based on an average output rate of 2.5 lessons a week, which is roughly what I can do on my own, if I were to work on this on my own with no other support, it would take the rest of this year. And that’s not cool. So I put out a call for folks to come and join me. I’m hoping to get the plugin community.

We’ve cross-posted to the Plugin Review team. So anybody who has an interest in developing plugins, who has an interest in teaching others about developing plugins, who can help us research and write scripts, who can help us with voice recordings. So sometimes we’ll do a cool thing where somebody will do the research and script writing and somebody else will record the voice and then someone else will take the voice and put the video together. Or someone will just, you know, do the whole thing. So we’ve got all of these different opportunities where folks could come along. Or just reviewing, you know, reviewing our scripts, reviewing our final videos, making sure that the content is valid, correct, and showing the best of what is possible with plugin development.

There is the call for contributors. It’s on the training team site. And then there’s also If you go to our GitHub repository, there is an issue I’ve pinned at the top of the issues list for intermediate plugin developer, and that’s where you can comment and say, yes, I want to get involved and we can start connecting there.

00:26:54 – Reyes Martínez 
Awesome. Thanks for sharing. Glad to hear there are plenty of contributing opportunities there. Javier, I saw you shared a question, would you like to unmute and share it yourself?

00:27:08 – Javier Casares 
Okay. So the first one, I think both have been in some topics in some conversations. The first one, I don’t know if now it’s working, but is it showing when, if I’m not… When you finish a lesson or a tutorial or something, there is like something, somewhere that shows that you did that tutorial. Is that showing anywhere? Because I know you can see that in Learn WordPress, but it’s shown in I don’t know, in your profile or someplace?

00:28:03 – Kathryn Presner 
Yes.

00:28:04 – Javier Casares 
Okay.

00:28:04 – Kathryn Presner 
I actually had this already open, so I’ll just show you. It is shown on your profile in your activity.

00:28:14 – Javier Casares 
Okay, in the activity, but…

00:28:14 – Kathryn Presner 
That’s what it is for now. If somebody feels like there should be more to this, like a badge…

00:28:27 – Javier Casares 
More, like maybe, under the activity tab. For example, there are the photos, the plugins, because the activity disappears when you did some things.

00:28:44 – Jonathan Bossenger 
So if I could interrupt this. That is actually a conversation that we have had with, I think, the Meta team. I can’t remember. I think it was in GitHub somewhere. I can go and find the GitHub issue once we finish chatting about this. But we have had a conversation. I seem to remember even using my inspector, inspector tools, developer tools to like quickly hard code one and sort of show it. And the idea was to have it as its own Learn tab, you know, so where it’s like plugins, and there’s a couple others I can’t remember what they are. But you have one for Learn and then that would list your completed courses or your lessons that you’ve taken, whatever. So that is part of the plan.

I think I think it’s a conversation that, because we don’t have control over the profiles, it’s a conversation we need to have with Meta. So it is definitely something we want to do, but our focus was on getting the new site going and then that sort of part of the next phase. So that is definitely a conversation that has been had. I’ll find that issue of that conversation and see if I can share it while we’re doing this.

00:29:45 – Javier Casares 
Okay. No, the main reason is because the activity disappears. So if you want to see if that person did some tutorials, you need a place to see that. And that’s my second question. Another old question about this. Is there any idea to have an official certification from the community or something?

00:30:17 – Kathryn Presner 
So certifications have been a long conversation, and I’ll even link to a post from 2022. It’s a big topic, and I think there have been a lot of discussions about the pros and cons of having certifications, the difficulty in establishing a certification program.

And like Jonathan said, the focus was on getting the site up and running. And then we can pick up some of these conversations because clearly, some folks really want certifications. And whether that’s something that’ll happen, I’m not sure, because like Jonathan said, that’s also a wider conversation that has to happen. But certainly, it comes up a lot. And I think now that the site is out, we can pick up some of those conversations and see where they go.

00:31:06 – Javier Casares 
Maybe a first step…

00:31:09 – Jonathan Bossenger 
Sorry if I could just. Sorry, I want to quickly add to that because this is something that I am very opinionated of. So this is my opinion as Jonathan Bossenger, not the WordPress community, not the company that I work for. But those of you in this room might remember there was a company a number of years ago, last year or some time, that released their own certification and it was covered on WP Tavern.

And I remember some of the comments on that Tavern post, and one of the comments was, and this is nothing against that company, I’m not bringing this up to say anything against them, but one of the comments by a community member in that Tavern post was, if I fix all the bugs on their website, does that automatically mean I get the certification? And to me, what that points to is that as a community, we need to first agree what is required to get that certification. Now, we have some idea of how to get there. We’re busy creating this content. It’s a community effort. So I think we’re all kind of agreeing that having this content is good. The community is reviewing it. The community is giving us feedback. I recently had a piece of feedback on one of my lessons about something that I showed that could have been done a better way, and I’m busy recording an update for that.

So once we have that foundation, once we have those courses out there that the community agrees on these courses are good, then I think we can have that conversation about certifications, because then the community agrees this content is good. The process of going through this content, learning this content, doing the practical examples, exams, whatever we have together, means that the person who’s completed this content knows what they’re talking about, then we can have certifications, I feel. And so I feel like this work that we’re doing now is laying the foundation of that.

And as Kathryn shared, we’ve had this discussion as a training team many, many, many times. And this project, this process of creating these learning pathways is very much part of it. But as a community, I don’t think we’re ready yet to say this content. I could tell you that this content is right, because I created it. But somebody else might say, no, what you’ve done here is wrong. We need to tweak this. We need to tweak that. So there needs to be a little bit of time for the community. And I would love, and I’m going to make this open call, seeing as I’ve got the media call here, every single WordPress developer out there, come and take the course, come and tell me what I’m doing wrong. So we can make it better. So we can make it right. So that when anybody takes it, we all know, we all agree that this is the best content for these people to learn from. Excuse me. And then we can certify.

00:33:36 – Javier Casares 
Okay.

00:33:39 – Reyes Martínez 
Thanks, Javier, for asking. I think conversations around certifications can go on for a long time. I know, I know. It’s a big topic, yeah. And I know there are some known challenges as well.

00:33:53 – Reyes Martínez 
Jonathan, you raised your hand again or… okay, I don’t know if you wanted to share something else. I just wanted to share or ask you also where people can learn more about Learn WordPress and the Learning Pathways project? Kathryn, maybe you can share…

00:34:13 – Kathryn Presner 
Sure. Well, I think you might have shared it in the chat before, but there is a post if you’re talking about the new site and learning pathways on the new site. I wrote an introductory post here, but is that what you meant or did you mean something else?

00:34:31 – Reyes Martínez 
Yeah, let me share some of those links. And I believe you hosted an online workshop yesterday and you’re hosting another one tomorrow. Is that correct?

00:34:41 – Kathryn Presner 
Yes. Yes, exactly. So we had one yesterday. Jonathan and I hosted a workshop about the new site. We recorded it. It’s up on WordPress.tv, I will grab the link. And then we’re having another one tomorrow. So that’s a tomorrow will be with Wes Theron, who’s another content creator. And yeah, we walk through the new site live. Oh, thank you for grabbing the link. And here’s the recording of yesterday’s. And yeah, it’s a tour of the new site in greater depth than we’ve done here, let’s say. And we also had the certifications question yesterday. So obviously, that’s going to keep coming up. But it’s good. It’s good for us to talk about it and get the conversation going again. So yeah, that would be another place to check out.

00:35:26 – Reyes Martínez 
Definitely. I know Ben also gave a talk at WordCamp Europe for those folks interested in getting a little bit more background about the Learn WordPress platform as well. I’m going to share the link in the chat as well. And there was an episode in the WordPress Briefing podcast as well with Wes, I believe, touching on the learning pathways. So all of those are great resources to get some more context. Okay.

00:36:04 – Reyes Martínez 
And I think, I don’t know folks if you want to share anything else about the new Learn WordPress launch, any other resources?

00:36:14 – Kathryn Presner 
I can take this question from Javier, if you want.

00:36:19 – Reyes Martínez 
Oh, yeah, sure.

00:36:22 – Kathryn Presner 
So very good question about multilingual capability. I will share my screen and show you what we have now. So we have had volunteers translating over time. So not just for the launch, but over time, some of the lessons, some of the courses. And so you can toggle the language to see what’s available. We need more folks to help translate, and also we need a better multilingual solution. So right now, if you click on, you know, Italiano, you’ll see the courses in Italian. These are some community courses. But this isn’t a true multilingual solution, obviously. This is sort of what could be done at the time.

However, going forward, we want a better multilingual solution. And so we are testing a multilingual plugin, which is TranslatePress. Now, the Meta team ran into some technical issues with TranslatePress. There were some issues with that plugin, using it at scale like this. There were some performance issues. The TranslatePress team said they would fix them. And so now, again, now that the site is launched and we’ve got the base up and running, we’re picking that up again, and hopefully we’ll be able to implement that and have a full multilingual solution. Because the way of copying content right now is not ideal. It’s a cumbersome process and it’s not ideal, as anyone who’s ever built a multilingual site knows. You need a good system. And so TranslatePress tested well, it’s just that there are some scalability issues with it. So stay tuned.

00:38:09 – Reyes Martínez 
Thanks, Kathryn, for answering.

00:38:19 – Jonathan Bossenger 
We do have a process in place to start translating the content, even though the plugin is not working. So again, call for contributors. If you speak a different language to English, I speak Afrikaans, which is useless to the rest of the world. So I can’t translate anything. But if you speak another language and you can translate the content, that would be amazing, because I would love to see all of our content translated for everyone. So if you want to translate, you can start. And then once we get the solution in place, then we can implement it.

00:38:44 – Javier Casares
Okay.

00:38:47 – Reyes Martínez 
Thank you. Okay, I was saying that I want to be mindful of people’s time. So, if there are no further questions, I believe we can move on to the next agenda item. I’m also curious, because we are approaching the hour, I’m also curious to know if you folks prefer or want to hear about showcase entries, or do you prefer to jump directly into the open floor?

00:39:23 – Reyes Martínez 
I see, Rae, you are… Did I pronounce it correctly as well? Rae? Okay. Yeah, maybe then I can share… Oh, question. Rae, you can go ahead as well and unmute, yeah.

00:39:40 – Rae Morey 
Hi, everyone. I was wondering how many people are working on creating, how many contributors are working on creating content for Learn WordPress? If there’s a small team, if there’s lots of people, I mean, because there’s a lot of content to create, you know, with one course having 59 lessons, and that’s very time-consuming. So I’m just interested in the workload as well.

00:40:05 – Jonathan Bossenger 
Hmm, Kathryn, do you feel like answering that one? Should I take it? Cynthia?

00:40:08 – Kathryn Presner 
Yeah, I’m trying to look up the stat for July.

00:40:12 – Jonathan Bossenger 
I can talk, but I don’t want to be the Misha.

00:40:15 – Kathryn Presner 
Well, go ahead and talk. Meantime, I’m looking up the number for July specifically.

00:40:22 – Jonathan Bossenger 
Sure. So what I do know is there are a small number of what we’re calling content creators. So Kathryn, sorry, Cynthia is a content creator. I don’t know why my hand is up. Maybe Sue was picking up my hand, but I didn’t physically do it. Cynthia is a content creator. I’m a content creator. Wes is a content creator. What we mean by that is somebody who takes a lesson idea, a description, with an objective, sometimes not even an objective, maybe some links, and does the whole thing start to finish. So at the moment there’s about four or five of us that are, you know, we create the whole thing start to finish.

Then there are a number of folks who are just creating the video part. So we somebody I remember who met with some folks from I think it’s Hostinger, they’ve got some video editors. They’re not great at the research and script writing part, but they’re great at taking a voice recording and a script and then putting some video together. So we have two team members from Hostinger that are contributing a number of hours per week towards that. We have a big pool of reviewers. So we have a number of reviewers in the team. I would say easily 15 reviewers that review the content quite regularly. And then we also have a number of script writers. So again, it’s a small number. There’s about three or four of those. They just do research and script writing.

And I want to highlight Ronny Shani there. She’s done some amazing work with us. And I’m sure I see other people putting thumbs up. Ronny’s all over the place. She does amazing things. But she’s helped with a lot of research and script writing, especially for the developer-focused things. She’s not comfortable having her voice recorded or doing the video, but she’s very good at doing that. So I would say on the whole, the whole team team, if we include the reviewers, is probably 20 to 25. That excludes anybody translating content, that’s just creating the original English content. But then that’s broken down by different roles and what folks are capable of doing. Obviously, creating content requires you to be comfortable recording your voice as you can hear, I’m very comfortable doing that, comfortable with a video editing tool, putting these things together. And that’s why we’ve tried to sort of open up the sausage factory and make it easy to break these tasks up a little bit so that we can include other contributors. So that’s why in my call for contributors post, I’m saying if you are interested in any of those sort of five areas, please come and join us because the more the merrier.

00:42:47 – Kathryn Presner 
Thanks, Jonathan. And in the meantime, I popped the stat in the chat. But in July, we had six content creators. That’s folks creating videos, scripts, voiceovers, editing, and all that types of work. And then we had three people who created localized content. So that was in two different languages.

That gives you some idea. And I don’t think that was out of the ordinary. It’s not an average, but that’s a sample month.

00:43:21 – Reyes Martínez 
Thank you. Thank you both for answering that. Okay. Any other lingering questions?

00:43:35 – Reyes Martínez 
It feels, it looks like we can move on to the next item. Again, I don’t know… how do you feel about going quickly through some of the latest showcase entries? Is that okay for everyone? Yeah?

Okay, I guess these sessions always take longer than expected. A lot of things to talk about and discuss. Okay, so again, let me share some links for reference in the chat.

00:44:16 – Reyes Martínez
I’ll try to cover these very quickly. One of the first entries I shared is Freethink. Freethink is a digital media company dedicated to sharing stories of people and groundbreaking technologies.

They have a modern website design that draws visitors into a dynamic mix of content including long form written pieces and videos, and they leverage WordPress scalability and design is built on WordPress, WordPress VIP. It’s a really cool site and a large publication. So here’s the link to the showcase.

And the next on the list is Spotify’s official newsroom, For the Record, which leans on WordPress publishing capabilities and the flexibility of custom blocks. They deliver a wide range of content about the company, its technology, and cultural and musical trends. And, oh, the Spotify entry, we don’t know, or at least I don’t have any other information about who designed the site. But if you’re interested, I can try to just learn a little bit more about this entry and try to figure it out or see if we can learn more about the designer who’s behind that site.

00:45:56 – Reyes Martínez 
I was reading some of the chat messages. Perfect. And next on the list, we have Disney General Entertainment Press. This site focuses on Disney’s television brands and is built to communicate updates across its creative properties.

Using WordPress, the DGE press team streamlined the editorial process, content distribution, and updates for 8000 press members. You can learn more about these and other enterprise success stories in the enterprise WordPress showcase shared by the Scale Consortium group. I know this is a brand this group works with. So yeah, I highly recommend checking that Scale Consortium link if you want to read about some other cool success stories.

And other entries include be beau, a French design agency; Digitalists, a digital marketing agency from Austria; and Studio Enabloo, a design and production studio headquartered in Africa. They are all great examples of modern sites that leverage WordPress flexibility to create some unique and branded experiences. So all of these are pretty cool sites and those are links in case you want to check those out. If you want any more any other information about them, feel free to reach out and I can try to learn or yeah learn a little bit more about who are the designers behind them. I know a few folks from those sites, others we don’t know so many information so much information, but yeah.

00:47:53 – Reyes Martínez
And finally, I would just like to remind everyone that the State of Enterprise WordPress 2024 survey is now open and looking for feedback from enterprise organizations. So, if you know any enterprise brands using WordPress, please encourage them to provide their input to help advance the enterprise WordPress space. I think that’s all.

Question, Javier: Is there a way to filterFilter Filters are one of the two types of Hooks https://codex.wordpress.org/Plugin_API/Hooks. They provide a way for functions to modify data of other functions. They are the counterpart to Actions. Unlike Actions, filters are meant to work in an isolated manner, and should never have side effects such as affecting global variables and output. by country? In the showcase page, do you mean? I don’t know if there’s actually…

00:48:30 – Javier Casares 
I cannot find… If there is a way, I cannot find that. I see that there is like a place where it says country, whatever, but there is no filter for… Or I cannot find the filter, but…

00:48:48 – Reyes Martínez 
Yeah, that’s interesting. I don’t know right now if there is a…

00:48:52 – Javier Casares 
Maybe we need to open a ticket.

00:48:57 – Reyes Martínez 
I don’t think there’s a current filter by country. But yeah, that would be interesting.

00:49:00 – Javier Casares 
Some time ago, we talked in the Spanish community to have like some directory for meetups or whatever, focused on Spain. It should be interesting to have one place where you can put Spain and see everything there but I cannot find that so. I will try to open a ticket, an issue somewhere. I don’t know where the showcase is now. It’s in some repo in GitHub.

00:49:34 – Reyes Martínez 
Yeah, I believe there’s a repo for the WordPress.org website. I can follow up with you on that if I find the right repo where you can share your suggestion. But I agree that that’s interesting.

00:49:55 – Reyes Martínez 
Okay, if there are no more questions on that, I believe we can move on to a little bit of discussion. I guess there’s not a lot of time. I mean, I’m okay with going for a little bit over an hour, but again, I just want to be mindful of everyone’s time.

00:50:18 – Reyes Martínez 
Let’s open the floor for any other topics about the Media Corps project. I noted some potential conversations that I had in mind, but I would like to first hear if you have any specific questions or topics that you would like to discuss. If so, please feel free to unmute or share them in the chat.

00:50:51 – Reyes Martínez 
It’s quiet here. Okay. Rae. Any updates on the progress of the Media Corps experiment? What do you mean like progress? Or any update on the progress? I would love it if you could elaborate a little bit more on that to ensure I understand it correctly.

00:51:16 – Rae Morey 
Yeah, I just mean, I guess, what’s the general sentiment around how it’s going, I guess, for your team as well and from leadership? And is there a timeline for looking back at the progress and measuring it and deciding on whether it’s been successful or not?

00:51:36 – Reyes Martínez 
Yeah, that’s a great question. So I think I think progress, well, I think we are just starting. I mean, maybe it feels like ages since we announced the first idea, but we are really starting the project. The latest feedback form that we shared, I believe, in general, I mean, I think feedback was positive. Of course, I think there’s room to address or keep improving based on media folks’ feedback. But I feel right now the general sentiment is positive. And there’s a lot of I think we are still learning as we go like there are no like set processes yet. I think we are just learning and the experimental project I know there are a few folks who maybe don’t like to call this experiment but I think it’s actually a kind of… it’s an experiment.

And the timeline we set for or to just see if this could be successful is December. So I think by the end of the year, we’ll be able to maybe look back at the past six months and, you know, like, just evaluate some of the feedback, some of the insights received and to see, you know, how this has been going, what’s the feedback received, and we can recommend or suggest any direction or another one. So, yeah. I don’t know if… does this answer your question?

00:53:22 – Rae Morey
Yeah.

00:53:30 – Reyes Martínez 
Also, in the meantime, I don’t know, in case you are also thinking about any other questions, I also wanted to touch a little bit on the Media Corps and the Uniting WordPress YouTubers efforts. Because I don’t know if folks have all the context and background. But on July 3rd, Anne, Anne McCarthy hosted a call with some WordPress YouTubers to get to know each other and chat about pain points, content planning, and other ways to stay in touch. And if I’m not mistaken, she’ll be hosting another call later this month. So, I feel there has been some confusion, maybe around, like, Media Corps and Anne’s efforts. So I thought I would try to help clarify those initiatives and to help manage expectations and any potential confusion.

For those who are not or haven’t heard about Anne’s efforts, I believe they try to or they aim to provide accurate and like relevant product information. Also leveraging actually the WordPress Media Corps project, but they also aim to help create a feedback loopLoop The Loop is PHP code used by WordPress to display posts. Using The Loop, WordPress processes each post to be displayed on the current page, and formats it according to how it matches specified criteria within The Loop tags. Any HTML or PHP code in the Loop will be processed on each post. https://codex.wordpress.org/The_Loop. where YouTubers creators can share their feedback and insights from the audiences back into the project.

And lastly, I think Anne is also aiming to build a community where these creators can exchange tips, tricks, or any other best practices to support each other. So I think in comparison to the Media Corps, or at least regarding the Media Corps project, what we aim is to cover a broad range of WordPress updates in briefings, so not just limited to product releases or technical development topics.

00:55:33 – Reyes Martínez 
We also expect media partners to regularly attend or watch briefings and share feedback to help shape the upcoming briefings and the project implementation. So I see, or at least from my perspective, I see that Anne’s efforts might be more suitable for YouTubers or content creators who want to maybe share product feedback or stay closely informed about core, Gutenberg, and other related discussions. But again, this is not, by the way, I mean, these efforts are also compatible, it doesn’t mean that you have to be in one or the other one. But it is that I thought, I don’t know, like sharing some of this context would help especially clarify, I don’t know, these efforts. So hopefully, this helps avoid some confusion. But yeah, that’s my perspective.

00:56:44 – Reyes Martínez 
Any other questions, thoughts?

00:56:57 – Reyes Martínez 
Yeah, go ahead, Rae.

00:56:59 – Rae Morey 
Couldn’t find the hand-raising icon, so I’ll just skip. So, it’s interesting that you talk about that because that was actually going to be one of my next questions. Obviously, there’s been some criticism from YouTubers in recent weeks about WordPress, Gutenberg, the release of WordPress 6.6. I guess, how is leadership handling that? Is that something that Anne is taking care of? Is that something that, I guess, what is the feedback from leadership around that kind of criticism that’s happening?

00:57:39 – Reyes Martínez 
I don’t have any feedback from project leadership. I honestly feel that it’s really hard, I mean, to just keep track of everything that is shared out there. I think even I know contributors, like Anne and other core contributorsCore Contributors Core contributors are those who have worked on a release of WordPress, by creating the functions or finding and patching bugs. These contributions are done through Trac. https://core.trac.wordpress.org., I know they try to stay, like, updated on the feedback shared out there, but I think it’s really, really hard to just keep track of all the feedback and thoughts, opinions that are shared out there daily.

I don’t even know if sometimes or some of those videos sometimes are even, I mean, if project leadership knows about those videos or feedback. I know, you know, like there, for example, one of the things that Anne also hopes with this initiative is to actually try to improve the feedback loop because right now, I think it’s kind of hard for everyone to know what’s being shared because there are so many different places to share input or feature requests, suggestions. It’s all kind of distributed across many different places. I think it’s really hard to just keep track of everything that is shared out there. I think that’s also the idea regarding… like improving the feedback loop. But yeah, I can’t share again, I don’t know any thoughts or input from project leadership on that.

00:59:42 – Reyes Martínez 
Okay. I know we… I mean, I do have more topics that I would like to discuss, but I know we are, I see we’re a little over an hour already. So, yeah, I think we can wrap up our discussion for today if there are no other thoughts, questions.

And I think we covered a lot of ground and we can keep conversations going on SlackSlack Slack is a Collaborative Group Chat Platform https://slack.com/. The WordPress community has its own Slack Channel at https://make.wordpress.org/chat/., GitHub, for any questions or topics that we would like to further discuss. And of course, if there’s interest, we can always consider scheduling a discussion call, not just a briefing, but I mean like more of a discussion call.

01:00:37- Reyes Martínez
So yeah. All right. So yeah, I guess we can officially wrap this up. Thank you all for your contributions and for sharing your thoughts. And thank you, Kathryn, Cynthia, and Jonathan for sharing your insights about the new Learn WordPress experience with us.

As a reminder, the recap and recording of this session will be shared on the Media Corps blog. In the following days, and the video will be also uploaded to the WordPress YouTube channel.

If you have any further questions or need any additional information, please feel free to reach out on Slack.

01:01:26 – Reyes Martínez 
Thank you, everyone. And have a great day, afternoon. And yeah, thank you. Thank you all again for your time.

01:01:34 – Jonathan Bossenger 
Thank you. Thank you, guys.


Thank you to @zoonini and @psykro for reviewing this post.

#media-corps-briefing #summary

Upcoming Media Corps Briefing Scheduled for August 7

Following last week’s proposal, we will be hosting a multi-topic Media Corps briefing next week. Here are the details:

  • Date: August 7, 2024
  • Time: 12:30 PM UTC
  • Location: To be determined (a link will be provided in the Media Corps SlackSlack Slack is a Collaborative Group Chat Platform https://slack.com/. The WordPress community has its own Slack Channel at https://make.wordpress.org/chat/. channel before the session)

What to expect

This briefing will provide an overview of some of the latest happenings in the WordPress project, including a quick rundown of new entries in the Showcase.

Among other updates, you can expect to hear about the new Learning Pathways and the Learn WordPress redesign from Training contributors Kathryn Presner (@zoonini), Cynthia Norman (@cnormandigital), and Jonathan Bossenger (@psykro), who will help answer any questions about the upcoming launch.

After the briefing, we will open the floor for other questions and discussion topics about the Media Corps. While the briefing (the news/presentation portion) will aim to be shorter this time, note that any subsequent discussions may go a little longer.

The session will be recorded and uploaded to YouTube in the following days.

A few friendly reminders:

  • Briefings are intended for Media Corps partners but are open to the public to avoid restricting information, which means anyone can join as a viewer or listener. We will prioritize questions from media partners as much as possible.
  • Due to time constraints, we may be unable to cover all questions and discussion topics live.

Do you have any questions about the session? Please share them in the comments below or on the Media Corps Slack channel.

Thank you to @javiercasares, @sion99, and @zoonini for reviewing this post.

#media-corps-briefing

First Briefing Retrospective and Next Steps

This post summarizes the feedback received from media partners regarding the first Media Corps briefing and future sessions, along with suggested next steps. Thank you to everyone who completed the feedback form and contributed their thoughts.

Feedback has been synthesized for ease of reading. Full (anonymized) form responses are in this spreadsheet.

Overview

  • Attendance: 14 people attended the first briefing live. The form responses from media partners mixed live attendance and recording views. Due to time zones, finding a time that works for everyone is challenging, so this underscores the importance of recording briefings.
  • Overall briefing effectiveness: The briefing received an average rating of 3.8 out of 5, where 5 is the best effectiveness rating. On average, partners who completed the form found the briefing valuable, but there’s room for improvement.
  • Briefing organization: The average rating is 4.3 out of 5, which suggests that most respondents found the briefing well-organized.

What went well in the first briefing?

  • The demos were well-received and highly appreciated for understanding new features and changes.
  • A number of answers indicated that they found the information, the recap on the Media Corps blog, and the links/resources shared useful. These also helped as supportive resources for non-native English media partners.
  • It was easy to ask questions.
  • Anne’s participation, knowledge, and preparation of the source of truth were highlighted as significant positives.

What would you like to see improved for future briefings?

  • It would have been great to have the chief architect or lead designers available for questions to get firsthand knowledge of vision and ideas.
  • The briefing was very technical. What I’m hearing from subscribers is that they want to know more about what WordPress can do, not how it works. 
  • Briefings shouldn’t go for more than 30 minutes.
  • Focusing on multiple aspects of the project beyond just the coreCore Core is the set of software required to run WordPress. The Core Development Team builds WordPress. updates.
  • Having someone other than Anne discuss important changes coming to WP would make more sense since Anne has her own initiatives with content creators and generally publishes her own content.
  • Understanding it was the first iteration, there wasn’t much in terms of the actual “media corps” content or evolving the idea of “media corps.”
  • Perhaps there could be email follow-ups after the event? That could be used to share the recording and transcript.

How often should we host the Media Corps briefings?

The majority of media partners prefer monthly briefings, which indicates a strong preference for regular, consistent updates that are frequent enough to stay informed but not overwhelming.